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Seine reopens to Paris swimmers after century-long ban

134 pointsby divbzeroyesterday at 5:43 PM74 commentsview on HN

Comments

fouronnes3yesterday at 9:13 PM

I'm going to swim a 1000m race [0] there tomorrow morning! Wish me luck HN!

[0] https://openswimstars.com/paris/

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nextosyesterday at 7:25 PM

One of the benefits of EU regulations is that they have brought some order to the dumping of raw sewage into rivers and seas. But there is still a lot of work to do.

Local authorities from lots of EU regions generally avoid measuring water quality after rainy days because raw sewage is still often dumped under those conditions.

Even in Basel, where the Rheine is really clean, authorities sometimes advise not to swim.

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cycomanicyesterday at 8:15 PM

For anyone visiting Paris, the sewer museum is definitely a unique experience and worth a visit (although smelly). It gives you a grasp of what a monumental it was to build the sewers back then. You can also see the overflow reservoirs that dump water into the Seine when there is heavy rain (they were talking about the cleanup efforts leading to the Olympics when I was there some years ago).

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jedimastertyesterday at 6:41 PM

> The seasonal opening of the Seine for swimming is seen as a key legacy of the Paris 2024 Olympics, when open-water swimmers and triathletes competed in its waters which were specially cleaned for the event.

Meanwhile...

> The Olympic legacy of the Seine has taken another hit, with a second athlete taken to hospital after competing in the murky waters.

https://www.thetimes.com/sport/olympics/article/second-olymp...

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bambaxyesterday at 7:22 PM

People living in houseboats along the river have been swimming in the Seine forever. And every summer, young people, possibly a little drunk, jump into the water as a dare from bridges near Notre-Dame.

But yes, this is more mainstream and open to all so it's kind of big news.

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david927yesterday at 6:13 PM

Just beware of the sharks

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Under_Paris

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selimnairbyesterday at 10:35 PM

You know that river was bad if they closed it in 1925.

saltysaltysaltytoday at 4:09 AM

Commendable they’ve been able to remove the organic toxins, but I’m left wondering about PFAS, pesticides, microplastics etc?

cm2187yesterday at 7:47 PM

The water is "so clean" that you have mandatory showers before going in... But it's France, so how would you live without pointless regulations?

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