Champs-Élysées & Trocadéro

The 16th arrondissement – known as the Chaillot Quarter – was formally the village of Chaillot, which was absorbed into Paris in the 19th century, and architecturally transformed by Haussmann into the grand avenues and opulent mansions it is today. Many are now embassies, but it still remains Paris’ most exclusive residential area.

Directly in front of the Eiffel Tower across the Seine is the Jardin Trocadéro, its fountains beautifully lit at night, where crowds congregate to watch the fireworks, the highlight of the 14 July celebrations. Underneath the Jardin Trocadéro is the recently reopened aquarium alongside ‘CineAqua’, a showcase for animation, and the unique Japanese restaurant Ozu, where you can watch the piscine habitats while eating… raw fish!

The Place du Trocadéro was built for the 1878 Universal Exhibition along with the Palais de Trocadéro. The Palais was demolished to make way for the new Palais de Chaillot, a curved, winged building, built for the World Fair of 1937 – a fusion of neo-classical architecture and Art Deco – which is home to four museums and a theatre.

From here, the avenue President Wilson – which has Paris’ largest concentration of museums – leads you to the funky Palais de Tokyo, which combines contemporary art, ‘fooding’ and shopping in one stripped-down warehouse space. The Galliera opposite is Paris’ fashion museum, housing over 100,000 outfits from the 18th century to the present day… but if you’d rather buy than simply look, then the adjoining arrondissement of the 8th is shopping central (for the posh shops, at least).

Probably the most famous shopping stretch in Paris is the avenue des Les Champs-Élysées. Though heavily commercialized, it is still the chicest ‘high-street’ in the world, with its wide pavements and cafés, chestnut trees and bordered flowerbeds that turn into larger green spaces towards the place de la Concorde. Within the greenery sit the new additions to Paris’ already long list of art galleries, the ‘Grand’ and the ‘Petit’ Palais, both built for the Universal Exhibition of 1900, as was the incredibly ornate rococo Alexandre III bridge, which, with its nymphs and cherubs, is super-kitsch.

Following years of neglect, both the ‘Grand’ and the ‘Petit’ Palais have been renovated over the last decade. The ‘Grand’ holds temporary exhibitions (it’s also where the Germans kept their tanks) and is worth visiting just to see the magnificent glass cupola, ironwork and glass Art Nouveau roof. The Petit now houses the Musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris, the place to go if you like Ingres, Delacroix and Courbet. Your transition from the 16th to the 8th doesn’t alter the level of swank: you enter the ‘golden triangle’, and you drool at the shop windows of the swish rue Faubourg-Saint-Honoré. Don’t wear anything but haute-designer – it’s important to look the part when stopping off for extortionate cocktails at any of the area’s exclusive hotel bars.


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