Street Talk & Neighborhoods

Monuments, museums, gardens and parks set the rhythm for many quarters of Paris, but the melody of life in the city is in its streets and neighborhoods. The city wanderer, the flâneur, follows his or her nose, observing and sometimes engaging with details, individuals and scenes along the way. Join us in this section as we explore the streets and neighborhoods of Paris and encounter those who inhabit them.

Stained glass

The Stained Glass Window, a Paris Vignette

1
In this remarkable vignette, Donna Elveth turns the routine act of walking the dog in her neighborhood in Paris into a story of life and death, art and beauty.

The Cranky Pedestrian: The Barefoot Photographer Rants Against Bicycle Cadavers

0
A call for contributors to turn a cranky eye on their surroundings brought forth a photographic rant from Va-nu-pieds, France Revisited’s fetish photographer, who’s fed up with the sight of bicycle cadavers on the sidewalks of Paris.

The Cranky Host: A Shuffle Through Montmartre

0
The guidebooks describe the pleasures of sightseeing in Paris, typically under sunny skies, but ignore the cold, gray, back-aching shuffle through the crowds of the kind that longtime resident Ellen Labelle experienced while visiting Montmartre with friends.

The Cranky Urbanist: Paris Doesn’t Need the Triangle Tower

2
Responding to France Revisited's call for an opinion article from various opponents to Paris City Hall’s push to approve the construction of a 180-meter (590-foot) high-rise known as the Triangle Tower, Patrice Maire, president of the association Mont 14, stepped up to the plate with "Will Paris Be Modernized or Disfigured?"

Paris on the Edge: Does the French Capital Need High-Rises and Towers to Stay...

1
One doesn't usually think of this low dense city having much in the way of a skyline, but Paris is now in the well advanced planning stages for the most significant changes to the city’s architectural profile in 40 years.

Stephane Jaspert’s Cobblestone Art: From the Streets of Paris to a Garret in Montmartre

5
Stephane Jaspert picks the cobblestone up from his desk and says, “Tourists often see Paris as a light and romantic city, but it’s a tough city, hard as rock.” We are high above the cobbled streets of Montmartre in Mr. Jaspert’s garret.

French Letters: From Gatsby Days to Templar Knights

3
John M. Edwards thinks the most exotic experience Americans have in Paris these days is ordering macaroons in a Piere Hermé boutique. But John remembers a time in the 1990s when, between girlfriends and apartments, Paris still rhymed with bewildering encounters and doomed relationships.

Love Locks on the Bridges of Paris

1
Some see them as graffiti, others view them as symbols of love placed at the heart of a romantic city. They are the love locks of Paris, attached to historic bridges over the River Seine. A France Revisited audio-slideshow.
Jef Aerosol Paris mural - Saint Merri - GLK

Paris Street Talk: Merry, the Mural and the Pisser (Merry, la fresque et la...

7
...As I turned to walk up rue Saint Merri in the Beaubourg Quarter of Paris I was surprised to see that the entire wall of a 5-story building was covered with the image of a face of a man with a finger to its lips. The man was calling for quiet. He had Dali eyes.

The France Revisited Newsletter

Stay curious. Stay informed. Sign up for the free France Revisited Newsletter.

Support France Revisited

France Revisited is an adventurous professional publication largely supported by passion, curiosity, humor... and donations.

France Revisited Newsletter

Stay curious. Stay informed. Sign up for the France Revisited Newsletter.

The France Revisited Newsletter is sent out periodically so as to keep you informed about the 4-6 new articles that we post each month along with information about festivals, events and touring opportunities.

It’s free, of course, and you can unsubscribe at any time, though we can’t imagine why anyone would want to.

Thanks you for subscribing !!

Error.

France Revisited Newsletter

Stay curious. Stay informed. Sign up for the France Revisited Newsletter.

The France Revisited Newsletter is sent out periodically so as to keep you informed about the 4-6 new articles that we post each month along with information about festivals, events and touring opportunities.

It’s free, of course, and you can unsubscribe at any time, though we can’t imagine why anyone would want to.

Thanks you for subscribing !!

Error.

France Revisited Newsletter

Stay curious. Stay informed. Sign up for the France Revisited Newsletter.

The France Revisited Newsletter is sent out periodically so as to keep you informed about the 4-6 new articles that we post each month along with information about festivals, events and touring opportunities.

It’s free, of course, and you can unsubscribe at any time, though we can’t imagine why anyone would want to.

Thanks you for subscribing !!

Error.