1 Bedroom
Rue de Verneuil

 

Address: Rue de Verneuil

detailed map

Zipcode: 75007

Area: Musee d'Orsay

Metro: Rue du Bac

Description:

In an excellent central location of the left bank close to St Germain des Prés and the Seine, this apartment is located in an older building with elevator.

The apartment is on the second floor and is approximately 65 sq.meters. It contains a living room w/ sofabed, separate dining room, compact separate kitchen (4 burners, small oven, diswasher, refrigerator and washing machine). A bedroom w/ double bed and full bathroom, separated wc. TV, telephone.

The apartment has a pleasant , lived-in atmosphere, tastefully decorated with a personal touch. It looks over the small street which is relatively quiet (by Parisian standards) but the bedroom is over the courtyard.

 

Close to the apartment

Rue du Bac
Rue du Bac has many historic connections. It was built in 1564 and named after the bac (ferry) that used to transport quarry stone across the Seine to the construction site of the Tuileries Palace, which was actually burnt down by the Communards in 1871. On the 6th arron. side of rue du Bac were the barracks that housed the Musketeers - of “The Three Musketeers’ fame. On the 7th arron. side of rue du Bac is Deyrolle, a 150 years old taxidermy shop open to the public, which besides the stuffed animals, is like a grand ‘Cabinet des Curiosities’ with shells, minerals, insects, butterflies, pictures all on view.

St-Germain
St-Germain was a center of bohemianism and existentialism in the glittering café society of the post-war years. Names associated with this period are Sartre and Camus and the singer Juliette Greco. Young French teenagers spent nights in its jazz clubs and cabarets. Many famous French singers sang in the clubs or lived in the area, such as Georges Brassens, Jacques Brel, Charles Trénet, Guy Béart, Charles Aznavour. The home where Serge Gainsbourgh lived on rue de Verneuil has become a graffitied shrine. Jazz greats who played here include Sidney Bechet, Miles Davis and Duke Ellington.

Musee d'Orsay
Across the river from the Louvre, was originally a Beaux-Arts train station but by the 1950's its platforms became too short and it was up for demolition. An innovative restoration transformed the train station into a museum spanning art from 1830 to 1914. Its sky-lit Impressionist Gallery holds the jewels of Impressionist Art with masterpieces by Monet, Degas, Renoir, Pissaro and Van Gogh. Next to the gallery there is a cafe built to incorporate one of the two original giant clocks of the station, with a balcony (open in the summer) and lovely view over the Seine. The other restaurant is the more formal Restaurant du Musee d'Orsay , which was the dining room of the old hotel in the station and is an ornately gilded period piece. Its buffet brunch or prix-fixe menu is good value. Museum closed on Mondays. National Museums as the ‘Louvre’ are closed on Tuesdays and Paris Museums as the ‘d’Orsay’ are closed on Mondays.

Musee Rodin
Musee Rodin housed in the magnificent Hotel Biron. August Rodin originally rented rooms in the Hotel for living and as a studio. There were plans to destroy the house but in 1916 the French government agreed to convert it into a museum for him. The museum now houses his sculptures, academic paintings and sketches. There are also several works by Camille Claudel, the talented sculptor who became Rodin’s muse, model, and lover at the age of 17. He was nearly 50. The lovely garden is a setting for some of Rodin’s best known works including ‘The Thinker’, ‘The Burghers of Calais, and ‘The Gates of Hell’.

Invalides & Napoleon's Tomb
The group of buildings 'Hotel des Invalids' was ordered by Louis XIV the ('Sun King') to house the king's old soldiers. A year later he commissioned the Eglise du Dome, a magnificent Baroque church with its beautiful gold-leafed dome, which holds the impressive tomb of Napoleon. Napoleon was brought here from his grave in St. Helena where he was exiled, to fulfill his last wish to be buried 'on the banks of the Seine among the people of France whom I have loved so much. In the complex is the Army Museum with the largest collection of militia in the world. Leading from the impressive forecourt of the Invalids with its captured canons runs the tree-lined Esplanade des Invalides to the grand Pont Alexandre III a gift from Czar Alexander to commemorate the 1892 French-Russian alliance.

Jardin des Tuilleries
The Tuileries Gardens were designed by Andre Le Notre in 1664 and is one of the largest parks in Paris. It is bordered by the Louvre, Rue de Rivoli and, at the western end, the Orangerie and the Jeu de Paume. The Orangerie houses Monet's magnificent 'Nympheas' series of paintings of water-lilies which were painted at Giverny and donated to the nation by the artist as a 'spiritual testimony'. It also houses other great Impressionist and 'Ecole de Paris' artists. It is undergoing a major re-haul at the moment. The Jeu de Paume holds special exhibitions.

Continued...

 

 

 

Select a vacation rental in another district
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Sleeps: 2-4

Size: 65 m2

Floor: 2

Elevator: Yes

Minimum Stay: 4 nights

from 159€ daily

from 1113€ weekly


Features:

• TV
• Telephone
• Dishwasher
• Washing Machine

Near:

• Rue du Bac
• St Germain
• Musee d'Orsay
• Musee Rodin
• Invalides
• Jardin des Tuileries

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Services:

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 From 18.50€
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 From 85.00€

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