Showing posts with label French. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Paris 1st Arrondissement

The 1st arrondissement of Paris is historically one of the most central, oldest, one of the smallest by area and one of the least populated arrondissements of Paris. In the official documents it is also called “Arrondissement du Louvre”, as the Museum of Louvre occupies a big part of it and plays a very important role in the life of the arrondissement.

Discover my vision on the 1st arrondissement of Paris on Flickr.

Borderlines of the arrondissement:

South: the Seine (with its quays, bridges and l’Île de la Cité)
North: boulevard de la Madeleine and Jardin des Tuileries
East: rues Etienne Marcel, des Petits Champs and its “Japanese” district of Pyramides
West: boulevard de Sébastopol and the Châtelet area

Places to see:

Île de la Cité, le jardin des Tuileries, Musée du Louvre (la Pyramide du Louvre, la Cour Carrée), Palais-Royal, Les Halles, Place du Châtelet (Théâtre du Châtelet), Place Vendôme, Pont des Arts, Pont Neuf

Streets to walk:

Rue Rivoli, rue Saint Honoré, rue Sainte Anne, rue Saint-Denis, rue des Pyramides

Metro Stations:

Concorde, Tuileries, Palais Royal – Musée du Louvre, Louvre – Rivoli, Châtelet, Châtelet les Halles, Etienne Marcel, Pyramides, Pont Neuf

Inevitable things to do:

Preferably on a sunny day, especially during the April-September period, take a book and go the Jardin des Tuileries and have a seat on one of the green metallic chairs. The best option is to take two chairs for you: one “armchair” with a tilt and a second chair for your legs - you will see, this is just precious to be reading a book, sunbathing and enjoying this place full of tourists, but still calm and relaxing.

Then head to the quays, go along the Seine and have a break at the Pont des Arts: this place is very special, one more time, especially during the April-September period, when Parisians come here to have a picnic, to chat, to play the guitar and simply to relax. On some summer evenings you can hardly advance to the middle of the bridge, as it is full of picnickers.

From the Pont des Arts you can see the end of the Ile de la Cité – the famous island in the heart of Paris. This is another great place to have an “apéro” or a picnic on a sunny day, or simply after a working summer day. Here you are surrounded with the Seine, with people drinking beer/wine, and eating cheese, “charcuterie” with baguettes. So Parisian, so French and so charming!

Cafés to try (My “Péché Mignon” list) :

If you are a fan of Japanese food (by Japanese I don’t mean just “sushi”, but all the other real Japapese “Lamen” dishes) – you should absolutely walk through the rue Saint Anne – full of all kind of Japanese restaurants. The best one, to my mind, is a place called HIGUMA, you will easily recognize it by the queue outside the café. But no worries, the queue moves fast, and the food is really worth waiting! Inside you can see the preparation of the dishes with your own eyes, as the Lamen kitchen is just in the room. The cooking process is just fascinating with its big Wok pans, the fire, the vapour in the air, and the sounds psh-psh-psh. The menu is both in Japanese and in English, except form the walls, where it’s only in Japanese. The inevitable dish is one of the Lamen soups which costs around 7.5- 8.5€ (bear in mind, the portion is so huge, that you will need to eat it with a break to breath J ). But if you want to take the best of this place (and feel full for the rest of the day), take a menu of a Lamen soup with the Gyozas, simply yummy!

After such a lunch break, it’s high time to have a walk, so let’s continue walking down the Rue Saint Anne and discover the 2nd Arrondissement.

Paris and its 20 arrondissements

An important point to know before discovering Paris arrondissement by arrondissement is that sometimes you might be contemplating some building at the crossroads and find out that in fact it is situated in another arrondissement than you are. Or you can start walking down a street in one arrondissement and in the end of the street find out that you are actually already in another one. This has already happened to me at least twice:
·         at the Opera metro station – the Place de l’Opéra – when you stand in the middle of the square, the first thing you see is the Opera building. But be aware, in this case, that you are in the 2nd arrondissement and the Opera is in the 9th ;
·         at the rue Sainte-Anne near the Pyramides metro station – this street links the 1st and the 2nd arrondissements and belongs to both.
And there are many other places like this in Paris (at the crossroads, in the middle of the bridges over the river Seine, at the squares, and so on). The most fascinating point is that often, when being in some certain district, you can still easily identify it by its specific characteristics. And exactly this makes every arrondissement a city within a bigger city.