Walking Paris’s Famous Shopping Arcades: Jouffroy, Verdeau and Panoramas
A first-person perspective Paris walk tour of three famous shopping arcades - Passage Jouffroy, Passage Verdeau and Passage des Panoramas, filled with shops (including antiques, old books and gifts), art galleries, bistros, cafés and restaurants - from Boulevard Montmartre in the busy Grands Boulevards area.
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FILMED: September 2018 (Weekday Afternoon) using iPhone 6
ROUTE MAP*:
ROUTE TIMESTAMPS:
00:00, 08:17, 12:26 Boulevard Montmartre
01:31, 06:18 Passage Jouffroy
03:38, 06:08 Rue de la Grange Batelière
03:48, 05:07 Passage Verdeau
04:51 Rue du Faubourg Montmartre
08:52, 10:44 Passage des Panoramas
10:31 Rue Saint-Marc
SIGHTS TIMESTAMPS:
00:10 Grands Boulevards Metro
00:51, 02:04, 07:00 Grévin Museum (Musée Grévin) - waxworks museum of French historic and contemporary figures
01:16, 06:10 Passage Jouffroy - 19th-century glass-&-iron shopping arcade
02:38 Hôtel Chopin Grands-Boulevards Paris
03:43, 05:04 Passage Verdeau - built in 1847, takes the name of its creator, it is one of the most charming covered arcades in the capital
08:42, 10:40 Passage des Panoramas - one of the first covered passages in Paris, this 1799 walkway features shops & ornate architecture
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Places to see in ( Paris - France ) Passage Verdeau
Places to see in ( Paris - France ) Passage Verdeau
The passage Verdeau is a walkway Parisian located in the IX th arrondissement. It is located between rue de la Grange-Batelière in the south and rue du Faubourg-Montmartre in the north. The passage takes its name from Mr. Verdeau, one of the promoters of the passage and shareholder of the company Jouffroy passage, also inventor of the system of rental of linen to hotels and furnished.
Established in 1846 by the society of passage Jouffroy, under its current name, the passage Verdeau is in the extension of the passages of the Panoramas and Jouffroy. Set back, the passage Verdeau has always suffered from the comparison with the passages it extends and has long been disinherited. Yet it is one of the clearest, with a high canopy fishbone and a sleek neoclassical design .
However, the opening of the Hotel Drouot has attracted many antique dealers who have taken up residence there and the passage has since attracted many collectors of old books or old postcards. A photo shop (14-16) has been in the same location since 1901 .
( Paris - France ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Paris . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Paris - France
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Passage Verdeau, Paris
Le passage Verdeau est un passage couvert parisien situé dans le 9ᵉ arrondissement
Paris, France : Passage Jouffroy, Passages des Panoramas : Christmas Noël in the streets of Paris
Passage Jouffroy is located in Paris Passage Jouffroy
General information
Type Covered passage
Address 10 Boulevard Montmartre - 9 rue de la Grange-Batelière
Town or city Paris
Country France
Coordinates 48.872549°N 2.342141°ECoordinates: 48.872549°N 2.342141°E
Technical details
Floor area 140 by 4 metres (459 by 13 ft)
The Passage Jouffroy is a covered passage of Paris, in the 9th arrondissement. It runs between the Boulevard Montmartre to the south and the rue de la Grange-Batelière to the north.
Description
The Passage Jouffroy is a covered walkway in the south of the 9th arrondissement of Paris, on the border with the 2nd arrondissement. It begins in the south between 10 and 12 boulevard Montmartre, and ends in the north at 9 rue de la Grange-Batelière.
Each passage is about 140 metres (460 ft) long and 4 metres (13 ft) wide. About 80 metres (260 ft) from its entrance on the Boulevard Montmartre, the passage makes a right angle turn and runs west for a few metres before descending some stairs. It then continues in a northerly direction to its outlet on the rue Grange-Batelière. This was imposed by the irregular pattern of the three plots on which the passage was built. This last part of the passage is particularly narrow, leaving room only for the corridor and a shop.
The Passage des Panoramas opens as a continuation of the passage Jouffroy on the other side of the Boulevard Montmartre. The Passage Verdeau does the same on the other side, after crossing the street from the Grange Batelière.
