I like how the video focus on something I've always say about this city: There's a different Paris for every person. Whatever you want, you can find it here.
I was born in Paris and very proud of that. I now live in Montreal but will always be Parisian at heart. This documentary was really interesting, eye-opening and made me even more proud to be from there.
Sorry I had to turn this off the red flashing part of it forced me to do so!! A good documentary spoiled. From a channel that normally show really good stuff.
In future cities, streets will be covered by glass walls, accessible only to AI-driven cars. Traffic lights and speed signs will become unnecessary, as all vehicles will be fully automated. Pedestrians will access designated entry points through soundproofed glass domes, leading to elevators to upper levels where walkable communities exist. Designated spots will be provided for large public buses to elevate directly to the second floor, eliminating the need for passengers to use elevators (similarly for police cars and emergency vehicles, if nearby they can utilize the metro). A metro system will interconnect these communities, facilitating travel between different areas. High-speed rail networks will extend beyond city limits, providing interstate transportation. Additionally, some cities may opt for streetcars instead of metros, and long flat escalators akin to those in airports could transfer people to the nearest metro stop. Pedestrians can use bridges across roads or access ground floor parks. Meanwhile, AI-controlled highways will be situated underground, offering multiple transportation options. In rural areas, suburbs, and national parks, only underground highways will exist, with road-rise elevators allowing vehicles to ascend vertically. Every suburb will have a metro station nearby within a 5-15 minute walking distance. All ground level operations will be machine and AI-controlled, while elevated public spaces will be available under sunlight for humanity enjoyment.
There's Paris and Barcelona in the middle... With high density, great architecture and a strong push towards less cars, more soft mobility and public transportation, more vegetation and more sustainability centered around a more enjoyable life. The two extremes you mentioned are bleak and unfriendly to social life and enjoyment, they are two different flavors of social isolation. There's a reason why tourists flock to Paris and Barcelona in droves : these cities have a soul, a style, a cultural treasure trove and vibrant life. They've reinvented themselves, experimented and spearheaded urban renewal. Paris with Haussmann's renewal and Barcelona with the Eixample in the mid to late 19th century, both currently evolving at fast pace away from the car centric damages of the 20th century.
Im convinced cities should be designed like Paris
Very good documentary
Seemed interesting but such annoying editing effects. A red flash for EVERY transition, the blurring, the zooming, why? I only lasted 10 minutes.
Annoying 😢
I like how the video focus on something I've always say about this city: There's a different Paris for every person. Whatever you want, you can find it here.
I was born in Paris and very proud of that. I now live in Montreal but will always be Parisian at heart.
This documentary was really interesting, eye-opening and made me even more proud to be from there.
Love this series! Would love to see more cities covered!!
Paid is my most favourite City in the world followed by New York. I ❤️ Paris 🇫🇷💚👍
Sorry I had to turn this off the red flashing part of it forced me to do so!! A good documentary spoiled. From a channel that normally show really good stuff.
Thanks James I wanted to write exactly the same thing. Also the blurred or out of focus transitions from scene to scene are painful to watch.
Thank you for not watching.
Interesting content but the editing choice makes it very painful to watch.
In future cities, streets will be covered by glass walls, accessible only to AI-driven cars. Traffic lights and speed signs will become unnecessary, as all vehicles will be fully automated. Pedestrians will access designated entry points through soundproofed glass domes, leading to elevators to upper levels where walkable communities exist. Designated spots will be provided for large public buses to elevate directly to the second floor, eliminating the need for passengers to use elevators (similarly for police cars and emergency vehicles, if nearby they can utilize the metro). A metro system will interconnect these communities, facilitating travel between different areas. High-speed rail networks will extend beyond city limits, providing interstate transportation. Additionally, some cities may opt for streetcars instead of metros, and long flat escalators akin to those in airports could transfer people to the nearest metro stop. Pedestrians can use bridges across roads or access ground floor parks. Meanwhile, AI-controlled highways will be situated underground, offering multiple transportation options. In rural areas, suburbs, and national parks, only underground highways will exist, with road-rise elevators allowing vehicles to ascend vertically. Every suburb will have a metro station nearby within a 5-15 minute walking distance. All ground level operations will be machine and AI-controlled, while elevated public spaces will be available under sunlight for humanity enjoyment.
Feels like a impossible dystopian future invented by Saudis
👌Best
👏
Was editor on acid trip?
why so many reds?😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
to show all the red flags of Paris
Soviet microdistrict vs USA suburbia
There's Paris and Barcelona in the middle...
With high density, great architecture and a strong push towards less cars, more soft mobility and public transportation, more vegetation and more sustainability centered around a more enjoyable life.
The two extremes you mentioned are bleak and unfriendly to social life and enjoyment, they are two different flavors of social isolation.
There's a reason why tourists flock to Paris and Barcelona in droves : these cities have a soul, a style, a cultural treasure trove and vibrant life.
They've reinvented themselves, experimented and spearheaded urban renewal.
Paris with Haussmann's renewal and Barcelona with the Eixample in the mid to late 19th century, both currently evolving at fast pace away from the car centric damages of the 20th century.
Someone here doesn't know what "soviet" means.
I turned it off because maybe I’m going deaf.
Unsupportable presentation