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French village’s action to stop Waze sending cars onto its rural roads
Villagers take action after sat-nav system guides thousand of drivers through country roads to avoid congestion on nearby busy autoroute
Residents of a small French village have seen unwanted traffic - diverted through their quiet commune by a popular sat-nav system - drop to a trickle after installing a simple sign.
For three years, thousands of motorists have driven daily through the quiet streets of Parmain, Val-d'Oise (Ile-de-France) guided by the Waze app which directed them that way to avoid rush-hour congestion on a nearby autoroute.
One resident counted 1,200 cars a day passing her house in the normally quiet village - population 5,500 - most of them at rush hour on roads that were not set-up for such levels of traffic.
But now a simple no-entry sign, except for residents and services, has seen vehicle numbers drop to just 20 a day.
"This is a message sent to Waze, to say that is enough," said Loïc Tallanter, mayor of Parmain.
Some 14million drivers in France regularly use the GPS app, which offers real-time alternative routes to avoid traffic hotspots.
