Paris metro expansion reaches major milestone. Grand Paris Express construction delivers 200km new rail, 4 metro lines, and reduced commute times by 2030.
While violence erupts across major cities, France's capital demonstrates how coordinated policing and rapid response systems can reduce crime in densely populated urban centres.
Years of budget cuts and pandemic disruptions have created a perfect storm in the city's education sector, forcing institutions across the Latin Quarter and beyond to make difficult choices.
As rents in the 4th arrondissement climb past €1,200 monthly for a studio, long-time residents and local shopkeepers face an uncertain future in one of the city's most beloved districts.
As the city pushes ambitious sustainability goals ahead of the 2028 Olympics, locals in Marais and Belleville share why grassroots initiatives matter more than government mandates.
From postwar social housing to luxury penthouses, the policy decisions that reshaped the French capital's real estate landscape tell a story of competing visions for urban life.
As European capitals struggle with affordability, Paris's aggressive rent controls and social housing targets offer a contrasting model—but critics say it risks stifling development.
As global institutions grapple with recruitment challenges and budget cuts, French higher education is betting on blended education models to maintain competitive advantage.
As the capital races to complete major metro and rail projects before 2030, newly released data reveals the scale, cost and passenger impact of France's most ambitious urban transport transformation.
As violence and public safety crises escalate worldwide, the French capital's integrated approach to crime prevention and emergency services offers a blueprint that rivals London and Berlin are scrambling to replicate.
As apartment prices in central arrondissements climb past €12,000 per square metre, city leaders outline competing visions for affordable housing and development.
From cleaner air in the Marais to cheaper energy bills in Belleville, the city's ambitious climate initiatives are delivering tangible benefits where Parisians live and work.
As property prices surge and longtime residents face displacement, local organisations in Paris's 11th and 20th arrondissements must decide how to preserve neighbourhood identity while adapting to inevitable change.
New municipal spending data shows where Paris is placing its €5.2 billion in resources as the city navigates housing pressures, transport expansion, and climate commitments.