“I think I’m going to do like everyone else and leave Paris. » Aïcha Idrissi had first thought of taking advantage of the festivities which will accompany the Olympic Games. But the incentives to telework and the fear of traffic jams, crowds and attacks finally got the better of her. Like half of Parisians, she will take refuge somewhere in the French countryside, even if it means watching all this on television.
“But what horrifies me the most is this work that never ends. » For months, under the windows of his medical office on Avenue Gambetta, trucks and cranes have been making their gentle noise. Unable to open windows. All this to provide a showcase for the 15 million visitors expected in the French capital from July 26.
Aïcha is far from being alone. Half of Parisians are preparing to flee. According to an IPSOS Digital survey, 47% of the capital’s inhabitants will take refuge in the provinces in order to “avoid the crowds and the expected rise in prices”. But the rate could still increase, since at the time of the survey, in mid-March, 19% of those questioned had not yet made their decision. Some 26% of Parisians have also decided to bring forward their vacation dates so as not to be in Paris during the busiest times.
Five months before the Games, we were already recording increases of up to 50% in reservations on certain platforms offering the calm of Morbihan, the Loire Valley, Corsica or Vendée. In Le Figaro Magazinethe writer Jonathan Siksou even imagined a capital entirely deserted by its inhabitants, where it is necessary to block motorway entrances with concrete blocks and offer bonuses for “drudgery of daily life” to force Parisians to stay.
Half of Parisians are therefore preparing to disobey the exhortations of their mayor, who exclaimed: “Don’t leave this summer. Don’t leave, that would be bullshit! Stay, it’s going to be absolutely amazing. » Quite a contrast with this time when the mayor campaigned against the Olympics by asserting that “the Games are expensive […]I believe that this is no longer relevant at all.”
Cycling and teleworking
Could this exodus be the effect of the gigantic advertisements that have been plastered on the walls of metro stations for weeks? We can read that “to save time during the Games, the important thing is to telework!” “. And that cycling is the “preferred mode of travel”. As the president of the Île-de-France Regional Council, Valérie Pécresse, repeated: “You shouldn’t be afraid to do a little walking, it’s good for your health. » An injunction which has been rather misinterpreted by these thousands of less privileged workers who, to get to their jobs, have no choice but to crowd onto crowded metro lines, such as the famous line 13.
From there to thinking that, during the Games, Paris will be hell, there is only one step that a majority of French people have happily taken. The closer the Games get, the less interested the French are in them. Only 53% now say they are a good thing, compared to 61% just six months ago.
The confidence of the French in the ability to organize an opening ceremony worthy of the event is also down by 14%. This ceremony, which must take place along the Seine, over six kilometers, arouses all fears in terms of security. This week, for the first time, President Emmanuel Macron publicly confirmed that “there are plans B and even plans C”. These options include the possibility of a limited ceremony at the Trocadéro, or even in the Stade de France, as has always been done.
Itinerants sent to the region
Reservations down
The inconveniences of traffic and crowded transport, however, have nothing to do with those of the 3,000 students who had to leave manu militari their residences requisitioned to accommodate firefighters, caregivers and police officers. Nothing to do either with the increase in evictions of tenants at the end of their lease, which increased from 19% in 2022 to 23% in 2023, then to 28% between last September and February.
“A certain number of owners are getting rid of their tenants with the aim of renting their accommodation on platforms during the Olympic Games period,” declared Ian Brossat, in charge of housing and emergency accommodation at Paris town hall. .
Among Parisians who will leave the capital, 13% will take the opportunity to rent their apartment on temporary rental platforms, where the offer has literally exploded. “With the Olympic Games, Airbnb has established itself as a leader in tourist accommodation in Paris,” wrote in The world the geographer Victor Piganiol. The American multinational expected to reach 130,000 ads by summer. Is this the reason why hotels are still not full? Over the past three months, their prices have fallen by 13%. According to the MKG firm, only 64% of available rooms are reserved. Several sports federations and groups have canceled part of their reservations.
Given the plethora of supply, prices are falling everywhere, even if they still remain higher than usual. The most affected are medium or low category hotels, which are also worried about the dip that could follow the event. As if regular visitors were fleeing the capital in the face of the arrival of new tourists. A phenomenon that we also experienced in London in 2012.
Enhanced security
For experts, the attack which occurred on March 22 at the Crocus City Hall in Moscow is not unrelated to this drop in reservations. Especially since France has already been targeted by several attempted attacks by the same branch of the Islamic State jihadist group. Since then, the alert system has been raised to its maximum level.
The unsubscriptions would particularly affect the Japanese and Americans, and it is a phenomenon that hoteliers know well since it has been repeated each time the capital has been the victim of terrorists.
To ward off any threats, the security perimeter for the opening ceremony has been further expanded. A week before, you will have to show a QR code to venture on foot, by bike or by car in an area of several square kilometers covering the Parisian banks of the Seine from east to west. This obviously includes all the major monuments, such as the Louvre and the Trocadéro, as well as the Île Saint-Louis and the Île de la Cité. Around fifteen metro stations will be closed.
Absolutely exceptional fact: not only will the Seine be closed to all navigation a week before D-Day, but during the opening ceremony, between 7 p.m. and midnight, airspace will be completely prohibited within a radius of 150 kilometers around Paris. All this on the eve of one of the biggest holiday weekends. An alert system has even been provided to notify all mobile phone owners in real time by text message in the event of danger.
Some 2,000 soldiers and police officers will come to lend a hand to the 35,000 police officers and gendarmes who will be on duty every day. This includes dog squads, motorcyclists, but also experts in documentary fraud and anti-drone warfare. There remains the immense task of security agents: 9,000 are still missing. The same thing happened in London, where the army had to be called for help at the last minute.