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Grand Paris Express station neighbourhoods

With the gradual commissioning of the Grand Paris Express, the Atelier parisien d'urbanisme (Apur), the Société des Grands Projets (SGP), the Direction Régionale et interdépartementale de l'environnement, de l'aménagement et des transports (DRIEAT) and the Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques (INSEE), as well as the Établissement public foncier d'Île-de-France (EPFIF) and the Institut Paris Region (IPR), are launching a new phase of the observatory of the station districts of the Grand Paris Express to show the urban and social transformations linked to the arrival of the metro at the level of station districts, lines and the network.
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L'Haÿ-les-Roses station area, line 14 south © Apur - Emmanuelle Roux

Ten years after the first assessment, new studies have been carried out in line with the timetable for opening, based on the same perimeter around each station, with an 800 metre radius corresponding to the immediate area of influence and a 10-15 minute walk. The monographs at neighbourhood level bring together indicators organised around 7 themes: current and future urban change - living environment - population and jobs - housing supply and prices - local life, uses and new centrality - accessibility and mobility - environment. They detail the characteristics of each station area, placing it in its immediate environment, in the municipalities affected by the arrival of the station, and make it possible to carry out a cross-analysis of all the station areas on a line (A comparative analysis of station neighbourhoods on Line 14 South). 

Monographs on 9 station districts along line 14 have already been published: Saint-Denis Pleyel and Mairie de Saint-Ouen to the north, and the 7 districts along the southern extension of the line, from Maison Blanche to Orly airport.

In 2025, the work will continue with the production of monographs on the station areas of line 15 south, starting with the areas at the western end of the line:

These studies are accompanied by a simple datavisualisation, accessible to all from the Apur website and updated each year at the level of the 68 stations.

Numerous data associated with station districts and presented in the Observatory's various studies are also available in open data.
 
Finally, thematic studies carried out on the scale of the entire network complete the analyses: