Kuvatud on postitused sildiga park. Kuva kõik postitused
Kuvatud on postitused sildiga park. Kuva kõik postitused

laupäev, 27. september 2014

Promenade Plantée (Coulée verte René-Dumont)

http://www.paris.fr/english/parks-woods-gardens-and-cemeteries/gardens/promenade-plantee/rub_8212_stand_34230_port_18987

Promenade Plantée (Coulée verte René-Dumont)

Visuel représentant promenade plantée.jpg
Enlarge the picture
This unique plant-flanked promenade spans the 4.5 km from Place de la Bastille to Bois de Vincennes, on a viaduct and over footbridges.

Essentials
Opened in 1993
65,000 sq m
Don’t miss
The Viaduc des Arts.
Viaduc des arts
  

Getting there
- From Avenue Daumesnil to the Bois de Vincennes, up and down stairs and lifts (Paris 12)
- Metro: Bastille
Opening hours
Pictures

  Things to doSurely the most original way to explore eastern Paris between Bastille and the Bois de Vincennes – overhead and underground, on viaduct footbridges and in tunnel trenches.
Philippe Mathieux and Jacques Vergely designed this trail in 1988, on the tracks that took trains from Bastille to Varenne-Saint-Maur from 1859 to 1969 when the line was abandoned and replaced with a sprinkling of gardens.
The City of Paris embarked on a vast refurbishing project, revamping this viaduct’s 71 arcades under the Promenade Plantée, in 1989.

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/france/travel-tips-and-articles/76886

17. La Promenade Plantée

A railroad track with a floral makeover, this elevated walkway offers superb views and allows you to sidle through lush green archways high above the city crowds. This charming 4.5km pathway runs through most of the 12th arrondissement and you can join it from Avenue Daumesnil near the Bastille métro stop.
Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/france/travel-tips-and-articles/76886#ixzz3EYfsqGpw

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promenade_plant%C3%A9e
The western portion of the parkway may be accessed via stairways and elevators leading up to the elevated viaduct. This portion is reserved for pedestrians. The eastern portion of the parkway is accessible via ramps and stairways and is open to both pedestrians and cyclists. The west end can be reached from Bastille by walking 300 m south on Rue de Lyon, then left on Avenue Daumesnil. The staircase entrance is immediately on the left where Avenue Daumesnil enters rue de Lyon.


The Promenade plantée is an extensive green belt that follows the old Vincennes railway line. Beginning just east of the Opéra Bastille with the elevated Viaduc des Arts, it follows a 4.7 km (2.9 mi) path eastward that ends at a spiral staircase leading to the boulevard Périphérique beltway.
At its west end near the Bastille, the parkway rises 10 m above the surrounding area and forms the Viaduc des Arts, a line of shops featuring highly skilled arts and crafts. The shops are located in the arches of the former elevated railway viaduct, with the parkway being supported atop the viaduct. This portion of the parkway runs parallel to the avenue Daumesnil. The parkway intersects the Jardin de Reuilly near the rue Montgallet and descends to street level. At that point, it becomes a grassy mall and then follows the old railway direction below street level towards the east, passing through several tunnels. As it reaches the rue du Sahel, it splits, with one portion continuing to the beltway, and the other terminating in the square Charles-Péguy along the former path of a branch line that once linked to the Petite Ceinture railway. The elevated part route on the viaduct has some enclosed sections, as when it passes between modern buildings, and some open sections with expansive views.
In addition to the Jardin de Reuilly and the square Charles-Péguy, the Promenade Plantée also includes the Jardin de la gare de Reuilly, with its preserved but unused railway station, and the square Hector-Malot.

http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2014/mar/25/top-10-free-things-to-do-paris

Walk La Promenade Plantée

le Viaduc des arts overlooked by the Promenade PlanteePhotograph: Alamy
Opened in 1993, six years before New York's similar High Line project, La Promenade Plantee is a tree-lined walkway on an old elevated railway line in east Paris. The 4.5km trail is a wonderful way to explore the city, taking you up and down staircases, across viaducts, above the streets and offering the occasional chance to wave back at the lucky Parisians whose apartments overlook it. The walkway also runs over the Viaduc des Arts, a bridge in which the arches are now occupied by galleries.
• 12th arrondissemen, promenade-plantee.org

Parc de Belleville

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/france/paris/sights/parks-gardens/parc-de-belleville

A few blocks east of blvd de Belleville, this lovely park occupies a hill almost 200m above sea level, set amid 4.5 hectares of greenery. Little known to visitors, the park (which opened in 1992) offers some of the best views of the city.

Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/france/paris/sights/parks-gardens/parc-de-belleville#ixzz3EYde5ztK




Parc Monceau

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/france/travel-tips-and-articles/76886

11. Parc Monceau

If celebrity-spotting in a cemetery is too morbid, march among France’s greats in Parc Monceau, which has statues of luminaries like Chopin and celebrated writer Guy de Maupassant. The park’s rich history makes it a fascinating spot for a promenade: this peaceful green space was the site of a massacre in 1871, and was a favourite painting spot for Monet. Head straight to the Monceau métro station in the 8th arrondissement.


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/france/travel-tips-and-articles/76886#ixzz3EYawgqst



reede, 12. september 2014

Jardin du Luxembourg

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destination/france/paris/136765/Paris-free-things-to-do.html

Jardin du Luxembourg (11)

The quintessential park in a city where most people don't have gardens is a hive of activity, with its pony rides, swingboats, sandpits and playground, tennis courts, chess players, early-morning joggers, and the round pond where generations of children have rented toy boats. Originally the gardens of the Palais du Luxembourg (built for Marie de Médicis, now the Senate), one side is French style with gravel paths, trimmed avenues, statues and bandstand, the other English style with rolling lawns (no walking on the grass). Best activity of all? People watching from a pale green Luxembourg metal chair.
This is the quintessential park in a city where most people don't have gardens.
This is the quintessential park in a city where most people don't have gardens.
Address: Place Edmond Rostand, 75006 Paris
Getting there: RER Luxembourg
Contact: senat.fr/visite/jardin
Open: daily, varying between 8.15am-4.30pm in December to 7.30am-9.30pm in late June

 http://www.davidlebovitz.com/2009/04/ten-great-things-to-do-with-kids/
The southwest corner of this Renaissance garden is devoted to kids, including acres of slides and swings. It costs 1,50 Euro to enter and espresso is another euro; but sitting in the shade of century-old plane trees while the kids run themselves ragged… priceless. There’s even a hundred-year-old puppet theater run by a crotchety old man. And, of course, the famous carousel.

http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2013/may/10/paris-with-kids-family-friendly 
Luxembourg is quintessential Paris with children, a place that makes it easy to idealise life in the French capital. ... Inside are a massive playground, Charles Garnier's carousel, puppet shows, pony rides and sailboats for hire. We usually stop at the unassuming Boulangerie Marc Rollot, 48 rue Madame before heading into the park. It's become our family favourite for pastries – especially the apricot-and-custard oranais and the pain aux raisins.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/04/travel/travel-guide-paris-for-kids.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1 
Your children can mingle with the offspring of the French cognoscenti at the Luxembourg Gardens (Sixth Arrondissement, museeduluxembourg.fr/en/le-musee/jardin), a park that’s appealing to all ages. There’s an excellent enclosed pay-to-play area (with bathrooms), pony rides and toy sailboats in the central basin. The park’s storied puppet theater puts on shows, in French, daily at 4 p.m., and at 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. on weekends. 


Montmartre

http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2013/may/10/paris-with-kids-family-friendly
To visit Montmartre, we begin at the Abbesses metro station instead of Anvers, the one tourists typically use. Kids enjoy Le Mur des Je t'Aime, an enormous tiled mural with the words I Love You written in 250 languages. It's tucked into the easy-to-miss Square Jehan Rictus on the north side of Place des Abbesses.
http://www.lesjetaime.com/english/
 

Chapelle 2 km

If hungry, stop at Coquelicot at 24 rue des Abbesses a cafe with a generous terrace where hot chocolate is served in bowls, the way it's drunk at home in France. On the menu are bread and brioche smothered in butter and homemade preserves, artisan yoghurts, eggs, fresh juices and light lunches.

We walk through the Passage des Abbesses and up four intimidating flights of stairs, or alternately up stair-less rue Ravignan, a little further up. On our way towards the white domes of the Sacré-Coeur, we pass through picturesque Place Emile Goudeau, where Picasso, Matisse and Braque once lived.

I offer my girls a choice of playgrounds: compact Square Suzanne Buisson or impossibly romantic, tiered Marcel Bleustein-Blanchet, better-known as Parc de la Turlure. We pause to watch the artists on Place du Tertre then wind our way to the basilica's main plaza to take in the impressive vista. Then it's time to descend the hill towards Anvers station for a metro to Buttes-Chaumont.

Parc des Buttes-Chaumont is a magical park with rocky buttes, sweeping trees, a mysterious grotto and the curious Temple de la Sibylle, mounted high atop a peak in the middle of the lake. The temple is accessed by two bridges; kids can channel their inner Indiana Jones to cross one 21m above the water or opt for the lower-lying suspension bridge. Buttes-Chaumont has a carousel, several playgrounds, a puppet theatre and picnic-friendly lawns. 
http://en.parisinfo.com/paris-museum-monument/71468/Parc-des-Buttes-Chaumont
Entrance to the Buttes-Chaumont park is free, but there is a charge for access to the island by boat.
from 30 September to 30 April: 7am - 8pm.





https://www.flickr.com/photos/rbpdesigner/4882846683 
Montmartre Funicular 

http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/city-guides/free-paris-traveler/

In the shadow of the Sacré-Coeur basilica and near where Picasso lived and worked, Montmartre's Place du Tertre square is a lively spectacle teeming with aspiring artists selling souvenir-ready artwork and drawing tourists' portraits.


  

neljapäev, 11. september 2014

Paris with Kids

http://www.timeout.com/paris/en/for-kids

http://www.timeout.com/paris/en/kids-activities/50-things-for-kids-to-do-in-paris

mähkmevahetamiskohti http://www.luvaville.com/travel-with-kids/paris/nursing/diaper-changing

http://www.bonjourparis.com/story/traveling-paris-infant/
 The city has several baby-friendly cafés and restaurants, equipped with high chairs, changing mats and even a play corner.
Here are a few:
Pendant que les enfants jouent (75012, near the Gare de Lyon)
Le Petit Bazar (75015 - our favorite)
Les 400 coups (75019)
Le Poussette Café (75009) or any other café and restaurant.

titekraami rent - http://babytems.com/
 

mänguväljakuid

Tuileries - http://pariisi2014.blogspot.com/2014/09/jardin-de-tuileries.html

http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2013/may/10/paris-with-kids-family-friendly

Playgrounds close to the main sights in Paris

• Champs-Elysées Jardins des Champs-Elysées
• Eiffel Tower Champ-de-Mars
• The Louvre Jardin des Tuileries
• Marais Place des Vosges or Square Léopold Achille
• Montmartre Square Suzanne Buisson or Marcel Bleustein-Blanchet
• Centre Georges-Pompidou Jardin des Halles
• Musée d'Orsay Jardin des Tuileries
• Notre Dame Square Jean XXIII
• See paris.fr for opening hours and exact locations

http://www.parismarais.com/en/visit-le-marais/events-in-the-marais/the-marais-gardens.html
JARDIN ALBERT-SCHWEITZER
5, rue des Nonnains d’Hyères 75004
Just steps from the Cité Internationale des Arts, this French garden created in 1968 retains the Marais spirit of the seventeenth century. It has a playground shaded by yews and poplars. It was built in honor of Albert Schweitzer, missionary doctor and Nobel Peace Prize winner.




http://www.luvaville.com/travel-with-kids/paris/things-to-do/jardin-tino-rossi
Nice parc with playground, public toilets, boulodrome, roller rink, bike lanes and a sculpture parc.

http://www.luvaville.com/travel-with-kids/paris/things-to-do/square-boucicaut 
1 Rue de Babylone.

Small playground situated perfectly just by the department store Bon Marché, so while Mum is shopping the kids can play and use the swings.
Opening hours: 8.00 (9.00 in weekends) - 17.45 in winter time and 20.30 in summer time.


A beautiful and a bit "wild" parc compared to other parcs in Paris. You will find a little lake, a carrousel and a nice playground with sandpit, climbing tower, slide and swings.
Opening hours: 7.00 - 20.00 in winter and 22.00 in summer.

