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Lost in the metro? Paris translation app aims to help visitors

The Paris metro has launched an instant translation app ahead of next year's Olympic Games to help hapless foreign visitors navigate the French capital's urban transport system.

Lost in the metro? Paris translation app aims to help visitors
The sign above an entrance of a Metro station in Paris. (Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP)

The meandering metro, featuring more than 300 stations whose names can be hard to find or pronounce even for natives, easily becomes a nightmare for anybody without fluent French.

The Summer Olympics, to be held in the French capital between July 26 and August 11, will bring millions of visitors without knowledge of French or even English to the capital, most of whom will be using public transport to shuttle between sports venues.

READ MORE: The essential smartphone apps you need for living in France

In comes Tradivia, an instant translation app able to handle 16 languages, with which metro operator RATP has equipped 6,000 of its staff across the network’s stations.

The app translates spoken queries, including in English, German, Mandarin, Hindi and Arabic, into French for the benefit of RATP’s agents whose responses then get translated back to the language of the visitor.

“We had a real issue here, because our agents can’t be expected to answer queries in all languages,” said Valerie Gaidot, customer experience head at RATP.

The app has been specifically tailored to the Paris metro experience, and knows its way around station names, itineraries and the various ticket and travel pass types that can leave tourists bewildered.

This, RATP said, is a decisive advantage over general translation help like Google Translate that sometimes fails to make sense of the metro’s idiosyncrasies.

After experimenting on three urban lines first, the operator rolled out the service across the network over the summer.

In addition, four languages — English, German, Italian and Spanish — are currently available for special platform announcements, with Mandarin and Arabic to be added before the Olympics.

Some 15 million people are expected in Paris and surrounding regions for the Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games.

READ MORE: Hotels, tickets and scams: What to know about visiting Paris for the 2024 Olympics

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PARIS

Bon appetit: Paris’s Champs-Elysées to host giant picnic

Paris’s most famous street, the Champs-Elysées, is to host a giant open-air picnic on Sunday as the French capital’s iconic boulevard seeks to reinvent itself.

Bon appetit: Paris’s Champs-Elysées to host giant picnic

Nearly 273,000 people have applied to take part in the event which will see a 216-metre red-and-white chequered rug cover the picnic ground and feature free packed meals from organisers’ eight partner restaurants.

Around 4,000 people have been selected to participate in the ‘le grand pique-nique’, with each guest invited to bring up to six additional people and choose one of two sittings, at noon or 2pm.

The ‘world’s largest tablecloth’, made from 25 pieces of recycled fibre, will be assembled on site by 150 people, organisers said.

The aim of the event was to show that the Champs-Elysées, famous for its expensive boutiques and restaurants, was not only good for shopping, said Marc-Antoine Jamet, president of the organiser, the Champs-Elysées Committee.

“It’s a way of telling Parisians: ‘Come back to the Champs-Elysées’,” he said.

In 2023, the association transformed the avenue into an open-air mass dictation spellathon, pitting thousands of France’s brainiest bookworms against one another.

With 1,779 desks laid out on the boulevard, organisers had sought to break the world record for a dictation spelling competition.

A top tourist attraction, the avenue has been gradually abandoned by locals in recent years.

The historic UGC Normandie cinema, which opened in 1937, is set to close in June due to decline in business.

On Monday, the Committee was due to present a 1,800-page study of possible ways to reinvent the Champs-Elysees.

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