The passage is covered by a canopy of metal and glass. An ornate clock stucco overlooks the alley. The floor is paved with a geometric pattern composed of white, gray and black squares. The exit from the musée Grévin is located inside the Passage Jouffroy.
History
The Passage Jouffroy was built in 1845 along the line of the Passage des Panoramas in order to capitalize on the popularity of the latter. A private company was formed to manage it, headed by Count Felix de Jouffroy-Gonsans (1791-1863), who gave his name to the passage, and M. Verdeau, who gave his name to the passage that was built as a further extension, the passage Verdeau. The passage was built by architects François Destailleur and Romain de Bourges.
The Passage Jouffroy represents an important stage in the technological evolution of the 19th century and the mastery of iron structures. It is the first Parisian passage built entirely of metal and glass. Only the decorative elements are wooden. It is also the first passage heated by the ground.
In the early 1880s Arthur Meyer, founder of the newspaper Le Gaulois, joined the cartoonist Alfred Grévin to create a gallery of wax figures on a property adjacent to the passage. It was inaugurated on 10 January 1882 and has since taken the name of the musée Grévin. The exit of the museum, decorated with a montage of various characters, is in the passage and contributes in large part to its success. The museum includes a hall of mirrors that was originally housed in the Palais des mirages designed by Eugène Hénard for the Exposition Universelle (1900).
In 1974 the passage was registered as a French historical monument. The passage was completely renovated in 1987 and regained its original paving.
Transport
The closest Metro stations are Grands Boulevards (lines 8 and 9), 100 metres (330 ft) to the east up the Boulevard Montmartre, and Richelieu-Drouot on the same lines 130 metres (430 ft) to the west.
Wikipedia
Paris France - Passage Verdeau Set 2018
Passage Verdeau é uma galeria muito frequentada!
Passage Verdeau
14/04/2011, Paris
Ep 06 - FB Live Replay: Video Tour of Paris - The Covered Passages (19th century shopping arcades)
A replay of Episode 06 of my FB Live video tour series. This time I avoid the wet Paris winter with a tour of a few Covered Passages - the 19th century shopping arcades. One of my favorite parts in the whole city!
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Explore Paris Covered Passages
Explore Paris Covered Passages. Things to do in Paris - Passageways of Paris - Covered shopping arcades that will tempt you to shop until you drop! Come see the grand boulevards passageways in Paris with me Andrew Prior from Travelling Fabulously. Whatever I do I always try to do it fabulously. There is nothing better than on a gloomy raining day in Paris to explore it's amazing passageways and one of my favourites is the Grand Boulevard Passageways. So come along and explore with me, of course a bit of fun along the way.
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The places mentioned in this video are listed below. Please visit them and support them. Mention me to them and let them know how fabulous I think they are, they might even give you a little something extra to brighten your day. I love a little bit extra don’t you.
Passage Verdeau
6 Rue de la Grange Bateliere, 75009 Paris
Quartier Art Drouot
12 Rue Drouot, 75009 Paris
Galerie Verdeau
Galerie Virguina
Graveur Bing Guis
Le Bonheur des Dames
Passage Jouffroy
10-12 Boulevard Montmartre, 75009 Paris
La Boite a Joujoux
Paris est une Photo
Le Maison Du Roy
Le Cure Gourmande
Hotel Ronceray
Passages des Panoramas
11 Boulevard Montmartre, 75002 Paris
Passage 53
Gyoza Bar
Les Grands D'Espagne
NoGlu
Carnard et Champagne
Clasico Argentino
Bisou Creperie
Hemingbird
Hotel Chopin
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PalmTherapySounds
Edith Piaf - La Foule (Reach Eargasm remix)
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Walking tour in Paris : Passages and Palais Royal
Walking tour in Paris in 19th century Passages and in the Palais Royal
0:07 Passage Verdeau
1:32 Passage Jouffroy
5:04 Passage des Panoramas
9:30 Paris stock Exchange
15:25 Passage Vivienne
20:15 Palais Royal
24:22 Colonnes de Buren
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Passage Jouffroy -Paris
L'un des plus jolis passages couverts de Paris que je vous invite à parcourir depuis l'accès de la rue de la Grange-Batelière jusqu'au Boulevard Montmartre. Vous y découvrirez son charme, ses boutiques et librairies.
