Urban Policy, Priority Neighborhood, QPV, Village Mozart, Sarcelles, socio-economic inequalities, housing quality, employment access, education level, public spaces, urban rehabilitation
This document provides an urban analysis of the Village Mozart neighborhood in Sarcelles, classified as a Priority Neighborhood of the City (QPV) under France's urban policy, highlighting its socio-economic challenges and proposed improvements.
[...] This has several consequences: first, such a weakening limits access to diversified goods and services, and also directly affects the village populations who see job offers decrease. But that's not all. A particular look can also be made on the problems of aerial parking that the village proposes. This problem, which appears to be of little importance on the surface, raises in reality problems for the residents of the village who are then confronted with a significant lack of space to park their vehicle and access their home correctly. [...]
[...] It is essential here to ensure places of relaxation, entertainment and interaction for the populations. It is thus in the interest of the village to promote the creation of public spaces to improve the quality of life of the population and promote social development Thus, through the evocation of these new constraints, we also understand the many cultural problems that the city must face. It is then in this tense context and in the face of a situation that is most alarming in terms of community well-being, the policies will put in place a number of projects and collaborations aimed at changing the situation and allowing the village to improve its standard of living III. [...]
[...] The Village Mozart neighborhood in Sarcelles belongs to the category of 'HLM neighborhoods in distant suburbs of large urban units'. Sarcelles is a commune in the Val-d'Oise and has 58,483 inhabitants in 20201 ; Located about ten kilometers from Paris, it is a spatial crossroads between urban and agricultural spaces that opens onto the Ecouen forest to the north, and resonates with diverse activity poles: the Saint-Denis plain and the activities of the Roissy Charles de Gaulle airport (east of Sarcelles). [...]
[...] Social-Spatial Cohesion We can finally observe attention being paid to spatial and visual cohesion in rehabilitation projects for buildings. For example, through the project of opening up the neighborhood to the rest of the city by valorizing the Petit Rosne5, we perceive the will of the politicians to make sure the neighborhood is no longer isolated. The city even organized a discovery workshop in February 2024 for young people aged 11 to 17 around the river and the challenges of water management6. [...]
[...] Here, we can see that the village of Mozart in Sarcelles meets a certain number of these criteria. In fact, if we evaluate this village, we can first note problems related to the unemployment rate, or the quality of housing in the area, which directly impacts the village's classification as a QPV. First, if we look at urban analysis, we can see that the urban forms are particularly diversified in the village neighborhood, but present very few collective habitats, which presents multiple problems that we will see. [...]
APA Style reference
For your bibliographyOnline reading
with our online readerContent validated
by our reading committee