Covered passages of Paris

The covered passages of Paris (French: Passages couverts de Paris) are an early form of shopping arcade built in Paris, France, primarily during the first half of the 19th century. By 1867, there were approximately 183[1] covered passages in Paris but many were demolished during Haussmann's renovation of Paris. Only 25 survived into the 21st century, all but one are in the arrondissements (municipal districts) on the Right Bank of the Seine.

The common characteristics of the covered passages is that they link at least two streets, have glass ceilings and are: pedestrianised; artificially illuminated at night (initially with gas lamps); privately owned; highly ornamented and decorated; lined with small shops on the ground floor. The passages’ upper floors usually had apartments.[2] Originally, to keep the passages clean, each would have at the entrance an artiste de décrottage (a ‘shoe cleaning artist’).

Alfred de Musset frequented the Galerie Vérot-Dodat when visiting a famous actress.[2]

Eugène-Francois Vidocq, the father of criminology and of the French police system, lived in the Galerie Vivienne in 1840.[2]

As a child, Louis-Ferdinand Céline lived in the Passage Choiseul.[2]

The passages were the subject of Walter Benjamin's incomplete magnum-opus Das Passagen-Werk (Arcades Project) which was posthumously published.

List of currently accessible passages

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The following table lists the covered passages that still exist and remain accessible to the public.

District
Name
Date
Entrance
Hours
Heritage listing
Length
Image
1Passage des Deux-Pavillons1820Mérimée33m
1Galerie Véro-Dodat1826Monday-Saturday (except public holidays) 0700-2200Mérimée80m
2Passage Ben-Aïad1826Closed to the publicMérimée90m
2Passage du Bourg-l'Abbé1828Monday-Saturday 0700-1900Mérimée47m
2Passage du Caire1798Monday-Friday 0700-1800360m
2Passage Choiseul1829Mérimée190m
2Galerie Colbert1826Mérimée83m
2Passage du Grand-Cerf1825Monday-Saturday 0800 - 2000Mérimée117m
2Passage des Panoramas18000600-2400Mérimée133m
2Passage du Ponceau1826Monday-Friday 8-992m
2Passage des Princes1860Monday-Saturday 0800 - 2000Mérimée80m
2Passage Sainte-Anne1829Mérimée47m
2Galerie Vivienne18230800 - 2000Mérimée176m
3Passage Molière1791Mérimée46m
3Passage Vendôme1827
  • Monday-Friday 0700 - 2000
  • Saturday 0800 - 2000
Mérimée57m
6Cour du Commerce-Saint-André1776Mérimée120m
8Cité Berryer1745Mérimée95m
8Arcades du Lido1926120m
8Galerie de la Madeleine1845Monday-Saturday (except public holidays) 0800-1900Mérimée53m
8Passage Puteaux1839Monday-Friday 0700 - 240029m
9Passage du Havre1845115m
9Passage Jouffroy18450700 - 2100Mérimée140m
9Passage Verdeau1847
  • Monday-Friday 0700 - 2100
  • Saturday-Sunday 0700 - 2000
Mérimée75m
10Passage Brady1828Mérimée216m
10Passage du Prado18300900 - 1900120m

Further reading

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  • New Paris Guide, Or Stranger's Companion Through the French Metropolis: To which is Added a Description of the Environs. A. and W. Galignani. 1827.
  • Lefeuve, Charles (1875). Les anciennes maisons de Paris, Volume 4 (in French). C. Reinwald et cie. street by street, house by house

References

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  1. ^ Joanne, Adolphe Laurent (1867). The Diamond Guide for the Stranger in Paris ... L. Hachette & Company. p. 90.
  2. ^ a b c d "Découvrez la magie des galeries et passages couverts parisiens". www.paris.fr (in French). Retrieved 2023-08-31.
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