Senin, 23 November 2015
As of 2013 the City of Paris had 1,570 hotels with 70,034 rooms, of which 55 were rated five-star, mostly belonging to international chains and mostly located close to the centre and the Champs-Élysées. Paris has long been famous for its grand hotels. The Hotel Meurice, opened for British travellers in 1817, was one of the first luxury hotels in Paris. The arrival of the railroads and the Paris Exposition of 1855 brought the first flood of tourists and the first modern grand hotels; the Hôtel du Louvre (now an antiques marketplace) in 1855; the Grand Hotel (now the Intercontinental LeGrand) in 1862; and the Hôtel Continental in 1878. The Hôtel Ritz on Place Vendôme opened in 1898, followed by the Hôtel Crillon in an 18th-century building on the Place de la Concorde in 1909; the Hotel Bristol on rue de Fabourg Saint-Honoré in 1925; and theHotel George V in 1928.
Hotels in Paris

Tourists from around the world make the Louvre the most visited art museum in the world.
Greater Paris (the city plus surrounding departments) received 22,4 million visitors in 2014, making it one of the world's top tourist destinations. The largest numbers of foreign tourists in 2014 came from the United States (2.74 million), the U.K., Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain and China (532,000). Arrivals from the U.K, Germany, Russia and Japan dropped from 2013, while arrivals from the Near and Middle East grew by twenty percent.
In 2014, visitors to Paris spent $17 billion (€13.58 billion), the third-highest sum globally after London and New York. In 2012, according to the Paris Convention and Visitors Bureau, 263,212 salaried workers in the city of Paris, or 18.4 percent of the total number, were engaged in tourism-related sectors: hotels, catering, transport and leisure.
Tourism in Paris
According
to the 2011 census, 59.0 percent of the Paris metropolitan area workforce is in
commerce, transportation, and market services: 26.8 percent worked in
non-market services (public administration, education, human health and social
work activities); 8.6 percent worked in manufacturing, mining, and utilities;
5.3 percent worked in construction; 0.3 percent worked in agriculture.
The
majority of Paris's salaried employees fill 370,000 businesses services jobs,
concentrated in the north-western 8th, 16th and 17th arrondissements. Paris's
financial service companies are concentrated in the central-western 8th and 9th
arrondissement banking and insurance district. Paris's department store district
in the 1st, 6th, 8th and 9th arrondissements employ 10 percent of mostly female
Paris workers, with 100,000 of these registered in the retail trade. Fourteen percent of Parisians work in hotels
and restaurants and other services to individuals. Nineteen percent of
Paris employees work for the State in either in administration or education.
The majority of Paris's healthcare and social workers work at the hospitals and
social housing concentrated in the peripheral 13th, 14th, 18th, 19th and 20th
arrondissements. Outside Paris, the western Hauts-de-Seine department La Défense district
specialising in finance, insurance and scientific research district, employs
144,600, and the north-eastern Seine-Saint-Denis audiovisual sector has
200 media firms and 10 major film studios.
Paris's
manufacturing is mostly focused in its suburbs, and the city itself has only
around 75,000 manufacturing workers, most of which are in the textile,
clothing, leather goods and shoe trades. Paris region manufacturing
specialises in transportation, mainly automobiles, aircraft and trains, but
this is in a sharp decline: Paris proper manufacturing jobs dropped by 64
percent between 1990 and 2010, and the Paris region lost 48 percent during the
same period. Most of this is due to companies relocating outside the Paris
region. The Paris region's 800 aerospace companies employed 100,000. Four
hundred automobile industry companies employ another 100,000 workers: many of
these are centred in the Yvelines department around the Renault and PSA-Citroen
plants (this department alone employs 33,000), but the industry as a whole
suffered a major loss with the 2014 closing of a major Aulnay-sous-Bois Citroen
assembly plant.
The
southern Essonne department
specialises in science and technology, and the south-eastern Val-de-Marne,
with its wholesale Rungis food market,
specialises in food processing and beverages. The Paris region's manufacturing
decline is quickly being replaced by eco-industries: these employ about 100,000
workers. In 2011, while only 56,927 construction workers worked in Paris
itself, its metropolitan area employed 246,639, in an activity
centred largely around the Seine-Saint-Denis (41,378) andHauts-de-Seine (37,303) departments
and the new business-park centres appearing there.
Employment in Paris
The economy of Paris
stretches well beyond its administrative limits, as many of its manufacturing
and service industries are in its closest suburbs. While economic figures are
collected in the Paris region (Île-de-France) and its eight départements,
employment numbers are expressed within Paris, the Paris agglomeration and the Paris aire urbaine (an area similar to the North Americanmetropolitan area).
