Morning of the Sustainable Development Network - The Seine in transition

Patricia Pelloux, deputy director of Apur, will speak on the evolution of the uses of the Seine since the 18th century.

The Seine occupies an essential place in the history of the Capital, the life and imagination of Parisians. If the river has shaped Paris, its uses have evolved and have in turn transformed it. The Seine is thus used as a resource, a commercial axis, a heritage space and increasingly as a space conducive to leisure activities while remaining a natural environment to be protected.

Introduction by Noémie Giard, head of the public service, Musée Carnavalet: on the collections and the renovation work of the Museum

Putting it into perspective: evolution of the uses of the Seine since the 18th century
- Isabelle Backouche, director of studies at the School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences
- Patricia Pelloux, deputy director of the Atelier Parisien d’Urbanisme

And in the middle, the Seine: the reappropriation of the river by Parisians
- Bruno Gouyette, head of the Seine Mission within the PEPS cluster, Department of Ecological Transition and Climate
- Anne du Plessis, Deputy Head of the Biodiversity Division, Urban Ecology Agency, Department of Green Spaces and the Environment
- Yasmina Channaoui, Head of Mobility and Infrastructure, General Delegation for the Olympic and Paralympic Games, General Secretariat

Economic actors in the ecological transition
- Maud Berthier, Mission Seine project manager within the PEPS cluster, Department of Ecological Transition and Climate
- Juliette Duszynski, Head of the Waterway Development Department, Voies Navigables de France
- Vincent Delteil, site director, Vedettes de Paris
- Lila Durix, Head of the Single-Use Plastic Exit Mission at the PEPS Pole, Department of Ecological Transition and Climate

Enlargement and new perspectives: Seine axis and neighboring territories
- Marie Pierre Padovani, head of the PEPS unit, Department of Ecological Transition and Climate

Resources

External links