“
Towards a greener and more united Paris
”, at least that is what the Paris town hall website dedicated to its local “bioclimatic” urban planning plan announces.
Adopted last June by the Paris Council, the new plan must be definitively validated by the State by the end of the year.
But if the climate aspect seeks to make the capital "
a city more respectful of the environment which preserves nature and biodiversity, but also a city better adapted to climate change, which will be able to cope in particular with heatwaves"
, the ambition of the project goes far beyond the sole ecological framework and promotes a “
unified and mixed socio-demographic city
”.
And on this last point, its main lever is the registration in the PLU of a list of locations reserved for social housing.
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In fact, a thousand plots spread across the different districts of the capital are concerned, with in particular 40% of offices reallocated with the aim of “functional diversity”.
The neighborhoods most exposed to this “pastillage” are located in the so-called “social housing deficit” zones: mainly in the west and in the center.
Two sectors are however spared because they are not governed by the local urban plan but by protection and development plans: the protected sectors of the Marais and the 7th arrondissement (PSMV).
Le Figaro
has identified and mapped the plots concerned and uses its search engine to help you find these reserved pitches near you.
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