Jun. 3rd, 2013 18:49

Paris

cos: (Default)
[personal profile] cos
I'm going to Paris a week from today, for my first time there.

Any suggestions?

[ Going with Alice, visiting her sister who lives in Paris, and also visiting my friend Christine and seeing one of her gigs. ]
Date: 2013-06-04 00:12 (UTC)

wotw: (ab)
From: [personal profile] wotw
Notre Dame.
Date: 2013-06-04 00:42 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] pseydtonne.livejournal.com
If you can help it, take buses instead of the metro. It's too easy to visit Paris and see nothing by only taking the subway everywhere. While it will take a lot longer, you'll see everything. Something will jump out at you and make you get off. Problem solved.

The 95 bus from Montparnasse to Montmartre is a special treat. Get off at Rue Ordener and head east towards the 18th Ward Hall (metro Jules Joffrin). When you get to the back of Sacred Heart, climb the less-interesting rear steps so you get the thrill of seeing the view from the top without expecting it.

There are also some cool bridges on the far east side, out by les Marrioles. You can also experience the New York City similarity of their Little Italy (Place d'Italie) actually being Chinatown (really, Little Saigon).
Date: 2013-06-04 00:55 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] whipchick.livejournal.com
The Louvre - go early-ish in the day and do a couple hours, then go back to your hotel, take a nap, have lunch, relax, and go back in the evening. Otherwise you will be EXHAUSTED. Go in through the "groups" entrance at the back - it's allowed, and the line is a LOT shorter. Pick a day when it's open later - it will also be less crowded after 7PM. Mona Lisa's great - then turn around and notice the GIANT ROOM SIZE PAINTING that no-one is looking at because they're all crowding around Mona Lisa.

Sainte Chapelle is magnificent. The best stained glass ever. Totally worth a visit.

There are rental bikes - the kind you pick up at one place and drop off in another, if you're into that :)

This will be beautiful spring weather - enjoy just walking around, eating out of bakeries, grocery store picnics, etc.

If you're good with heights, the roof of Notre Dame is worth the climb - it's amazing how the city falls away and everything is silent.

My favorite museum is the Rodin museum, and it's lovely to walk in the garden there, too.

If you've got enough French to say "Hello" and "excuse me" and "I would like to order...", French people will often start speaking English with you, saying they want to practice, but you have to start in French or they get pissy :) Generally, though, Parisian rudeness is not real rudeness, it's New Yorker rudeness - they just don't have time to dick around with tourists.



Date: 2013-06-04 01:03 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] 42itous.livejournal.com
Cluny Museum. That's where the original Unicorn Tapestries are. It's also a former monastery that was built over several hundred years, so you get a lot of different architectural styles in one rambling building.

I second the vote for Sainte Chapelle -- and Notre Dame, which is practically right next-door. Those rose windows and gothic ceilings are just breath-takingly gorgeous.
Date: 2013-06-04 01:23 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] dr-memory.livejournal.com
Paris is one of those cities where most of the agreed-upon Obvious Tourist Stuff really is totally worth seeing. Louvre, Notre Dame, Sainte-Chapelle, Eiffel Tower, Arc d'Triomphe, etc etc: yes, all of it, really.

My personal favorite not-on-the-obvious-list thing in Paris: the sewer museum. Early summer is, sadly, probably not the greatest time to visit it (dead of winter, really, is your best bet), but it's still fascinating.

Also: OH GOD THE FOOD. ALL OF IT. OH MY GOD.
Date: 2013-06-04 01:34 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] 42itous.livejournal.com
Huh. Apparently there are two sets and I misremembered which was which. The more famous Unicorn Tapestries are indeed at the Cloisters, and the set at the Cluny is The Lady and the Unicorn: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lady_and_the_Unicorn. Still, worth going to see. I remember there being a lot of symbolic detail, with different types of animals representing... virtues? seasons? Clearly I need to review my art history!

