1 STREETLIFE
Go electric on a classic city tour
With its sights set on banning fossil fuel cars by 2030, Paris is embracing electric vehicles - and you can take one for a spin around the capital's landmarks. Words: Georgia Stephens
Vintage cars, with vintage engines, typically have a lot to say: they grumble around corners, groan up hills and continue to mutter to themselves even when they’ve come to a stop. But this one isn’t like the others. The white-and blue Renault 4L, which rolled off the factory floor in 1955, should be as talkative as the rest of her kind. Yet, all I can hear as we stop at a red light between the honey-coloured apartments of the 8th arrondissement are wafts of French radio, blowing in through the sunroof on the breeze.
From the back seat, it’s hard to tell exactly where it’s coming from — beyond one of the cast iron balconies on either side, perhaps, or the next car over, where a blonde woman is cradling a miniature poodle on her lap.
The light turns green, and the little Renault sparks into life. The engine sounds like a spaceship powering up — there’s an electrical whirring that grows increasingly high pitched. And then we’re away, speeding over the cobbles.
“She’s surprisingly powerful,” driver Renaud Garza calls back with a chuckle from beneath his navy chauffeur’s cap. “With the battery, I can drive at around 75mph.”
This story is from the June 2024 edition of National Geographic Traveller (UK).
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This story is from the June 2024 edition of National Geographic Traveller (UK).
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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