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The Paralympics are coming to Paris. Will Paralympians be able to get around?

As Paris gets set to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games this summer, city officials are under added pressure to improve accessibility and disability rights.

The French capital is expected to welcome upward of 350,000 visitors living with a disability during the Games, and its metro system is just one of many areas of Parisian life that poses challenges to those with disability.

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The Olympics aren’t the only event coming to Paris this summer. So are the Paralympics, and the city is trying to change how the French see accessibility, so that athletes and visitors with disabilities can feel welcome – now, and in the future.

But more broadly, Olympic organizers say they want the Games to be a catalyst for creating awareness and inclusion of the 12 million people in France living with disabilities.

Stereotypes have been hard to tackle. According to polling, 72% of French people associated disability with wheelchair use, though those who use wheelchairs make up only about 10% of the population with disabilities. Meanwhile, only 8% and 9% associated disability with visual and hearing disabilities, respectively, though people with those make up more than half of France’s population with disabilities.

The government has pumped €1.5 billion ($1.6 billion) into making the Paris region’s transportation system, shops, and restaurants more accessible by this summer. It will also provide 1,000 taxi drivers with state aid to go toward buying vehicles accessible to wheelchair users and those with reduced mobility. The taxis will be available during and after the Games.

Anne-Marie d’Acremont is one of France’s top wheelchair basketball and rugby players, having played for the national team in both sports. When she hits the court, she navigates it with ease, snaking between her opponents before taking the ball to the net.

But getting to practice on Paris’ public transportation system is a different story.

“There’s only one metro line that has wheelchair access, and if the elevator is broken, I’m stuck,” says Ms. d’Acremont during a meeting with students at the University of Paris 8 in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. “The station manager will tell me to go to the next stop, which can be a half-mile down the road. But I have no choice. There’s no way I’m missing practice because of that.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The Olympics aren’t the only event coming to Paris this summer. So are the Paralympics, and the city is trying to change how the French see accessibility, so that athletes and visitors with disabilities can feel welcome – now, and in the future.

Ms. d’Acremont is the first to say that she has adapted to Paris when Paris doesn’t adapt to her. She’s used a wheelchair for over a decade, since she had Lyme disease as a teen and lost the ability to walk. She doesn’t harp on what she can’t do – only what she can.

Yet as Paris gets set to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games this summer, city officials are under added pressure to improve accessibility and disability rights. The French capital is expected to welcome upward of 350,000 visitors living with a disability during the Games, and its centuries-old underground transportation system is just one of many areas of Parisian life that poses challenges to those with disability.

But more than the Paris Games improving accessibility around the city, Olympic organizers say they want the event to be a catalyst for creating broader awareness and inclusion of the 12 million people in France living with disabilities.

Colette Davidson

Anne-Elisabeth d’Acremont (right), a top French wheelchair basketball and rugby player, answers questions about disability at the University of Paris 8 during the Olympic and Paralympic Week, Saint-Denis, April 4, 2024.

Olympic and Paralympic Games of the past have had an impact on their societies and can provide lessons, but disability rights activists say more needs to be done if Paris is to make true societal change.

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