Now I want to go to the Cloisters again.
Date: 2013-06-04 02:55 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] missionista.livejournal.com
Sainte- Chapelle! (moreso than Notre-Dame) Musee de Cluny! Musee D'Orsay! Louvre (assuming you aren't totally museum-ed out by then)! AND OMG THE SEWERS!!! Seriously, the sewers! Food, glorious food! And walk along the Seine. And over the Seine. And drink wine! Yummy wine! I'm very excited for you. :)
Date: 2013-06-04 02:57 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] missionista.livejournal.com
Sainte- Chapelle! (moreso than Notre-Dame) Musee de Cluny! Musee D'Orsay! Louvre (assuming you aren't totally museum-ed out by then)! AND OMG THE SEWERS!!! Seriously, the sewers! Food, glorious food! And walk along the Seine. And over the Seine. And drink wine! Yummy wine! I'm very excited for you. :)

I CAN"T BELIEVE I ALMOST FORGOT--You MUST go to Pere Lachaise cemetery. Anyone who was anyone is buried there. The best time I ever had in a cemetery was at Jim Morrison's grave.
Date: 2013-06-04 03:15 (UTC)

ceo: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ceo
Second on the sewer museum. And the food, though maybe not right afterwards.

The Palace of Versailles is completely worth a visit. So is Chartres, which has the famous cathedral as well as two others, and parts of which still look like the 16th century. Versailles is near the end of the RER C line; Chartres is about an hour out on the Transilien (commuter rail) from Gare Montparnasse.
Date: 2013-06-04 11:21 (UTC)

goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Europa)
From: [personal profile] goljerp
A few thoughts:

* Do you want to go up to the top of something, but would be willing to take an escalator and not climb yourself, and don't want to go up *really* high? The Centre Pompidou, in addition to being a wacky building of its era (the 1970s) with interesting (and wacky) fountains near it, and modern art inside it, is also someplace where, at least 15 years ago, you could go. I remember the view as being nice, although obviously not as high up as you can possibly get... but also not nearly as long a wait.

* There are tons of terrific art museums in Paris, several of which have been mentioned. One which I found very interesting, and which hasn't been mentioned, is the Picasso museum.

* Enjoy!
Date: 2013-06-04 12:47 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] elfy.livejournal.com
I also recomment Montematre and the cementary which is close to it, with all these cats and famous people. And look out for space invaders, they are aaaaaaaaall over the city. Hundreds of them, really.

How long are you staying?
Date: 2013-06-04 12:50 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] oscuridad.livejournal.com
Go to the catacombs! Mindblowing.
Date: 2013-06-04 16:14 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] ladymondegreen.livejournal.com
Cluny is great. Particularly the beamed ceilings in the later parts, and yes, the tapestries (which are in a dim room, and may be hung in the wrong order, as there is some debate about the story they are telling, but just about everyone agrees that they are supposed to represent the experience of the senses, as well as having seasonal aspects and appearing and disappearing animals). As far as I know there's no connection between the two sets of tapestries, though I wondered the same thing.

Do be careful to check the schedule, because, as with everything in Paris, it closes unexpectedly on days you'd expect it to be open, and they also host private parties. In the park across the street from Cluny, there is a very small sculpture of Romulus and Remus.

The archeological tour under Notre Dame is pretty interesting, particularly if you like Roman ruins or want to learn more about how Isle de la Cite was formed and what it was like in medieval times.

Oh, and definitely visit the medieval parts of the Louvre. I at least did a serious double take when I got down there. I won't spoil the visual.

I second or third Musee D'Orsay and the rest of the Louvre, where you can be two inches from a sculpture that is the same age as say, the Trojan war, with no glass between you, and also see their futuristic rising column elevators in the area where the three wings meet up. I especially recommend the Near East section, which has the twins of some of the middle eastern sphinxes that are in the British Museum, and some terrific temple paintings.

There is so much to do that before we went I went around to all the websites for attractions I wanted to see and made a spreadsheet of their hours and the days they were open and what neighborhood they were in (this will differ in the summer) so I could group things appropriately, and also so we wouldn't discover we had gone to a closed attraction and not know what to substitute.

Also, Paris is littered with miniatures of the Statue of Liberty that are the original molds and models for it including one that stands in the courtyard of the Musée des Arts et Métiers.

Have a wonderful time! Take photos, eat in a different place every time you can, and make sure to get the flower-style gelato ice cream cones at least once, because it's fun to watch them make them, especially if you get more than one flavor.
Date: 2013-06-05 07:14 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] pseydtonne.livejournal.com
Warning about bike rentals: you have to have a chip-based credit card in most places. I learned this the hard way in Lyon.