A beautiful park with a great playground (fee required), a fountain pond for sailing small boats, a marionette theater (puppet shows at 2:30, 3:30, and 4:30 in summer), an old fashioned carousel, and many statue-lined paths to explore.
The highlight of the beautiful gardens is the kids playground, tucked away in the back. It's 2.50 Euros for unlimited play per child, while adults can sit outside looking in, basking in the sun or shade. it closes at 7pm.
...  the clean and tidy parks sporting functioning play equipment that dot the city. Some of these are large and well known, but many are tiny little “pocket parks” that always seem to be around the next corner. My favorite is the place des Vosges where you can build a sandcastle in the shadow of 17th century housing development, entertaining the kids in a sublime architectural environment.

http://www.hostelworld.com/travel-features/155889/15-things-to-do-for-free-in-paris
This beautiful spot is actually the oldest planned square in Paris. Make your way to Place des Vosges and you’ll be able to lounge on the grass by the fountain, sit on one of the benches, watch the street performers or stroll around the square checking out the cool buildings. These include a former home of famous writer, Victor Hugo. You can also visit some of the art galleries lining the square, many of which will allow you to check out their art collections for free.

http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/travel/city-guides/free-paris-traveler/
Victor Hugo lived at the Place des Vosges's Hôtel de Rohan-Guéménée for 16 years (1832-1848) and wrote many of his works here, including much of his epic novel, Les Misérables. Examine manuscripts and first editions at the Maison de Victor Hugo and tour his apartment, which chronicles his life before, during, and after exile. Admission is always free.
 

reede, 27. juuni 2014

Parc de la Villette

http://goparis.about.com/od/sightsattractions/ss/parks_gallery_8.htm

df
Nestled in the far north of Paris is an under-appreciated park that is at the center of the Cité des Sciences et de L'Industrie, an ultramodern complex that itself encompasses a cultural center, a concert hall, a museum, and much more. The Parc de la Villette is a great place for kids and adults to explore and offers equal parts fun, beauty, and opportunities for learning. The Parc de la Villette's multi-themed gardens, open "prairies", and cultural center, and open-air cinema area are guaranteed to provide you with a memorable day in one of the city's less-explored areas.
  • The Parc de la Villette have 10 thematic and original gardens that will easily amuse both adults and kids, including:
    • Bamboo garden
    • Dragon garden
    • Fog garden
    • Mirror garden
    • Wind garden
    • Dunes garden

La Villette (15)

This modern park and museum complex reinvigorated the former abattoir district with its red follies and themed gardens. On the northern edge, the Cité des Sciences (advance booking recommended, especially during the school holidays) swarms with kids, for its interactive exhibits in the Explora display, its excellent children's section and spherical Géode IMAX cinema. South of the canal are the Cité de la Musique music museum and concert hall, Zénith rock venue and Grande Halle, last remnant of the livestock market. Numerous events include circus, theatre, a summer outdoor film festival and Jazz à la Villette in September. The park is free but there are the following charges for the museums - Cité des Sciences: Explora, €8; 6-24 years, students, over 60s, €6; children under 6, free; Cité des Enfants, children 2-12, €8. Cité de la Musique museum: €7; under 26, free
This modern park and museum complex reinvigorated the former abattoir district with its red follies and themed gardens.
This modern park and museum complex reinvigorated the former abattoir district with its red follies and themed gardens.
Address: 211 avenue Jean-Jaurès, 75019 Paris
Getting there: Metro Porte de Pantin or Porte de la Villette
Contact: 0033 1 40 03 75 75; lavillette.frcite-sciences.frcitedelamusique.fr
Open: Park: daily, 6am-1am. Cité des Sciences: Tue-Sat, 10am-6pm; Sun, 10am-7pm. Cité de la Musique: Tue-Sat, noon-6pm; Sun, 10am-6pm



2 km Chapelle'st

http://www.davidlebovitz.com/2009/04/ten-great-things-to-do-with-kids/
This is a reclaimed industrial landscape turned into futuristic park. Most of the playful park structures were designed by Bernard Tschumi with a child’s imagination in mind.