The Paris Region is
France's premier centre of economic activity, with a 2012 GDP of €624
billion (US$687 billion). In 2011, its GDP
ranked second among the regions of Europe and its per-capita GDP was the 4th
highest in Europe. While the
Paris region's population accounted for 18.8 percent of metropolitan France in
2011, the Paris region's GDP
accounted for 30 percent of metropolitan France's GDP. In 2015 it hosts the world
headquarters of 29 of the 31 Fortune Global 500 companies located in France.
The Parisian economy
has been gradually shifting towards high-value-added service industries (finance,
IT services, etc.) and high-tech manufacturing (electronics, optics, aerospace,
etc.). In the 2013 European Green
City Index, Paris was listed the 10th "greenest"
city of the largest 30 cities in Europe. The
Paris region's most intense economic activity through the central Hauts-de-Seine department and suburban La Défense
business district places Paris's economic centre to the west of the city, in a
triangle between the Opéra Garnier, La Défense and the Val de Seine. While the Paris economy
is dominated by services, and employment in manufacturing
sector has declined sharply, the region remains an important manufacturing
centre, particularly for aeronautics, automobiles, and "eco"
industries.
In a 2015 worldwide
cost of living survey by the Economist
Intelligence Unit, Paris ranked as the world's second most expensive
city. In the survey, it is joined among the most expensive European cities by Oslo, Zurich, Geneva and Copenhagen. The ranking compares more than
400 individual prices across 160 products and services, and is designed to
calculate cost-of-living allowances and build compensation packages for expatriates and business travellers.
Economy in Paris
According to a 2011
survey by IFOP,
a French public opinion research organization, 47 percent of residents of the
Paris Region (Île-de-France) identified themselves as Roman Catholic, though just 15 percent said
they were practicing Catholics, while 46 percent were non-practicing. In the
same survey, 7 percent of residents identified themselves as Muslims, 4 percent
as Protestants, two percent as Jewish, and 25 percent as without religion.
According to INSEE,
the French government statistical office, between 4 and 5 million French
residents were born or had at least one parent born in a predominately Muslim
country, particularly Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia. An IFOP survey in 2008
reported that, of immigrants from these predominantly Muslim countries, 25
percent went to the mosque regularly; 41 percent practiced the religion, and 34
percent were believers but did not practice the religion.
In 2012, Dalil Boubakeur, the Rector of the Grand
Mosque of Paris and former President of the French Council of the Muslim Faith,
estimated that there were 500,000 Muslims in the city of Paris, 1.5 million
Muslims in the Ile-de-France region, and 4 to 5 million Muslims in France.
The Jewish population
of the Paris Region was estimated in 2014 to be 282,000, the largest
concentration of Jews in the world outside of Israel and the United States.
Religion in Paris
Paris is the eighth most expensive city in the world for
luxury housing: €12,105 per square metre (€1,125/sq ft) in 2007 (with Londonat
the most expensive with €36,800 per square metre (€3,420/sq ft)). According
to a 2012 study for the La Tribune newspaper, the most expensive
street is the quai des Orfèvres in the 1st arrondissement, with an average price
of €20,665 per square metre (€1,920/sq ft), against €3,900 per square
metre (€360/sq ft) for rue Pajol in the 18th arrondissement.
The total number of residences in the city of Paris in 2011
was 1,356,074, up from a former high of 1,334,815 in 2006. Among these,
1,165,541 (85.9 percent) were main residences, 91,835 (6.8 percent) were
secondary residences, and the remaining 7.3 percent were empty (down from 9.2
percent in 2006).
Paris urban tissue began to fill and overflow its 1860
limits from around the 1920s, and because of its density, it has seen few
modern constructions since then. Sixty-two percent of its buildings date from
1949 and before, 20 percent were built between 1949 and 1974, and only 18
percent of the buildings remaining were built after that date.
Two-thirds of the city's 1.3 million residences are studio
and two-room apartments. Paris averages 1.9 people per residence, a number that
has remained constant since the 1980s, but it is much less than Île-de-France's
2.33 person-per-residence average. Only 33 percent of principal-residence
Parisians own their habitation (against 47 percent for the entire
Île-de-France): the major part of the city's population is a rent-paying one.
Social housing represents a little more than 17 percent of
the city's total residences, but these are rather unevenly distributed
throughout the capital: the vast majority of these are concentrated in a
crescent formed by Paris's south-western to northern periphery arrondissements.
In 2012 the Paris agglomeration (urban area) counted 28,800
people without a fixed residence, an increase of 84 percent since 2001; it
represents 43 percent of the homeless in all of France. Forty-one percent were
women, and 29 percent were accompanied by children. Fifty-six percent of the
homeless were born outside of France, the largest number coming from Africa and
Eastern Europe. The city of Paris has sixty homeless shelters, called Centres
d'hébergement et de réinsertion sociale or CHRS, which are funded by
the city and operated by private charities and associations.
