In my defence,
I was left unsupervised

1728

French
1728

Housed in a graceful eighteenth-century mansion at 8 Rue d'Anjou in the 8th arrondissement, Restaurant 1728 takes its name from the year the building was raised and weaves that heritage through every detail. The period architecture sets a tone of genuine refinement, with high ceilings, ornate mouldings and the accumulated patina of three centuries of Parisian history. The house once belonged to the Marquis de La Fayette, lending the address a romance that few dining rooms in the city can claim.....

66 Rue Monsieur Le Prince

In the Latin Quarter of Paris, on Rue Monsieur le Prince in the sixth arrondissement near the Odeon, this address serves as an event space used for day parties and club nights. It sits in one of the city's most storied student and nightlife districts, a short walk from the Luxembourg Gardens and the boulevards of Saint-Germain. Rather than a single fixed-brand club, the venue functions primarily as a host space for recurring promoter-led events. It has featured on listings for day-party series .....

Alcazar

Fusion Cuisine
Alcazar

Behind a seventeenth-century facade at 62 Rue Mazarine, in the heart of Saint-Germain-des-Pres, the Alcazar hides one of the most surprising interiors in Paris. The site has lived several lives: a royal jeu de paume tennis court in the 1600s, a printer's workshop in the 1700s, and from 1968 a riotous cabaret famous for its transformist revues under Jean-Marie Riviere. In 1998 the British designer Sir Terence Conran reinvented it as a spectacular contemporary brasserie, opening up a vast triple.....

Alivi (L')

French
Alivi (L')

A taste of Corsica in the heart of Paris, L'Alivi at 27 Rue du Roi de Sicile brings the flavours, aromas and easy warmth of the island to the historic Marais. The dining room, all exposed timber and rough stone, conjures the feel of a village auberge far from the boulevards outside. On sunny days the terrace, framed by olive trees, completes the illusion, transporting diners straight to the Mediterranean. The menu is a love letter to traditional Corsican cooking, from the island's celebrated .....

Aquarium de Paris

Often called Cineaqua, the Aquarium de Paris occupies a remarkable spot carved into the hillside of the Trocadero gardens, directly across the Seine from the Eiffel Tower. Its origins are extraordinary: first built for the Universal Exhibition of 1878, it is regarded as the ancestor of all the public aquariums in the world, and it was greatly enlarged for the 1937 exhibition, when it ranked as the largest in Europe. After closing in 1986 the site fell quiet for two decades before a major redevel.....

Arc de Triomphe

Standing at the centre of the great star of avenues from which it takes its setting, the Arc de Triomphe is one of the defining monuments of Paris, raised to honour those who fought and died for France in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars. Napoleon ordered its construction in 1806 after his victory at Austerlitz, but the work dragged on through changes of regime and the arch was not completed until 1836, long after his fall. Designed by Jean-Francois-Therese Chalgrin in a severe neoclassica.....

Arènes de Lutèce

One of the oldest surviving structures in Paris, the Arenes de Lutece is a Gallo-Roman amphitheatre whose remains lie in the Latin Quarter, in the 5th arrondissement. It dates from around the 1st century AD, when the city was the Roman settlement of Lutetia. In its complete form the amphitheatre was a large oval arena that could hold many thousands of spectators, used for combat and for stage performances, an unusual combination of functions in a single building. A raised stage and tiers of sea.....

Astier

French
Astier

Open seven days a week since 1956, Astier at 44 Rue Jean-Pierre Timbaud is a proud standard-bearer of the classic Parisian bistrot and the bourgeois cooking that goes with it. Seasonal dishes from the traditional French repertoire are prepared on site, the kind of unfussy, deeply satisfying cooking that has kept the tables full for the better part of seventy years. Its legendary cheese board is a destination in itself, aged by Maison Anthes and offered either as a plate or as a generous sharin.....

Atelier Brâncuși

When the sculptor Constantin Brancusi died in 1957, he left the entire contents of his Paris studio to the French state, on the condition that it be preserved as he had arranged it. The Atelier Brancusi, beside the Centre Pompidou, is the reconstruction that fulfils that bequest. Brancusi, born in Romania in 1876, settled in Paris and became one of the most influential sculptors of the 20th century, known for pared-down, abstract forms in marble, bronze and wood. He regarded the arrangement of .....

Atelier des Lumières

Inside a restored nineteenth-century iron foundry in the eleventh arrondissement, the Atelier des Lumieres became the first all-digital art centre in Paris when it opened on 13 April 2018. Created by the company Culturespaces, it takes the masterpieces of painters such as Klimt, Van Gogh, Cezanne and Dali and projects them, vastly enlarged and set to music, across the floors, walls and towering ceilings of its great hall, so that visitors are surrounded and immersed in the images rather than loo.....