Place des Vosges, Paris
Place des Vosges by Olivier Bruchez
In 1605, King Henri IV decided to turn the Marais district into Paris’ most exclusive residential area. Flanked by the Pavilion du Roi (King’s Pavillion) and the Pavilion de la Reine (Queen’s pavillion), the area was named Place Royale. His son, Louis XIII completed the project. None of the royal family ever actually lived there.
The remainder of the square is configured with 36 symmetrical houses each with a ground-floor arcade, steep slate roof, large dormer windows and vine covered walls. The first of the houses were built of brick, the rest were built rapidly and given timber frames and faced with plaster. The plaster was later painted to resemble brick. Duels, fought with strictly observed formality, were once staged in the elegant park in the middle which contains a statue of Louis XIII. From 1832-48 Victor Hugo lived at a house at No 6, which has now been turned into a museum. Cardinal Richelieu lived at No. 21. In 1800 the square was renamed Place des Vosges. Today, the arcades at street level are occupied by expensive galleries, shops, and cafes.
Daily 10-5:40. Closed Monday.
Admission charged.
Metro: St. Paul
created by John,
viewed 3075 times
| 100% of users recommend it
Do you recommend this attraction?
yes
no
What other visitors said about Place des Vosges
Add a new comment-
just great place by patouche
I love this place, my favorite in Paris
written 340 days ago