Marne-la-Vallée key figurest_1037
Transcription
Marne-la-Vallée key figurest_1037
2009 Marne-la-Vallée KEY figures © Éric Morency / Architect: Cabinet Derbesse © Éric Morency / Architect: Olivier-Clément Cacoub © Émile Luider / Architects: Pier Carlo Bontempi-Hertenberger and Vitry / Landscape architect: Atelier de l’Île Population count Progression in population count 1975 GC 1982 GC 1990 GC 1999 2006 2008 103 ,400 152 ,200 211,000 246,400 279,460 293,500 Source for 2006: INSEE Source for 2008: EPAMARNE /EPAFRANCE estimates From 1975 to 2008, the number of inhabitants increased by a factor of over 2.75, going from 103,400 to 293,500 inhabitants. Progression in population count per sector Number of inhabitants Sector I Sector II Sector III Sector IV Marne-la-Vallée total RGP 1999* 99,849 85,128 49,510 11,884 246,371 2006 106,511 86,602 63,892 22,445 279,460 2008 107,900 87,900 70,900 26,800 293,500 * 1999 GCP: French General Census of Population, conducted by INSEE (French National Institute for Statistics) • 2006 data: INSEE sources, census as of 01/01/2006 • 2008 data: EPAMARNE/EPAFRANCE estimates 2006 GCP data • 103,839 households with an average 2.7 persons per household • 45.1% of inhabitants are under 30 (against 40.8% in Île-de-France) • 23.5% of inhabitants are between 30 and 44 (against 23% in Île-de-France) • 20% of inhabitants are between 45 and 59 (against 19.7% in Île-de-France) • 11.4% of inhabitants are 60 or over (against 16.5% in Île-de-France) Jobs 78,039 jobs in 1999 and 131,364 in 2007, representing 53,325 additional jobs over an eight-year period (source: INSEE CLAP (Connaissance locale de l’appareil productif / Local Knowledge of Production Means)). Progression in the number of jobs GC 1982 GC 1999 ERE 2000 2004 2007 42,410 78,039 111,462 121,686 131,364 Source for 2000: Regional survey on employment (ERE / Enquête régionale sur l’emploi) conducted by INSEE Source for 2004 and 2007: INSEE CLAP (excluding non-salaried, home-based, farming and defence jobs) 2006 GCP data • 28% intermediate jobs • 20% self-employed professionals and executives • 16% blue-collar • 32% white-collar • 4% farmers, craftsmen, small business managers and retailers Employment geographic breakdown (based on a Louis Harris survey conducted in February 2005) • 44% of the employed who live in Marne-laVallée work there (against 37% in 1990) • 23% work in the other municipalities east of Paris (against 25% in 1990) • 21% work in Paris (against 29% in 1990) • 11% work in Île-de-France (against 8% in 1990) • 1% work outside Île-de-France Sector I Sector II Sector III Sector IV Marne-la-Vallée total 37,336 41,786 29,099 23,143 131,364 Source for 2007: EPAMARNE/EPAFRANCE estimates Number of lived-in housing units per sector in 2007 (main residence)* Secteur I Secteur II Secteur III Secteur IV Total Marne-la-Vallée 42,030 30,770 25,560 9,630 107,990 Source: EPAMARNE/EPAFRANCE estimates * Including student housing and hostels Progression in the number of lived-in housing units (main residence) GC 1975 GC 1982 GC 1990 GC 1999 2007 32,875 49,942 69,517 87,161 107,996 © Éric Morency Source for 1975 to 1999: INSEE, general or complementary census of population Source for 2007: French tax authority (Direction Générale des Impôts) Strongly identified channels of development (source: CLAP 2007) • Tourist industry: 21,273 jobs within over 200 businesses (besides Euro Disney, one can mention UCPA’s tourist and leisure park, as well as hotels: Holiday Inn, Novotel, Adagio, Mercure, etc.) • Sustainable development: 11,504 jobs within 530 businesses (preventive and curative eco-industry, research, further education, etc.) • Finance and Back-office: 6,289 jobs within over 500 structures (Groupama, LCL, French Ministry of Finance, Banque de France, Natixis, etc.) • Health: the Montévrain/Jossigny cluster around the hospital Housing Housing breakdown according to number of rooms (2006 GCP) • 1 and 2 rooms: 22% • 3 and 4 rooms: 51% • 5 rooms or more: 27% Main residence housing type (2006 GCP) • Individual house: 38% • Collective block of flats (2 units or more): 60% • Other housing: 2% © Éric Morency 72,098 housing units produced in Marne-laVallée from inception to 2007* • Sector I: 17,798 (68% of land purchase amortisation sold by the EPA) • Sector II: 