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Paris vows to clean up 'trashed city' after wave of criticism

AFP
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Paris vows to clean up 'trashed city' after wave of criticism
A photo shows a protective face mask on the ground in front of the Eiffel tower in Paris on March on 17, 2020 as a strict lockdown comes into in effect to stop the spread of the COVID-19 in the country. - French President asked people to stay at home to avoid the spreading the Covid-19, saying only necessary trips would be allowed and violations would be punished. The country has already shut cafes, restaurants, schools and universities and urged people to limit their movements. (Photo by Ludovic Marin / AFP)

Paris officials laid out eight measures on Monday aimed at sprucing up one of the world's most visited cities following a social media campaign lambasting trash and other eyesores.

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For months residents have been posting pictures of dirty or dilapidated urban furniture, abandoned scooters or ramshackle terraces set up by cafes during the pandemic with the hashtag #saccageparis (Trashed Paris), to the dismay of City Hall.

It has put Socialist Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who is weighing a bid for the presidency, on the defensive.

"We're not doing this in response to saccageparis," deputy mayor Emmanuel Gregoire said at a press conference. "But when we are called out by our citizens... they deserve to be listened to and respected. The things being said by the Saccage Paris groups are not wrong."

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The push for a "new aesthetic," he said, would include repainting historic elements of public space including the ornate iron and wood "Davioud" benches from the Second Empire.

The city will also remove or renovate recent "Mikado" benches - which often resemble haphazard piles of railroad ties - that many Parisians love to hate.

 

Some 2,000 "useless" advertising panels will come down, Gregoire said. And he vowed "more discrete and harmonious" painting and barriers for the 60 kilometres (37 miles) of "coronapistes" bike lanes that were quickly carved out during the pandemic.

Most of the lanes currently are marked with plastic yellow poles or hulking concrete construction blocks that have not aged well.

Hidalgo's rightwing critics and some residents accuse her of allowing the capital to fall into neglect while making trips to other French cities to woo allies for her rumoured presidential run next year.

She has claimed the city is being targeted by a smear campaign, and has promised to double spending on cleaning during her second term as mayor to €1 billion.

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Anonymous 2021/09/01 17:21
Considering the huge number of tourists I do not think Paris is all that bad. Even Tokyo, which is an especially clean city, has its areas that look worse than Paris, much worse. And compared to Rome, Paris is spotless and in much better repair. You have really made an effort though. Trash cans are all over the place, they are changed multiple times a day, I know I have watched from my apartment window. But there are some cultures that just are not yet on board with stopping littering. In America it took a very long time to stop peopole from littering in the highways. But it has made a huge difference. But it took maybe 15 years. Even the Metro is actually really good. It is cleaner than both New York City and Washington DC.

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