Rising Stars: Chevilly-Larue Emerges as Grand Paris Growth Corridor Thanks to Line 14 Extension
New metro links and ambitious redevelopment put southern suburb firmly on Paris investors’ radar.
New metro links and ambitious redevelopment put southern suburb firmly on Paris investors’ radar.

Chevilly-Larue, long overshadowed by its glossier neighbours, has leapt to prominence in Paris property circles after the Grand Paris Express this week marked the opening of the long-awaited southern extension of Metro Line 14. The new Chevilly Trois Communes station at Rue Paul Hochart saw crowds of commuters and prospective buyers flocking to the area, eyeing both convenience and value.
The timing is no accident: as Paris faces high prices and constrained supply in the central arrondissements, smart buyers and developers are chasing opportunities in outer communes dynamically reshaped by infrastructure upgrades. The corridor running from Villejuif, through Chevilly-Larue, down to Thiais and beyond, is in sharp focus for both young buyers priced out of the city and investors searching for yield. Major infrastructure, new residential complexes and commercial projects are all feeding the area’s rapid transformation.
Chevilly-Larue sits just south-west of Orly, bordered by the A6 and the Parc départemental de Chevilly-Larue. Until recently, getting into central Paris meant clambering onto overcrowded buses or enduring the unreliable tramway. Now, the new automated Line 14 shuttles passengers from Chevilly Trois Communes to Châtelet-Les Halles in under 22 minutes. The town centre around Place Nelson Mandela has started buzzing: real estate agency Laforêt reports a 40% jump in walk-ins since January, while café Le 126 along Avenue Franklin Roosevelt has doubled its weekday trade on the back of new-arrival commuters.
Local government is leaning into the opportunity. A €324 million town centre revitalisation project, led by SEMMARIS and the local mairie, aims to build 650 new mixed-income apartments and expand the bustling retail hub near the Marché de Chevilly. The Parc des Impressionnistes, formerly peripheral, is being woven into a network of new promenades and cycle paths linking the town more closely to Villejuif and L’Haÿ-les-Roses.
While Paris’s inner arrondissements hold steady around €10,300 per sqm (Chambre des notaires de Paris, Q1 2026), Chevilly-Larue’s average sits at €5,150 per sqm—a far cry from the premium paid just 8 km north in the Marais. Over the past 18 months, notaires have recorded transaction volume in Chevilly-Larue up 17%, outpacing the Val-de-Marne average. Studio flats in new projects such as Résidence Le Hochart are selling off-plan from €175,000, attracting both first-time buyers and seasoned landlords hunting 4.5-5% gross yields. That marks Chevilly-Larue as one of the tightest rental markets south of the Périphérique, especially with a fresh influx of hospital workers and tech staff driven by the planned Gustave-Roussy cancer centre expansion in nearby Villejuif.
The corridor is also drawing attention from major institutional players. In mid-June, Nexity confirmed acquisition of a 3,400 sqm brownfield site behind Rue des Sorbiers, targeting a mixed-use scheme for delivery in 2028. Next on the municipal agenda: an upgrade of local schools and a new community centre on Place Anatole France, slated to break ground this autumn.
For those looking to move quickly, agents warn supply is still tight and the best plots are snapped up within days. With line 14 trains now running every three minutes and the Grand Paris Express continuing to unfold, Chevilly-Larue’s days as a sleepy suburb seem numbered. Investors and home-seekers alike may want to give this corridor a closer look before prices start closing the gap on central Paris.
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Published by The Daily Paris
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