Rue des Sablons

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Coordinates: 48 ° 52 '  N , 2 ° 17'  E

Rue des Sablons
location
Arrondissement 16.
quarter Porte-Dauphine
Beginning 35, rue Saint-Didier
The End 32-36, Avenue Georges-Mandel
morphology
length 385 m
width 10 m
history
designation 1868
Original names Rue des Bornes
Rue Saint-Hippolyte
Coding
Paris 8405

The Rue des Sablons is a 385 meter long and 10 meter wide road in the neighborhood Porte Dauphine of the 16th arrondissement of Paris .

location

The Place de Mexico divides the street into two parts: it runs as a one-way street north to Rue Saint-Didier and south to Avenue Georges-Mandel . In the extension beyond the avenue, the street is called Rue du Pasteur Marc Boegner .

Name origin

The name is reminiscent of the former sand plain ( French Plaine des Sablons ), a sand pit between what is now the 16th arrondissement and Neuilly-sur-Seine .

history

The length of the street has changed several times over the course of history. It originally ran between Place de Mexico and Place Possoz , which is south of Avenue Georges-Mandel, where Rue des Sablons ends today. The section north of the Place de Mexico was originally called Rue des Bornes ( German  street of boundary stones ) because it was on the border of the old village of Passy . After its incorporation into Paris, the two streets were merged in 1868 and formed the historically longest Rue des Sablons, which existed until March 10, 1891. The following day, the section south of Avenue Georges-Mandel was cut off and given the new name Rue du Pasteur Marc Boegner (part of the old Rue Cortambert).

Attractions

The building with the number 28 was added to the list of cultural monuments of the 16th arrondissement in 1984.

Web links

Commons : Rue des Sablons  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Plan de Roussel
  2. ^ Philippe Siguret, Bertrand Lemoine : Vie et histoire du XIVe arrondissement (Edition Hervas, Paris 1991), p. 146
  3. Ancienne Crèmerie in the Base Mérimée of the French Ministry of Culture (French).