GALERIE VIVIENNE IN PARIS
A beautiful little gallery in Paris, Galerie Vivienne. It opened in 1826.
A Passage in Paris
UN HOMME QUI DORT is a French movie which came out in 1974 and the author was born in the 19th arrondissement near here. He is the famous guy who wrote a book without the vowel e and other wonderful works. From the movie, I recognized many places, including Rue de Transvaal, off which the passage you can see here lies.
I walked by quickly, but one of the houses had a garland of little stuffed animals strung above the doorway beyond the courtyard garden gate. I thought, C'est l'arbre sec des pelouches! An arbre sec is a gibbet, and Rue de L'arbre Sec in Paris (métro Louvre-Rivoli) is named for a place where one could be hung to twist in the wind, as a deterrent to debt and crime.
There was only a street below this passage on the other side and I didn't go down there, but continued uphill to the beautiful Parc de Belleville, which was created in the 1980s and is on an ancient Merovingian domain. Up through the 18th century it had a gypsum quarry for Plaster of Paris, small farms, and many windmills. Up until 40 years ago, it certainly wasn't a gorgeous public park. Now, although dogs are not welcome, you can enjoy fountains, gardens, have a picnic, sunbathe, your children can play, and there is a spectacular view of Paris rivaling what you could see in Montmartre, but without tourist crowds and high prices. There are also public toilets.
The 20th arrondissement is a huge socioeconomic mix. As I hunted for a place to buy, I saw million euro renovations next to squats with black Africans cleaning out their toilet bowls in the gutter. There are drug dealers here sometimes, terrific stores, shops with artisans and services, a vineyard, and some very authentic Paris places to eat and drink. It isn't flat, so if mobility is a problem, you will be hindered here.
copyright 2013 Lisa B. Falour, B.S., M.B.A.
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YouTube: CUTECATFAITH, SLOBOMOTION
PARIS, PASSAGE DU GRAND-CERF ????♀️???? 1 MOMENT IN PARIS
PASSAGE DU GRAND-CERF, 145 rue Saint-Denis, 10 rue Dussoubs, 2ème arrondissement
Accès libre/free access / ♿
Horaires d'ouverture/opening hours : Lundi-samedi, 8h30-20h30
MÉTRO 4 : Étienne Marcel ; MÉTRO 3 & 4 : Réaumur - Sébastopol / BUS : 29 - 38 - 47
Paris, c’est bien sûr la tour Eiffel, Montmartre, le Louvre, la Seine, Notre-Dame et les Champs-Élysées, mais pas seulement! Venez vous balader et découvrir Paris avec 1 MOMENT IN PARIS. Abonnez-vous à la chaîne pour ne pas manquer les prochaines vidéos :
Paris is of course the Eiffel Tower, Montmartre, the Louvre, the Seine, Notre-Dame and the Champs-Élysées, but not only! Come stroll and discover Paris with 1 MOMENT IN PARIS.
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???????? Bienvenus à Paris ???????????????? Welcome to Paris ???????? 受欢迎的 ???????? Willkommen in Paris ???????? Bienvenidos a París ???????? Benvenuti a Parigi ???????? パリにようこそ ???????? Добро пожаловать в Париж ???????? Bem-vindo a Paris ???????? أهلاً بك في باريس
PASSAGES DE PARIS | Whereabout Wednesdays
I went shopping in the passages of Paris. Wanna go check it out? Just start at Passage Verdeau, then follow the way to Passage Jouffroy and then cross the street to enter Passage des Panoramas.
Hotel Chopin - Le Passage Jouffroy - Paris
Hotel Chopin as seen in the Film Mon Homme
My Man (French: Mon Homme) is a 1996 French drama film written and directed by Bertrand Blier. It was entered into the 46th Berlin International Film Festival where Anouk Grinberg won the Silver Bear for Best Actress.
