Knowledge (XXG)

Rue Saint-Lazare

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A ministerial decision of 12 Fructidor V (29 August 1797) fixed the minimum width of the street at 10 meters. This width was increased to 11 meters by a royal decree of 3 August 1838. An order of 3 September 1843 declared the public utility of expansion to 20 meters to the right of the properties
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Nos 27-29 (and nos 32-34, Rue de Châteaudun): Two notable buildings, decorated in the style of French architecture of the 16th century, built around 1840. Probably one of the most important collections of this style. The rear facades are visible from the rue de Châteaudun, whose extension in 1862
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This street already existed in 1700 under the name of rue des Porcherons or rue d'Argenteuil, and connected the villages of Roule and Ville-L’Évêque to the village of Porcherons. In 1734 it was still only lined with few buildings. The present name dates from 1770 and comes from the Maison
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was built in 1837. An alley, the "Impasse Bony", created in 1826 and located at the site of the Hotel Terminus, was used for unloading luggage. The Cour de Rome, in front of the station on the west side, encompassed the old "Impasse d’Argenteuil", which opened onto the Rue du Rocher.
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No 87: Avenue du Coq: site of the former castle of the Porcheron family (13th century), which gave its name to the district. Later, it became the property of the Le Cocq family, and gave its name to the impasse which was released in its
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The great flood of Paris in January 1910. Looking to the rue Saint-Lazare from the square Gabriel PĂ©ri. The railway station Paris Saint-Lazare is on the left.
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No 88: Hotel built for the PLM railway company in 1869 replacing the office of the Bridges and Highways department, built in 1788 by architect
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who lived there 10 years. The colors of the recent restoration claim to reproduce the original polychrome appearance.
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The Rue Saint-Lazare at the start of the 20th century already had heavy traffic of buses and compressed air trams.
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in 1793. It stood at the current location of no 117 rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis, in the 10th arrondissement.
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No 119: A fast food institution to teach McDonald's employees replaced a Bavarian tavern the
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Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues de Paris et de ses monuments
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Nos 113-115: Brasserie Mollard: The interior, dated 1894, is by the architect
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No 60 : Parisian Home of the Duke of Bassano, where he and his wife died.
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bought an apartment here, where he installed his mistress Jeanne Rozerot.
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No 58: Delaroche Hotel built in 1829 in the Tuscan style for the painter
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Former Grand HĂ´tel Terminus, now HĂ´tel Concorde-Saint-Lazare
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appears to have cut these buildings off from their garden.
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Saint-Lazare toward which it led (via the rues Lamartine,
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Rochegude, FĂ©lix de (1910). "VIIIe arrondissement".
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Index


Rue Saint-Lazare is located in Paris
Arrondissement
8th
9th
Quarter
48°52′34″N 2°19′50″E / 48.876062°N 2.330426°E / 48.876062; 2.330426
9 rue Bourdaloue and 1 rue Notre-Dame-de-Lorette
Place Gabriel-PĂ©ri and Rue de Rome
8th
9th
Paris
France
Bleue
leprosarium
Prison Saint-Lazare
Cour du Havre
Gare Saint-Lazare
Paul Delaroche
Émile Zola
Editions Flammarion
building constructed in 1908
François-Nicolas Hole
Hotel Concorde Opéra Paris
Juste Lisch
Exposition Universelle (1889)
Édouard Niermans
Roi de la Bière
The great flood of Paris in January 1910. Looking to the rue Saint-Lazare from the square Gabriel PĂ©ri. The railway station Paris Saint-Lazare is on the left.
The Rue Saint-Lazare at the start of the 20th century already had heavy traffic of buses and compressed air trams.

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