Accessibility links

WHRVOn Air Now

  • Hourly News
  • Listen Live
  • My Playlist

Paris goes pedestrian Parisians voted to close some 500 streets to cars, making the city more pedestrian-friendly. Not everyone is thrilled about the changes.

Europe

Paris goes pedestrian

April 4, 20255:22 PM ET

Heard on All Things Considered

By

Rebecca Rosman

Paris Goes Pedestrian

Listen· 3:473-Minute ListenPlaylist

TranscriptToggle more options

  • Download
  • Embed Embed<iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/nx-s1-5349398/nx-s1-5411767-1" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player">

  • Transcript

Parisians voted to close some 500 streets to cars, making the city more pedestrian-friendly. Not everyone is thrilled about the changes.

JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:

Paris is undergoing a major transformation. In a referendum last month, 66% of Parisians voted to convert 500 more streets into pedestrian zones, marking one of the biggest shifts in how the city moves. It’s the latest step in the mayor’s yearslong effort to make Paris greener, quieter and less car dependent. But as NPR’s Rebecca Rosman discovered, not everyone is thrilled about the changes.

REBECCA ROSMAN, BYLINE: Eight years ago, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo made a bold promise to make cars vanish. She vowed to cut vehicle circulation in half. Less smog, more bike lanes and more footpaths.

ROSMAN: Like this one in the city’s 18th district, just behind the Sacre-Coeur. That’s where I meet 39-year-old Pierre Cabane. He’s set up a table and chairs where cars used to park and enjoys a leisurely lunch in the sun with friends. No surprise, then, when Cabane tells me he voted in favor of the plan to pedestrianize 500 more Paris streets.

PIERRE CABANE: Just the less cars you have, I think the more pleasant it is for people to live in.

ROSMAN: But not everyone is on board. Some Parisians say these changes come at a cost.

(SOUNDBITE OF CAR HORN HONKING)

ROSMAN: Reda Kessera has been a Paris taxi driver for 25 years. I meet him on Rue de Rivoli, a major street that now dedicates most of its space to bikes, leaving just a single lane for taxis, buses and emergency vehicles.

REDA KESSERA: (Speaking French).

ROSMAN: Traffic, he says, has become unbearable, and that means fewer people are taking taxis.

KESSERA: (Speaking French).

ROSMAN: Speaking of the referendum, he says it may be great for Parisians, but it shows nothing but scorn for the people who come to work here, and that a taxi ride that used to take 15 minutes can now take an hour.

(SOUNDBITE OF CAR HORN HONKING)

ROSMAN: Carlos Moreno, an urban planner and adviser to Mayor Hidalgo, says pedestrianization isn’t just about traffic. It’s about rethinking urban life.

CARLOS MORENO: This is the sense of this new urban policy - walkability, bikeability, green areas, public spaces, local jobs, local economy, social interactions.

ROSMAN: He says Paris learned from cities like Amsterdam. Before its cycling revolution in the 1970s, road deaths across the Netherlands had reached record highs - some 3,000 in 1971 alone. That crisis helped turn the Dutch capital into one of the most bike-friendly cities in the world.

MORENO: I said to my friends in Los Angeles, maybe you will be the next Amsterdam if you will decide to start this transformation, even if we need to be patient and to take time for that. But the most important is to start.

ROSMAN: Mayor Anne Hidalgo won’t be running for reelection, but her vision is reshaping Paris in ways that will long outlast her time in office. The city’s major boulevards are quieter than ever.

(SOUNDBITE OF JACKHAMMERS DRILLING)

ROSMAN: A lot of the noise pollution today comes from construction sites like this one - yet another street, this one in the Marais, being dug up and turned into a car-free walking zone. A sign that Paris isn’t just cutting cars, it’s making the City of Lights into the City of Bikes. Rebecca Rosman, NPR News, Paris.

(SOUNDBITE OF NIKI SONG, “EVERY SUMMERTIME”)

Copyright © 2025 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

Accuracy and availability of NPR transcripts may vary. Transcript text may be revised to correct errors or match updates to audio. Audio on npr.org may be edited after its original broadcast or publication. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

  • Facebook
  • Flipboard
  • Email

NPR Plus logo

Exclusive benefits
Give a little. Get a lot.

Support mission-driven journalism while getting something great in return. Enjoy bonus content, early access and sponsor-free listening from your favorite NPR podcasts.

Get NPR+

Already have NPR+? Sign In

Close modal

a11107397707.cdn.optimizely.com

a11107397707.cdn.optimizely.com is blocked

This page has been blocked by an extension

  • Try disabling your extensions.

ERR_BLOCKED_BY_CLIENT

Reload

This page has been blocked by an extension

NPR logo

Privacy Preference Center

NPR and our service providers and vendors use cookies and similar technologies to collect information. A cookie is a string of characters that can be written to a file on the user’s computer or device when the user visits a site, application, platform or service. When you visit a website or use a mobile application, a computer asks your computer or mobile device for permission to store this file on your computer or mobile device and access information from it. Information gathered through cookies may include the date and time of visits and how you are using the website. Note that if you disable or delete cookies, you may lose access to certain features of the NPR Services.

User ID: 68cdb05f-bd83-4009-a245-4c16149c5207

This User ID will be used as a unique identifier while storing and accessing your preferences for future.

Timestamp:

Allow All

Strictly Necessary or Essential Cookies

Always Active

These cookies are essential to provide you with services available through the NPR Services and to enable you to use some of their features. For example, these cookies allow NPR to remember your registration information while you are logged in. Local station customization, the NPR Shop, and other interactive features also use cookies. Without these cookies, the services that you have asked for cannot be provided, and we only use these cookies to provide you with those services.

Performance and Analytics Cookies

Performance and Analytics Cookies

These cookies are used to collect information about traffic to our Services and how users interact with the NPR Services. The information collected includes the number of visitors to the NPR Services, the websites that referred visitors to the NPR Services, the pages that they visited on the NPR Services, what time of day they visited the NPR Services, whether they have visited the NPR Services before, and other similar information. We use this information to help operate the NPR Services more efficiently, to gather broad demographic information and to monitor the level of activity on the NPR Services.

Functional Cookies

Functional Cookies

These cookies allow our Services to remember choices you make when you use them, such as remembering your Member station preferences and remembering your account details. The purpose of these cookies is to provide you with a more personal experience and to prevent you from having to re-enter your preferences every time you visit the NPR Services.

Targeting and Sponsor Cookies

Targeting and Sponsor Cookies

These cookies track your browsing habits or other information, such as location, to enable us to show sponsorship credits which are more likely to be of interest to you. These cookies use information about your browsing history to group you with other users who have similar interests. Based on that information, and with our permission, we and our sponsors can place cookies to enable us or our sponsors to show sponsorship credits and other messages that we think will be relevant to your interests while you are using third-party services.

Back Button

Search Icon

Filter Icon

Clear

  • checkbox labellabel

ApplyCancel

ConsentLeg.Interest

checkbox labellabel

checkbox labellabel

checkbox labellabel

Reject AllConfirm My Choices

Powered by Onetrust

reCAPTCHA

Recaptcha requires verification.

protected by reCAPTCHA

StripeM-Inner