St Pierre will never be a 15-minute city according to mayor

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Posts on a website by residents have prompted the mayor of St Pierre-Jolys to come forward and address the issue of the village becoming a 15-minute city.

“So, there’s no plans, no nothing to become (an) actual 15-minute city,” said Mayor Raymond Maynard.

The concept of 15-minute cities was first introduced by urban scientist Carlos Moreno about 10 years ago at the Paris United Nations Climate Change Conference. The concept centers around creating cities that provide access to services, education, employment, and other necessities of life within a 15-minute walk, bike ride, or public transit ride.

Maynard said the whole issue of St Pierre becoming a 15-minute city came about when the village applied for a federal innovation grant about six or seven years ago. The village applied for the $1 million fund to build a net zero building; it never got the grant.

What the village didn’t notice on the grant application was that there was a clause in there that discussed 15-minute cities.

“So, I think that’s where all the uproar has come out because people think that we’re wanting to do this. We’re not part of this 15-minute city. It just happened to be part of that grant,” he said.

According to a paper published on the Science Direct website, the concept gained worldwide attention during the 2020 Paris mayoral re-election campaign of Anne Hidalgo, where Moreno was scientific advisor to the campaign. Hidalgo centred her platform around making Paris a 15-minute city. Since then, several cities around the world followed suit.

In 2024, there were 98 cities identified as either planning or implementing the 15-minute city concept, or similar concepts, and that most cities are already in the initial stages of executing their 15-minute city strategies, according to the paper.

Europe yielded the largest share of case studies with 58, followed by North America with 22, Asia and Oceania both with eight, and South America with two examples. No case studies were identified on the African continent. Some of the cities that have implemented this concept or one like it are Barcelona, Melbourne, Paris, Zagreb, and Portland.

The paper states that since the end of the Second World War, there has been a move from a “concept of proximity” to one of urban sprawl supported by the growing use of cars, expansion of highways, and mass consumerism as people sought larger living spaces and more amenities.

As a consequence of this, the environment has been affected by the increased use of vehicles on the road which perpetuates greenhouse gases and the loss of land for greenspaces or housing in order to build infrastructure for roads and highways.

Ironically, St Pierre is much like a 15-mintue city as it takes that long to walk from one end of the village to the other, according to Maynard.

“The only thing I want the people to know is…instead of listening to rumors, phone the office and find out what’s going on. This is what precipitated me to ask for this (interview) because there’s rumours (that) keep going around and nobody phones the office to get the information. And people assume that we’re doing stuff that is a detriment to their livelihood, and we’re not.”

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