
Canal Saint-Martin
Quai de Jemmapes, 75010 Paris
Napoleon ordered this canal built in 1802 to bring fresh drinking water to a Paris ravaged by cholera and dysentery.

Centre Pompidou
Place Georges-Pompidou, 75004 Paris
When this building opened in 1977, Parisians were genuinely horrified.

Le Marais
Rue des Francs-Bourgeois, 75004 Paris
The Marais means "the swamp," and that's exactly what it was until the Knights Templar drained it in the 13th century.

Montmartre & Place du Tertre
Place du Tertre, 18th Arr., Paris, 75018, France
Before it was a tourist magnet full of portrait artists and crêpe stands, Montmartre was the beating heart of modern art.

Opéra Garnier
Place de l'Opéra, 9th Arr., Paris, 75009, France
Charles Garnier was a virtually unknown 35-year-old architect when he won the design competition for the new Paris opera house in 1861.

Palais Royal
8 Rue de Montpensier, 1st Arr., Paris, 75001, France
This is Paris's best-kept secret hiding in plain sight, a five-minute walk from the Louvre that most tourists walk right past.

Père Lachaise Cemetery
16 Rue du Repos, 20th Arr., Paris, 75020, France
This is the most visited cemetery in the world, and it has better residents than most cities.

Shakespeare and Company
37 Rue de la Bûcherie, 5th Arr., Paris, 75005, France
This tiny English-language bookshop across from Notre-Dame is arguably the most famous independent bookstore on the planet.
Explore culture in Paris
GPS-guided narration at every landmark. Tap a spot on the map, hear the story. Every fact verified.