27,417 (77.5% of land purchase amortisation sold by the EPA) • Sector III: 17,450 (81% of land purchase amortisation sold by the EPA) • Sector IV: 9,433 (97.6% of land purchase amortisation sold by the EPA) © Éric Morency / Architect: Sirvin Travel time Number TGV from Chessy/ of trains Marne-la-Vallée* daily** Nantes Bordeaux Lille Lyon Marseille Nice London Brussels Strasbourg *EPAMARNE/EPAFRANCE figures. Main residence occupant’s status (2006 GCP) • Owners: 56% • Rentals or sublets: 42%, including subsidised rentals (HLM): 23% • Housed for free: 2% 2 h 52 3 h 57 1 h 10 1 h 50 3 h 36 6 h 07 2 h 42 1 h 30 2 h 24 Sources: SNCF * Shortest average travel time in May 2010 ** May 2010 Office space business Marne-la-Vallée represents 1.5 million m² in committed office space since 1970, providing an offer that is diverse and comparable to that found in Paris: • Fully dividable surfaces • May be purchased or rented • Close to the RER • Highly convenient airport access 55 business parks and service-sector centres A wide diversity in the offer: • Small lots from 1,500 to 2,500 m² within business areas • Medium lots from 5,000 to 10,000 m² within business parks • Highly extensive surfaces for warehouses, head offices, etc. Roads, car parks, public transport Main TGV destinations from Marne-la-Vallée 5 7 22 11 7 2 1 6 3 Airport and rail connections • Marne-la-Vallée is located 7 minutes from Roissy CDG airport via TGV (23 trips daily) departing from Chessy/Marne-la-Vallée railway station • 40 minutes from Roissy CDG (one trip hourly) and Orly (40 trips daily) airports via road shuttle • About 20 minutes from Gare de l’Est station via the SNCF rail network and 20 minutes from Gare de Lyon station via RER A • 30 minutes from Massy-TGV station (15 trips daily) departing from Chessy/ Marne-la-Vallée railway station Roads and motorways • Marne-la-Vallée is 30 minutes from Porte de Bercy in Paris • The Francilienne (A104, A4, RN104): 13 kilometres and 7 interchanges • The A4 motorway: 11 interchanges and 23 kilometres • The Route de la Marne (RD199): 5.5 kilometres and 5 interchanges • The Route de la Brie (RD499): 2 kilometres and 3 interchanges • The RD934 linking the A104 to the RD231: 4.5 kilometres and 4 interchanges Public transport • RER A line: 9 stations (Bry-sur-Marne, Noisy-le-Grand/Mont-d’Est, Noisy-Champs, Noisiel-Le-Luzard, Lognes-Le-Mandinet, Torcy, Bussy Saint-Georges, Serris/ Montévrain/Val d’Europe and Chessy/ Marne-la-Vallée); close to 113,000 incoming passengers daily, one RER train every 3 to 10 minutes at peak times, less than every 15 minutes off-peak. Marne-la-Vallée to Châtelet-les-Halles (central Paris) takes from 18 minutes (from Bry-sur-Marne) to 40 minutes (from Chessy) • RER E line: 4 stations (Chelles, Villiers-surMarne, Les Yvris and Émerainville) • One Transilien rail line: 3 stations (Chelles, Vaires-sur-Marne and Lagny-sur-Marne) • 34 city bus lines: 17 lines on the RATP network serving sectors I and II, and 17 lines on the PEP’S regional network serving sectors III and IV • Intercity bus lines Car parks • 5,020 spots in RER A relay car parks Retail and hotels Parks and gardens Shops As of late 2009, 603,200 m² (net surface area) had been committed since 1970, representing a total effective capacity of 733,400 m². • 3,800 hectares in equipped parks, including 2,000 hectares (or 70 parks) accessible to all • Numerous wooded areas, including in foremost position the Ferrières-en-Brie regional forest (2,900 hectares) • About 60 landscaped lakes and pools • Over 3,000 hectares in farming land (35 farms) 4 major shopping centres • Les Arcades in Noisy-le-Grand (70,000 m²) • Bay 1/Bay 2 shopping centers in Torcy and Collégien (105,000 m² in total) • Le Clos du Chêne in Chanteloup/Montévrain (31,000 m²) • Val d’Europe in Serris (90,000 m²) P.02 _ Marne-la-Vallée, key figures - 2009 Hotels and hotel residences 55 hôtels et résidences hôtelières : • 99 hotels (including 2 three-star hotels and one hotel residence) within Portes de Paris • 13 hotels (including 2 three-star hotels and one hotel residence) within Val Maubuée • 17 hotels (including 3 three-star hotels) within Val de Bussy • 16 hotels (including 5 four-star hotels, 4 three-star hotels and 3 hotel residences) within Val d’Europe EPAMARNE/Epafrance © Éric