The Borneo Post

Paris’ grittiest suburb awaits Olympics dividend

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From the windows of “Les Bons Vivants” cafe, a short walk from the athletes’ village for the Paris Olympics, the changes underway in the once run-down neighbourh­ood are instantly visible.

Next door, the makeover of the 130-metre (430-foot) Tour Pleyel skyscraper is nearly complete, turning the 1970s eyesore into a modern landmark that will host a four-star hotel and a pool with panoramic views.

Its private owner started the 500-million euros (US$550 million) renovation in anticipati­on of an Olympics dividend for the SaintOuen area, which has been a focus of public investment for the July 26-Aug 11 Paris Games. Around the corner from the cafe, a freshly completed apartment block with a modern facade of concrete and wood stands opposite relics of the past: scruffy two-storey brick buildings hosting garages and kebab shops.

A brand-new station – SaintDenis Pleyel – is also emerging nearby from a mass of cranes and scaffoldin­g, set to one day be a hub for four metro lines and 250,000 daily travellers.

“It’s taking time but after the Games it’s going to be good,” said Ethan, a fast-talking 28-year-old waiter at Les Bons Vivants. “As soon as they’re finished, all the infrastruc­ture will be for the town.”

The emerging modernity outside contrasts with life inside the bar. With its formica tables, old wooden bar and staff in traditiona­l black waistcoats and white aprons, time appears to have stood still.

The meeting of the new and old in Saint-Ouen is causing some tensions and fears, Ethan admits.

“House prices have gone crazy and it’s going to change the population, it’s undeniable,” he said.

Saint-Ouen lies just to the north of Paris, separated from the capital by the ring road that divides the generally wealthy and mostly white centre of the city from its more deprived, immigrant-heavy suburbs.

Known for its 150-year-old flea market and for once hosting the famed Pleyel piano factory, SaintOuen is also associated with the modern scourges of Paris’ suburbs: run-down tower blocks and drug-dealing.

The decision to place the athletes’ village there and extend two metro lines into the area – another three are planned in the future – was part of the pitch for the Paris Games which French authoritie­s won in 2017.

Just as the 2012 London Olympics helped regenerate the eastern Stratford area of the British capital, Paris organisers believe their Games will help develop Saint-Ouen and surroundin­g areas of the notorious Seine-Saint-Denis district.

“I guess we’re part of the gentrifica­tion process,” admits local resident Maite Gallen, 37, a psychologi­st who moved to Saint-Ouen from Paris with her husband “to have a bit more space.”

“In terms of the impact of the Games, I’m sceptical,” she said. “I guess it’s a good thing overall, but they came here and did a big presentati­on about the future ‘internatio­nal attractive­ness’ of Saint-Ouen which made me laugh.

“We’re not quite there yet. You can’t even find a supermarke­t nearby.”

She hopes that the new village that will house competitor­s and team officials for the Games will bring positive changes.

The giant complex has seen private developers build nearly 3,000 new apartments that will become a mix of private, student and public housing once the Olympic and Paralympic sport has finished.

The ground-floor spaces of the eco-friendly blocks will be given over to new commercial spaces including shops.

A kilometre away – a half-hour walk through a tangle of road and rail infrastruc­ture – lies the Stade de France, which will host the Olympic track and field events, which is undergoing a makeover 26 years after its inaugurati­on.

Synchronis­ed swimming, diving and waterpolo will take place in a new aquatics centre opposite.

The Stade de France was the scene of embarrassi­ng crowd management and policing failures in 2022 when France hosted the final of the Champions League, Europe’s premier football competitio­n. Gangs of youths robbed and abused Liverpool and Real Madrid fans around the stadium, leading to changes in the way French security forces handle such events.— AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A peniche boat sails past the Eiffel Tower on the River Seine during a parade to test “maneuvers”, “distances”, “duration” and “video capture” of the future opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics in 2024.
— AFP photo A peniche boat sails past the Eiffel Tower on the River Seine during a parade to test “maneuvers”, “distances”, “duration” and “video capture” of the future opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics in 2024.

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