Quote:
Originally Posted by iheartthed
I don't think I would ever have described Paris as a "clean" city. I haven't visited in a few years but litter and full trash bins were not uncommon at all in certain areas of the city. Perhaps it's worse now but it was definitely there before.
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Yes. Back in the days it was confined to some eastern working-class districts, but now it's both worse in those districts, and it has reached the wealthy western districts.
After I returned from the US, I lived at my sister's apartment during a few months in a working class area of the north-eastern districts, and it was okeyish, a bit more dirty than the western districts, but frankly okeyish.
Now, the few times when I return in that area, I'm always shocked at the level of squalor now.
Last week (or two weeks ago), they even reported about employees in the local supermarket near her apartment where I used to shop and which was quite a good supermarket, so they reported about employees in that supermarket going on strike due to insecurity and the supermarket having fallen down the ladders.
Some people posted this picture of the strike, and I was frankly shocked, because in my memory it was a gentrifying area, and the supermarket was perfectly neat, and now look how it has become:
And now the dirtiness has reached even the wealthiest western arrondissements. Their level of dirtiness now is slightly worse than the working-class area where my sister used to live when I returned from the US (but whenever I cross the line and go east of Paris the contrast is so shocking that the western districts, despite being far dirtier and less well maintained than in the past, are still incomparably better than the eastern districts).
Where you have well maintained areas (or just normally maintained areas worthy of a developed country) is in the suburban municipalities, most of them (like 80%+ let's say). I'm more and more tempted to move to the suburbs, like many inner Parisians (200,000 have left in the past 10 years), but so far I remain in the city of Paris proper because it's more centrally located and I don't want to waste too much time in public transportation. But each year that passes frankly makes you think about moving, and LOTS of Parisians are having the same thoughts.
I had a cousin who lived in Boulogne-Billancourt, and I used to think "Gosh, it's so far away, I could never live there, and it's not as pretty as Paris proper". And now I go to Boulogne-Billancourt and I'm astonished to see how well maintained the place is compared to how the city of Paris has become. I even recorded a short video a while ago, but cannot post it here because the forum does not have Twitter-video embedding. When I posted the video on Twitter (and it was just a video showing the corner of two commercial streets in the old city center of Boulogne), I had many reactions from Parisians who couldn't believe how clean and tidy it was compared to the city of Paris.