St. Eustace, facade and south side |
Nave |
Choir |
Vaulting, interesting late Gothic, very high |
North transept and rose window |
Organ |
A bit of the elevation; must re-visit this place |
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
St. Eustace, facade and south side |
Nave |
Choir |
Vaulting, interesting late Gothic, very high |
North transept and rose window |
Organ |
A bit of the elevation; must re-visit this place |
Hotel de Ville |
Beautiful Art Nouveau almost anywhere you look |
Almost anywhere |
We stopped for a quick lunch |
Then continued our walk past Les Halles, where construction of the new Les Halles continues... |
Someday it will all look like this |
The one older part not torn down |
We stopped for a quick look into the St. Eustace church (next post) |
And then carried along further |
A building that would have been quite at home in Barcelona |
Another interesting building on Rue Reaumur |
Another beauty |
The usual crowd...the Mother of them all... |
Knave view |
A bit of the elevation, including the huge glazed gallery |
Ditto; despite being a cloudy day, the interior was still lovely |
North rose window |
Pretty old; not the first Gothic, nor even the first Gothic cathedral, but pretty old |
Screen around the choir |
One of several models |
Traditional view...well, better from the Left Bank |
Bow view |
Still on the Ile de la Cite, we found the "traditional" site of the residence of Heloise and Abelard (identified in 1849, at the height of the 19th century's Medieval craze); Sic et Non |
The beginning of the market, Blvd. Richard Lenoir, off the Place de la Bastille |
Quail eggs |
Nice display of shrimp |
Impressive seafood stalls; we're not all that far from the Channel, and lotte, aka monkfish, aka poor man's lobster, was plentiful (I used to use it, when I could get it, in my bouillabaise) |
All manner of asparagus, including wild; note the black tomatoes to the right |
Niece Stacey has joined us and is enjoying the quotidien as well as the the sights |
Market scene |
All manner of prepared food as well as the ingredients |
On my walk back home (the others went to the Eiffel Tower, etc.), an emerging favorite place, Le Bistrot du Peintre |
At another Rue de Charonne restaurant, delivery of the afternoon pre-frites... |
He'll always have Paris |
The Bastille has been a site of rallies, protests, demonstrations, etc., since, um, 1789; today's rally was for railway worker solidarity; the smoke is mostly from their grills and BBQs |
Closer up; the animal rights folk also were there, but hanging back a bit |
From the area of the Bastille the shoppes keep getting trendier and more exclusive; the facades are often of the stores of yesterday, which, thankfully, have mostly been preserved and maintained |
In the Place des Vosges; beautiful shoppes, restaurants, galleries |
Wrote most of his biggest hits right here |
In one of the galleries |
So I have now figured out this is a chain; and it is my job to inspect for consistency among the many Paris branches... |
Hotel Sully |
Obligatory stop for a family favorite |
Sic transit, Gloria; a boulangerie for decades, perhaps, and now... |
In the old Jewish district, Hector Guimard's 1913 Art Nouveau synagogue |
Thus; we'll be seeing lots more Guimard |
More sic transit...once a Hammami, now COS |
Once a famous deli |
Not a boulangerie anymore |
Also not a boulangerie anymore |
I wonder what the Pompidiou will be a century from now... |
Will it stand the test of time like the the Hotel de Ville? |