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Congested Paris bans through-traffic near the Louvre and Eiffel Tower to cut pollution

The ban, which covers four districts including the Louvre and the Marais, is part of a wider effort to promote cycling and public transport

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Paris has resorted to drastic measures to curb soaring pollution levels. Photo: AFP/File

Paris has banned through-traffic from parts of its historic centre to cut pollution and congestion, with the city’s police chief vowing, however, that the new rules would be enforced with a light touch.

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As of Monday, drivers of cars and other motorised vehicles including motorbikes are no longer able to travel in the capital’s first, second, third and fourth districts – or arrondissements – unless they have business there.

The area of 5.5 square kilometres (2.1 square miles) includes the Louvre Museum, the glitzy Place Vendome, the Tuileries gardens and the historic Marais neighbourhood as well as many cultural venues and shopping areas.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo has long sought to limit car traffic in the capital in favour of less polluting means of transport, notably bicycles.

A city employee unveils a traffic sign indicating the limited traffic zone in the central core of the French capital banning vehicles from transiting through it. Photo: AFP
A city employee unveils a traffic sign indicating the limited traffic zone in the central core of the French capital banning vehicles from transiting through it. Photo: AFP

Over the past decade, the city has turned several areas previously dedicated to cars over to cyclists and pedestrians, including stretches of the banks of the river Seine.

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