Housing in Paris
Paris has a typical Western European oceanic
climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfb )
which is affected by the North Atlantic Current. The overall
climate throughout the year is mild and moderately wet. Summer days are usually warm and pleasant with
average temperatures hovering between 15 and 25 °C (59 and 77 °F),
and a fair amount of sunshine. Each year, however, there are a few days
where the temperature rises above 32 °C (90 °F). Some years have even
witnessed long periods of harsh summer weather, such as theheat wave of 2003 when temperatures
exceeded 30 °C (86 °F) for weeks, surged up to 40 °C
(104 °F) on some days and seldom cooled down at night. More recently, the average temperature for
July 2011 was 17.6 °C (63.7 °F), with an average minimum temperature
of 12.9 °C (55.2 °F) and an average maximum temperature of
23.7 °C (74.7 °F).
Spring
and autumn have, on average, mild days and fresh nights but are changing and
unstable. Surprisingly warm or cool weather occurs frequently in both seasons. In
winter, sunshine is scarce; days are cold but generally above freezing with
temperatures around 7 °C (45 °F). Light night frosts are however
quite common, but the temperature will dip below −5 °C (23 °F) for
only a few days a year. Snow falls every year, but rarely stays on the ground.
The city sometimes sees light snow or flurries with or without accumulation.
Paris
has an average annual precipitation of 652 mm (25.7 in), and
experiences light rainfall distributed evenly throughout the year. However the
city is known for intermittent abrupt heavy showers. The highest recorded
temperature is 40.4 °C (104.7 °F) on 28 July 1948, and the lowest is
a −23.9 °C (−11.0 °F) on 10 December 1879.
[hide]Climate data for
Paris (Parc Montsouris), 1981–2010
|
|||||||||||||
Month
|
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
Year
|
Record
high °C (°F)
|
16.1
(61) |
21.4
(70.5) |
25.7
(78.3) |
30.2
(86.4) |
34.8
(94.6) |
37.6
(99.7) |
40.4
(104.7) |
39.5
(103.1) |
36.2
(97.2) |
28.4
(83.1) |
21
(70) |
17.1
(62.8) |
40.4
(104.7) |
Average
high °C (°F)
|
7.2
(45) |
8.3
(46.9) |
12.2
(54) |
15.6
(60.1) |
19.6
(67.3) |
22.7
(72.9) |
25.2
(77.4) |
25.0
(77) |
21.1
(70) |
16.3
(61.3) |
10.8
(51.4) |
7.5
(45.5) |
16.0
(60.8) |
Daily
mean °C (°F)
|
5.0
(41) |
5.6
(42.1) |
8.8
(47.8) |
11.5
(52.7) |
15.3
(59.5) |
18.3
(64.9) |
20.6
(69.1) |
20.4
(68.7) |
16.9
(62.4) |
13.0
(55.4) |
8.3
(46.9) |
5.5
(41.9) |
12.5
(54.5) |
Average
low °C (°F)
|
2.7
(36.9) |
2.8
(37) |
5.3
(41.5) |
7.3
(45.1) |
10.9
(51.6) |
13.8
(56.8) |
15.8
(60.4) |
15.7
(60.3) |
12.7
(54.9) |
9.6
(49.3) |
5.8
(42.4) |
3.4
(38.1) |
8.5
(47.3) |
Record
low °C (°F)
|
−14.6
(5.7) |
−14.7
(5.5) |
−9.1
(15.6) |
−3.5
(25.7) |
−0.1
(31.8) |
3.1
(37.6) |
6
(43) |
6.3
(43.3) |
1.8
(35.2) |
−3.1
(26.4) |
−14
(7) |
−23.9
(−11) |
−23.9
(−11) |
Average precipitation mm
(inches)
|
53.7
(2.114) |
43.7
(1.72) |
48.5
(1.909) |
53
(2.09) |
65
(2.56) |
54.6
(2.15) |
63.1
(2.484) |
43
(1.69) |
54.7
(2.154) |
59.7
(2.35) |
51.9
(2.043) |
58.7
(2.311) |
649.6
(25.575) |
Average
precipitation days
|
10.2
|
9.3
|
10.4
|
9.4
|
10.3
|
8.6
|
8
|
6.9
|
8.5
|
9.5
|
9.7
|
10.7
|
111.5
|
Mean
monthly sunshine hours
|
62.5
|
79.2
|
128.9
|
166.0
|
193.8
|
202.1
|
212.2
|
212.2
|
167.9
|
117.8
|
67.7
|
51.4
|
1,661.7
|
Climate in Paris
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