Morency Number of jobs in 2007 per sector Breakdown per sector • Portes de Paris: 3 lakes and pools, 16 equipped parks open to the public EPAMARNE/Epafrance (77 hectares) and 4 private parks (291 hectares) • Val Maubuée: 28 lakes and pools, 30 parks open to the public (895 hectares) and 12 private parks (603 hectares) • Val de Bussy: 14 lakes and pools, 15 public parks (1,004 hectares) and 12 private parks (758 hectares) • Val d’Europe: 22 lakes and pools, 9 public parks (42 hectares) and 8 private parks (138 hectares) Marne-la-Vallée, key figures - 2009 _ P.03 About twenty higher-education establishments Number of students in 2009-2010Total 2009-2010(1) 275 schools from kindergarten to secondary • 115 kindergartens • 114 primary schools • 32 collèges (high schools) • 14 lycées (grammar schools) 79,057 youth and children attending school • 34,647 kindergarten and primary school pupils • 15,970 collège (high school) pupils • 9,918 lycée (grammar school) pupils • 18,522 post-secondary students Sector I Advanced technical sections: 287 Marne-la-Vallée universities: Sector II Sector III Sector IV 450 154 891 Institut Universitaire de Technologie(2) 1,533 1,533 Universities, including Institut Francilien d’Ingénierie(2) 1,007 7,016 1,336 9,359 Universities total 1,007 8,549 1,336 10,892 Leading schools and miscellaneous institutions: école Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées 1,271 école Nationale des Sciences Géographiques 225 1,271 225 ESIEE - ESIEE Management - ESTE - ISBS(3) 1,200 1,200 école d’architecture 582 582 Institut Français d’Urbanisme (IFU) 230 230 école du Trésor, Ministry of Finance 500 500 école Nationale des Impôts 552 552 École Louis-Lumière for Cinema and Photography 150 IFSI (Institut de Formation en Soins Infirmiers) 150 168 168 Stederen/HEIG (Hautes études d’Information et de Gestion) 220 220 école Supérieure de Commerce ESMA 771 771 CFAI Ingénieurs 2000 (Centre de Formation d’Apprentis de l’Industrie) 870 870 Leading schools total Grand total of students in Marne-la-Vallée 702 1,996 5,869 14,868 154 168 6,739 1,504 18,522 (1) PhD students are now enlisted with Paris-Est University, which explains the drop in numbers at Cité Descartes. (2) Temporary data, and excluding Meaux IUT students (598 students). (3) École Supérieure d’Ingénieurs en Électronique et Électrotechnique, École Supérieure de Techniciens en Électronique, Institut Supérieur des Biosciences. © Éric Morency / Landscape architect: Ronald Fream Other facilities Childhood and early childhood • 53 collective and family daycares • 71 leisure centres Health and social • 2 hospitals • 2 clinics • 2 out-patient hospitals • 19 institutions for the aged • 8 consulting centres for the protection of mothers and children • 9 institutions for disabled adults and children Contact: EPAMARNE/EPAFRANCE Local Planning and Development Authorities for Marne-la-Vallée New Town 5, boulevard Pierre-Carle – BP 01 – Noisiel 77426 Marne-la-Vallée – Cedex 2 – France Phone: + 33 (0)1 64 62 44 44 Fax: + 33 (0)1 64 80 58 44 @mail : [email protected] www.epa-marnelavallee.fr www.developpementdurable-mlv.org Sports • 3 golf courses • 6 riding schools • 6 swimming pools • 28 tennis centres • 49 gymnasiums • 34 stadia and major game fields • A UCPA tourist and leisure park in Torcy (extends 90 hectares, including 25 hectares of lakes and pools: mountain biking, P.04 _ Marne-la-Vallée, key figures - 2009 pony rides, swimming, canoeing, windsurfing, etc.) Leisure, culture and heritage • 18 libraries/media libraries • 19 music schools • 1 National School of Music and Drama • 47 cinema theatres • 7 cultural centres (including the MichelSimon centre in Noisy-le-Grand and La Ferme du Buisson in Noisiel) • 16 multi-purpose halls • 18 open houses and youth centres • 8 chateaux • 4 museums • Numerous festivals (at La Ferme du Buisson or at Disney Village, etc.) and concerts (at File 7 Hall in Magny-le-Hongre in particular) held all year round • Disney Village Festival and both Disney leisure parks, Europe’s leading tourist destination with close to 15.4 million visitors in 2009 EPAMARNE/Epafrance ROBINSON CREAPRESS © EPAMARNE/EPAFRANCE Photo Library – Printed on recycled paper by Champagnac. Schools, HIGH Schools, Grammar Schools, Universities and Leading Schools