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How France turned the humble roundabout into a showcase

How France turned the humble roundabout into a showcase

By Tsunami KarkiPublished 3 years ago 3 min read
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How France turned the humble roundabout into a showcase

With more than 50 important film productions, Claude Lelouch is one of France's most important film directors. In another famous incident, he was chased by a police officer in Paris. The officer said his driver's license had been confiscated as a result of the incident.

Two people knew exactly the way and Claude put it on a walkie-talkie between these two blind spots to warn another road. When the audio film didn't work, he thought the crossroads were clear. There were 18 red lights in total, but the fast cars were real.

Long before the advent of GoPro cameras, French film directors made a short film about cars running around Paris in the early hours of Sunday morning. It was a major hit in the movie theater in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

A shocking incident, in which large blue gatherings are taking place in northern France, was the responsibility of people watching the practice in large numbers. An amazing video of the city of Nancy was posted on YouTube a few weeks ago by an 18-year-old student. The rallies reportedly first appeared last month, on July 5, at Vimy Field near Lens, sparking curiosity and excitement among thousands of people.

Switzerland is not the only country that uses a modest cycle as a stage for works of art, and its ornate street objects are full and eye-catching. The images include large snails that look like mirrors, large chairs, and paper boats that appear to work.

In France, hundreds of thousands of commuters, tourists, and truck drivers across the country each year hear the art of road rotation from region to region. The French are very proud of their roadworthiness, and there are no less than 500,000 robots in the country.

Friederike Schmider has established the country's most famous gyroscopic art projects and is one of the first contacts of many municipalities when it comes to creating new works of art.

Ever since French mayors began to spend a lot of money on such things after coming to power in the 1980s, ornaments around the streets turned crosses into artistic expressions. It turns out that the roundabouts - at a crossroads of modesty and improvement - have invaded France's rural areas, disrupting order. In Corneille, north of Paris, and on the outskirts of Paris, new roads have been planted in the empty streets with tulips that bloom like construction grass in the spring.

Anyone who has ever passed through France will have seen a large number of roundabouts directing traffic. In the United States, for example, there are only 4,800 free-standing roads, and a quarter of all road deaths occur at intersections.

New here, you may be interested in downloading this guide to 20 amazing places in Paris. If not, or if this is the first time you have been there, you may be interested in downloading this guide to 20 of the most amazing places in Paris.

When crops such as winter wheat and barley are grown, many nitrogen fertilizers throughout Europe are shrinking as the prices of their most valuable commodities, natural gas, rise. Fields need fertilizer when they melt next year to increase yield and quality.

French corn producers will ban planting next year to harvest crops that do not need as much nitrogen as sunflowers, said Benoit Pietrement, chairman of the Cereals Council, Franceagrimer's cultural office. In Paris, the future of wheat goes with caution after eight years of global decline.

Google alleges that Epic violated its developer agreement by updating Fortnite with the hotfix "Fortnite 2020" to avoid paying Google Play developers - fees and enrichment at Google's expense. Epic has come a long way in its launch and has called users safe, says Google.

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About the Creator

Tsunami Karki

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