The Passage Jouffroy is a covered walkway in the south of the 9th arrondissement of Paris, on the border with the 2nd arrondissement. It begins in the south between 10 and 12 boulevard Montmartre, and ends in the north at 9 rue de la Grange-Batelière.[1]
Each passage is about 140 metres (460 ft) long and 4 metres (13 ft) wide. About 80 metres (260 ft) from its entrance on the Boulevard Montmartre, the passage makes a right angle turn and runs west for a few metres before descending some stairs. It then continues in a northerly direction to its outlet on the rue Grange-Batelière. This was imposed by the irregular pattern of the three plots on which the passage was built. This last part of the passage is particularly narrow, leaving room only for the corridor and a shop.
The Passage des Panoramas opens as a continuation of the passage Jouffroy on the other side of the Boulevard Montmartre. The Passage Verdeau does the same on the other side, after crossing the street from the Grange Batelière.
The passage is covered by a canopy of metal and glass. An ornate clock stucco overlooks the alley. The floor is paved with a geometric pattern composed of white, gray and black squares. The exit from the musée Grévin is located inside the Passage Jouffroy.
History[edit]
The Passage Jouffroy was built in 1845 along the line of the Passage des Panoramas in order to capitalize on the popularity of the latter. A private company was formed to manage it, headed by Count Felix de Jouffroy-Gonsans (1791-1863), who gave his name to the passage, and M. Verdeau, who gave his name to the passage that was built as a further extension, the passage Verdeau. The passage was built by architects François Destailleur and Romain de Bourges.
The Passage Jouffroy represents an important stage in the technological evolution of the 19th century and the mastery of iron structures. It is the first Parisian passage built entirely of metal and glass. Only the decorative elements are wooden. It is also the first passage heated by the ground.
In the early 1880s Arthur Meyer, founder of the newspaper Le Gaulois, joined the cartoonist Alfred Grévin to create a gallery of wax figures on a property adjacent to the passage. It was inaugurated on 10 January 1882 and has since taken the name of the musée Grévin. The exit of the museum, decorated with a montage of various characters, is in the passage and contributes in large part to its success.[citation needed] The museum includes a hall of mirrors that was originally housed in the Palais des mirages designed by Eugène Hénard for the Exposition Universelle (1900).[3]
In 1974 the passage was registered as a French historical monument. The passage was completely renovated in 1987 and regained its original paving.
Camera: Canon 100d
Lense: Canon EF 24-105mm f/4.0 L IS USM Lens
Paris - June 2015
Passage Verdeau un jeudi soir chez Holy Bol
Les Nautes de Paris étaient passage Verdeau pour dîner un Jeudi soir. Pour ceux qui veulent découvrir l'ambiance si particulière des passages à la nuit tombée, une visite chez Holy Bol au 23 passage Verdeau devrait vous séduire. Au menu cuisine Thaï avec un plat dont la renommée va aller grandissante : le Pad Thaï Crevettes.
www.parispassage.paris à la découverte des passages couverts
Vous qui aimez Paris et ses trésors,
je vous propose de venir avec moi pour une visite guidée des Passages Couverts
Les Passages, c'est un peu l'histoire intime de Paris.
La visite durera environ 2 heures
la Galerie d'Orléans, les jardins du Palais Royal, la Galerie Vivienne, la Galerie Colbert, les Passages des Panoramas, Jouffroy et Verdeau.
La visite explique pourquoi après la Révolution Française et principalement à l'époque de la Restauration sont apparus dans le tissu urbain Parisien les passages couverts. Leurs premières heures de gloire furent assez courtes, puisque le dernier passage a été construit en 1860.
Et aujourd'hui (depuis une vingtaine d'années) nous retrouvons le goût des passages couverts.
Pourquoi? Que s'est-il passé entre-temps? Les apprécions-nous pour les mêmes raisons?
Cette histoire des passages, c'est aussi la nôtre et celle de Paris, c'est l'histoire de l'évolution du commerce et des techniques commerciales, c'est une histoire intime liée à la ville de Paris et c'est aussi une histoire universelle.
Paris c'est magique!
Les passages couverts - Le passage Jouffroy
Les passages couverts de Paris ont été construits dans la première moitié du 19ème siècle, afin de fournir un abri aux riches acheteurs en cas de mauvais temps.
