The second district is located on the right bank of the Seine. There is the smallest district of Paris, covering less than 0.4 square miles (almost a square kilometer). Its population is under 20 000, but this area offers more than 60,000 jobs, the highest density of work in the city. This neighborhood is home to all the other windows commercial galleries in Paris, walkways open at both ends with a roof of glass and iron. The invention is actually a ParisianAdaptation of the oriental bazaars and markets, forms a miniature city with no noise of horse-drawn carriages, taxis speeding and bad weather. If these steps were mostly in 1820 and 1830, the sidewalks were made of a rare commodity. Window Shopping in Paris for another form of art developed in these steps. They have evolved (degenerated) in S-mall. Make sure you get at least one visit to an arcade feel of Paris, in the good old days.
The transitionpanorama of the Boulevard Montmartre is on the first arch from 1799. This was the first Parisian public with gas lighting. On the other side of the Boulevard Montmartre is the luxury Passage Jouffroy, restored about twenty years ago, a beautiful shopping center, includes two very special children's stores.
The Opera-Comique (Comic Opera) is a work of world-famous Boieldieu Place, near the Paris stock exchange. InIt was founded in 1714 to promote French opera in competition with the prevailing Italian opera of the day. Despite its name, not all the productions of comic opera, especially during the nineteenth century. The current building was built in 1898 and is the oldest standing opera in Paris. Two previous incarnations in 1838 and 1887 burned. Among the great composers were Berlioz and Bizet. The Opera Comique was the site of the first performance of Bizet's Carmen in 1875initially rather than a failure. It was also the first of Debussy's only opera Pelléas et Mélisande in 1902.
Avenue de l'Opera (also known as the Passage de l'Opera, or known as Le Rue Peletier or Le Peletier) is a way for the Theatre de l'Academie Royale de Musique, known more commonly known as the Paris Opera, the name, which burned in 1873. In 1875 this theater was the Palais Garnier, a theater that is now known as the Paris Opera replaced.
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