Louvre & Palais Royal

It’s no coincidence that the numbering of the Parisian arrondissements begins here: the Louvre, the Tuileries and Palais Royal form the geographical and royal heart of Paris, while the Seine runs through the city like its life blood. One cannot wander around this area without thinking of France’s past monarchy. Stroll through the formal Tuileries gardens, loved by Monet and Renoir, and picture the Royal Palace, burnt down by Communists in 1871, where Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette were kept under house arrest.

Today, a summer pleasure fair and Ferris wheel, offering the most outstanding views of Paris as well as the soaring sense of touching the sky, have replaced the angry mobs of the Revolution. Another sight worth catching on the way to the Louvre is through the Arc du Carrousel, which frames a view of the Concorde obelisk, the Arc de Triomphe and La Défence in almost perfect alignment.

The Louvre began life as a royal palace in the 13th century, and served as a power base right up to the German Occupation, when its rooms were used as offices. It is also a symbol of power: President Mitterand used it as an opportunity to reaffirm his presidential legacy by commissioning I.M. Pei to build the glass pyramid entrance. The Louvre houses the world’s largest art collection, where crowds of culture-vultures, tourists and now Da Vinci coders flock. They take their sight-seeing breaks sitting on the edge of the water features surrounding the pyramid, under the watchful eyes of flâneurs sipping Kir Royals at Le Café Marly on the Cour Napoleon du Louvre.

The Palais Royal opposite is an arcaded retreat, where the area’s past residents, including Colette and Jean Cocteau, Napoleon and Victor Hugo, dined at Le Grand Véfour, one of the oldest restaurants in Paris. Alongside the restaurant you’ll find boutiques offering, among other things, vintage fashion and military medals, as well as parfumeur Serge Lutens’ first shop. Behind the Palais Royal is the wonderfully old-   fashioned shopping arcade Galerie Vivienne and the Bibliothèque Nationale Richelieu, where noteworthy contemporary photography exhibitions take place.

Napoleon crops up again, this time in the form of a bronze statue at the centre of the place Vendôme, which is rather apt as this square quietly exudes snobbishness and self-importance. It is home to the Ritz and haute-joaillerie names such as Cartier and Boucheron. Follow on from here down the shop-lined rue de la Paix to see Charles Garnier’s magnificent neo-baroque opera house, perhaps stopping off at the tourist hot-spot Café de la Paix, if you fancy it.

At the other end of avenue de l’Opéra, crossing right through the 1st arrondissement, is rue du Saint-Honoré, a continuation of the luxurious shopping stretch of the rue du Faubourg-St-Honoré in the 8th, and of equal shopping interest. Concept store Colette, at no. 213, is a must for any fashion slave.

Les Halles, the 19th-century food market, was torn down in 1969 to make way for the huge and monstrous shopping complex, Forum des Halles, now terrorized by kids from ‘les banlieues’ who come to roam the teen-spirit shops of the vicinity (the Forum is a major RER-métro station connecting the suburbs to the city). Until mayor Bertrand Delanoë fulfils his promise to regenerate the site, avoid it.

However, rue de Montorgueil is pleasant place for a stroll, and is home to one of Paris’ most exclusive spas (Nuxe, at no. 32). It crosses over rue Etienne Marcel, which, along with parallel rue Tiquetonne, is home to young street wear shops such as Diesel.

Both streets take you to rue Montmartre, which is home, along with its side streets, to many vibrant bars (Somo seems to have past its sell-by date, but Café Noir and Dédé la Frite are always busy). To the west is the Bourse, Paris’ Stock Exchange. Continue northwards and you will hit the Grands Boulevards that line the border to the 9th arrondissement.


Find a...