A French Revolution In Mobility
Typical Metro entrance, this one by the Moulin Rouge.

Typical Metro entrance, this one by the Moulin Rouge.

Paris may be famous for food, art, history, and unparalleled urban beauty. But the city could also qualify as a transitopia, with some lessons for other urban regions. Before the holidays, I had the opportunity to travel to the city of lights for an Essec Business School conference on “electromobility.” I took the opportunity to scout out its transit system and came away impressed.

The backbone is the underground Paris Metro, opened with little fanfare in 1900. The 133 miles of rail includes 303 stations and 16 lines. Since the system stops every few blocks, it is ideal for serving the densely populated city center.

All Metro stations have this curvy, turn-of-the-last century design.

All Metro stations have this curvy, turn-of-the-last century design.

For longer trips, Paris built itself a longer-range suburban commuter rail line, called the “RER.” It’s fast and has stops spaced farther apart, which is badly needed since the Metro is focused on short-range trips.

Beyond those two city-focused systems, you’ve got long-distance trains and high speed rail to connect you all over Europe.

With the abundance of infrastructure and high-density living, rail travel is a way of life in Paris, and the numbers show it. Metro is the second-busiest subway system in Europe, with roughly 1.5 billion passengers each year and over 4 million per day. Indeed, traveling by Metro during peak hours is really uncomfortable. You have to let sometimes multiple trains pass in order to find space just to squeeze in the doors. Luckily the trains arrive in short order, but it’s unpleasant. Some kind of congestion pricing might be advisable to encourage more ridership in off-peak hours instead.  Because they sure can’t build more capacity or increase headways.

A rare uncrowded Metro train.

A rare uncrowded Metro train.

Paris also has a comprehensive bus system, but the roads are so crowded and narrow in many places that rail offers some distinct advantages.  Still, a partial ban on cars might greatly improve bus service, as the mayor of Paris is proposing (I understand it may be an effort to keep out non-Parisian drivers from the city streets).

Meanwhile, on the biker front, I didn’t see a lot of bicyclists (although winter might not be the best time for people to take out the bikes), but they have some green-striped bike lanes on many major roads.  Not many were protected, at least that I saw.  They also have a full-scale bikeshare program, similar to major cities in the US and elsewhere.

Bikeshare station in Paris

Bikeshare station in Paris

And there were plenty of pedestrians, although I don’t know how they don’t get hurt more often.  Crossing streets in Paris is confusing and risky.  In a number of places, they have walk signals for half the street, but then you get to a narrow curb in the middle and have to wait while the other walk signal turns green.  It’s easy as a first-timer not to notice the second red signal when the first turns green and just keep walking — right into traffic.

Overall, getting around without a car in Paris is very easy, although slightly dangerous as a pedestrian.  Most cities probably could not afford to build a comprehensive underground subway like Paris has (and maybe even Paris couldn’t these days, given how costs have increased so dramatically around the world).  But the key for the city is the density of the development, with most buildings at about seven to eight stories, and a variety of transportation options, from short-range rail to commuter rail to bike lanes and pedestrian boulevards.  So if you go to Paris, plan on transit for the rare times you don’t need to walk.

In a future post I’ll discuss electromobility options in France, which could provide a strong model for other cities around the world.

About

2 thoughts on “A French Revolution In Mobility

Leave a Reply