Frankly you have to have one in most of Europe anyway. Be prepared to hit ATMs and pay cash, and to wait in lines because you cannot use automated purchasing with a 20th Century swipe card.
Date: 2013-06-05 14:04 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] samus-aran.livejournal.com
I loved going under the big structures (tour, arc, etc) and looking straight up.

Not that you would, but don't go to disneyland paris. My inner child attempted escape and we went - it was awful.

The Parisian Pride Parade should be happening approximately the time you are there? I recommend it - it was probably the best experience we had while in Paris.
Date: 2013-06-05 22:41 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] electron100.livejournal.com
Depends where. I never had trouble at restaurants with ordinary swipe cards two years ago. I usually prefer paying cash anyway though, since I usually found credit card international fees to be higher than my ATM fees, although that varies with your bank obviously.
Date: 2013-06-06 14:29 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] lillibet.livejournal.com
We were there recently and had a marvelous meal at Le Comptoir du Relais (http://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g187147-d719090-Reviews-Le_Comptoir_du_Relais-Paris_Ile_de_France.html). All the websites will tell you to make reservations months in advance--do, if you can--but they serve continuously (unlike many places, which take a break between lunch and dinner) so we were able to walk in about 5:45pm and sit right down. It's across the street from the Horse Tavern, which serves great mussels and is a fabulous place to sit and people-watch. Street performers often move through that intersection, adding to the entertainment.

We also enjoyed dinner a few years ago at Les Bookinistes, the more downscale enterprise of Michelin-starred chef Guy Savoy.

I'd second everything other people have been recommending with the addition of the Musee Rodin--if you're a Rodin fan, it's heaven and if you're not, this might be your chance to change that.

Eiffel Tower tickets can be purchased in advance online. Warning--the tickets only get you up to the 2nd floor, where you then have to wait in line for the summit elevator with everyone else.

Leave lots of time for simply walking around, enjoying the beauty of the place.
Date: 2013-06-06 16:13 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] ellipticcurve.livejournal.com
Ditto on the chip-based card for bike rentals. It's been required everywhere I've done the bike thing (which is completely awesome, by the way)--that would be Toulouse and Lyon--and I believe Paris is the same.
Date: 2013-06-07 02:38 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] anais-pf.livejournal.com
Buy a Paris Museum Pass (http://en.parismuseumpass.com/). Not only will you probably save some money, more importantly, you can CUT THE LINE at all the museums. No standing in line, anywhere! Oh and you can also use it to bop in and out of places of possibly minor interest, knowing that you can bop right out again if it's not interesting, but you've spent no extra money to find out.
Date: 2013-06-08 08:26 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_nicolai_/
Musée de l'Orangerie. Pompidou centre. Cross the road near the Place Charles de Gaulle. Eat properly made croissants EVERY DAY!

(oh, and don't fly Alitalia, and check for strikes on the trains or at Charles de Gaulle airport before you go)
Date: 2013-06-08 21:13 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] ladymondegreen.livejournal.com
We really ought to go to the Louvre... how much time should we expect to want to spend there? Considering we'll have only about 7 free days and so many other things to see, what's your guess of how the Louvre stacks up - half day? full day? return on a second day?

The Louvre is enormous. You could literally spend two weeks there and not see all of it. I would say the 'return on a second day' strategy makes the most sense. That's what we did, and while I still felt that I wasn't getting to see as much as I would have liked, it helped to know that we would have a second crack at it.

Hmm, do Paris museums tend to be open on weekends? Do they have the American security-theatre obsession that would get in the way if we're wandering around the city with full backpacks?

The primary place that I was turned away for having a backpack (and not for the pack itself, but for having a metal spoon) was at Sainte Chapelle, where they have amazing stained glass to protect. So they have a long security line and they're fairly anal about making sure you don't have anything that could be used to damage the glass. Sainte Chapelle is relatively near the Latin Quarter, Notre Dame and various other Isle de la Cite attractions so you may just not want to take your backpacks that day if you can help it.

Outside of that, they did a fairly rudimentary bag check at the Louvre and at Versailles, but they didn't confiscate anything. I think I recall that [livejournal.com profile] pecunium also got some weird reactions to the fact that he carries a pocket knife.

As to weekends, the museums and attractions are open and in general extremely crowded, so go to something more obscure, or go very early.


Date: 2013-06-08 21:14 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] ladymondegreen.livejournal.com
Also, I <3 the aqueduct story. That sounds like a great basis for the beginning of a time-travel YA novel.

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