Impasse Bonne Nouvelle
Coordinates: 48 ° 52 '14.4 " N , 2 ° 21' 2.2" E
Impasse Bonne-Mouvelle | |
---|---|
location | |
Arrondissement | 10. |
quarter | Porte-Saint-Denis |
Beginning | 20-24, Boulevard de Bonne-Nouvelle |
The End | dead end |
morphology | |
length | 62 m |
width | 15 m |
history | |
Emergence | around 1650 |
designation | February 26, 1867 |
Original names | Impasse des Filles-Dieu Ruelle Couvreuse Cul-de-sac des Filles-Dieu |
Coding | |
Paris | 1104 |
The Impasse Bonne Nouvelle (French Impasse is German dead end ) is a street in the Porte Saint-Denis district of the 10th arrondissement in Paris .
location
The Impasse Bonne Nouvelle begins at no. 20–24 of the Boulevard de Bonne Nouvelle . Since 2017 there has been a pedestrian connection with the Rue de l'Échiquier through the park Yilmaz-Güney during opening hours.
The closest metro station is Bonne Nouvelle with lines and .
Name origin
The alley takes its name from the Notre-Dame-de-Bonne-Nouvelle church and its proximity to the boulevard of the same name .
history
This street was opened around 1650 under the name Cul-de-sac des Filles-Dieu and made possible via a path that runs along the hill of the Bastion de Bonne-Nouvelle and to the Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis near the Porte Saint -Denis leads to access to the nurseries of the Couture des Filles-Dieu outside the city walls. This farmland was the property of the former monastery of the Filles – Dieu , whose monastery, which was dissolved in the 1790s, was located within the enclosure on the site of today's Rue du Caire . After the opening of the Boulevard de Bonne-Nouvelle in the 1670s on the site of the demolished wall, the cul-de-sac remained connected to this street called Rue Basse-Saint-Denis. This street runs along the boulevard, two or three meters lower, from which it is separated by an embankment. The Filles – Dieu monastery was leveled in the second half of the 18th century with the creation of the rue de l'Échiquier, but it was not until 2017 that access was made.
For a short time the street was named Ruelle Couvreuse .
It was connected to the boulevard when rue Basse-Saint-Denis was removed by repairs in 1832.
In the mid-19th century, the cul-de-sac was delimited by a concert hall le Gymnase musical on the odd-numbered side and le Grand Café de France on the opposite side . From 1837 to 1899, the Bonne-Nouvelle bazaar was located on the site of today's post office ; it was destroyed by fire and replaced in 1900 by a department store, les Nouvelles galeries de la Ménagère , which was also destroyed by fire in 1930. Then the post office was built here.
The cul-de-sac with a width of 15 meters and a length of 62 meters is lined on the left by residential buildings and on the right is only the large post office, which was built in 1957 by the architects Joseph Bukiet (1896-1984) and André Gutton (1904 –1980) was built. It is exceptionally wide because it is used by the post office trucks to drive into the rear of the building.
The famous night club Le Memphis is located on the ground floor and basement of house no .
literature
- Jacques Hillairet: Dictionnaire Historique des Rues de Paris. Les Éditions de Minuit, Paris 1963, ISBN 2-7073-0092-6 .
- Laure Beaumont-Maillet: Vie et histoire du Xe arrondissement . Éditions Hervas, Paris 1988, ISBN 2-903118-35-3 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Pascal Étienne, Le faubourg Poissonnière, Délégation à l'action artistique de la Ville de Paris , 1986, 315 p., P. 257