Cela fonctionné tellement bien qu’il fut décidé de les exporter à d'autres villes de France et même à l'étranger vers la fin du 19ème siècle.
La plupart de ces passages se trouvent sur la rive droite de la Seine et furent construit avant 1860 et beaucoup de passages furent détruit après les travaux du baron Haussmann.
Le passage Jouffroy comporte plusieurs points intéressants.
Il fut construit en 1846 avec une inauguration en 1847 par une société privée, crée pour l’occasion. La société était présidée par conte Félix de Jouffroy-Gonsans, et il a donné son nom au passage.
A l’entrée du passage, côté Boulevard Montmartre, se trouve à droite le musée Grévin, rempli de statues de cire. Sur la gauche du passage, nous voyons aussi l'hôtel Ronceray, où monsieur Rossini, c'est d'ailleurs dans une des chambres de cet hôtel qui composa le fameux opéra Guillaume Tell.
Le passage devient populaire grâce au musée Grévin, construit en 1882.
Caractéristiques du passage Jouffroy
Il mesure 140 mètres de long pour 4 mètres de large.
C’est le tout premier passage à être complètement construits en verre et en fer avec une verrière en forme d'ogive qui permet en fait vraiment une luminosité particulière avec un éclairage complètement zénithale.
Au milieu du passage se trouve un escalier et ce passage possède l’unique escalier de l’ensemble des passages couverts.
Pour plus d'infos sur les passages couverts :
#passagescouverts #passagecouvert #passagejouffroy
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Passage Des panoramas Paris France February 2018
The Passage des Panoramas is the oldest of the covered passages of Paris, located in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris between the Montmartre boulevard to the North and Saint-Marc street to the south.
Le Passage Jouffroy - Paris
The Passage Jouffroy is a covered walkway in the south of the 9th arrondissement of Paris, on the border with the 2nd arrondissement. It begins in the south between 10 and 12 boulevard Montmartre, and ends in the north at 9 rue de la Grange-Batelière.[1]
Each passage is about 140 metres (460 ft) long and 4 metres (13 ft) wide. About 80 metres (260 ft) from its entrance on the Boulevard Montmartre, the passage makes a right angle turn and runs west for a few metres before descending some stairs. It then continues in a northerly direction to its outlet on the rue Grange-Batelière. This was imposed by the irregular pattern of the three plots on which the passage was built. This last part of the passage is particularly narrow, leaving room only for the corridor and a shop.
The Passage des Panoramas opens as a continuation of the passage Jouffroy on the other side of the Boulevard Montmartre. The Passage Verdeau does the same on the other side, after crossing the street from the Grange Batelière.
The passage is covered by a canopy of metal and glass. An ornate clock stucco overlooks the alley.[2] The floor is paved with a geometric pattern composed of white, gray and black squares. The exit from the musée Grévin is located inside the Passage Jouffroy.
History[edit]
The Passage Jouffroy was built in 1845 along the line of the Passage des Panoramas in order to capitalize on the popularity of the latter. A private company was formed to manage it, headed by Count Felix de Jouffroy-Gonsans (1791-1863), who gave his name to the passage, and M. Verdeau, who gave his name to the passage that was built as a further extension, the passage Verdeau. The passage was built by architects François Destailleur and Romain de Bourges.
The Passage Jouffroy represents an important stage in the technological evolution of the 19th century and the mastery of iron structures. It is the first Parisian passage built entirely of metal and glass. Only the decorative elements are wooden. It is also the first passage heated by the ground.
In the early 1880s Arthur Meyer, founder of the newspaper Le Gaulois, joined the cartoonist Alfred Grévin to create a gallery of wax figures on a property adjacent to the passage. It was inaugurated on 10 January 1882 and has since taken the name of the musée Grévin. The exit of the museum, decorated with a montage of various characters, is in the passage and contributes in large part to its success.[citation needed] The museum includes a hall of mirrors that was originally housed in the Palais des mirages designed by Eugène Hénard for the Exposition Universelle (1900).[3]
In 1974 the passage was registered as a French historical monument.[4] The passage was completely renovated in 1987 and regained its original paving.
Camera: Canon 100d
Lense: Canon EF 24-105mm f/4.0 L IS USM Lens
Paris - June 2015