Up above the hustle and bustle of the French capital is quite literally rarefied air. Breathe it in with a visit to Tour Montparnasse.
Built atop the Montparnasse – Bienvenüe Paris Métro station, the Tour Montparnasse features a restaurant, a terrace on the top floor, and Europe's fastest elevator. On a clear day you can see for 40 km or more.
Located in a breathtaking postmodern building designed by Frank Gehry, the Cinémathèque Française is a French non-profit film organization that houses one of the largest archives of film documents and film-related objects in the world.
Alongside daily showings of global cinemas on their film screens, the museum is also home to the Méliès Museum which showcases the life of French cinematic pioneer George Méliès.
Grand Palais Immersif - Bastille is a innovative cultural venue located in the heart of Paris, located in the unseen spaces of the Opéra Bastille, never before open to the public.
The digital exhibitions developed by Grand Palais Immersif and its partners aim to provide an artistic experience and to explain a work, an artist or a movement, by providing a point of view and keys to understanding, while arousing emotions in compliance with scientific requirements.
This new exhibition format features audiovisual, narrative, interactive, and immersive components, all designed to be wandered around with wonder.
Private museum Jacquemart-André is located in Paris’s 8th arrondissement on the Boulevard Haussmann. It's easy to reach on metro stops Miromesnil, Monceau and Saint-Philipe-du-Roule and it's also within walking distance of the Champs-Élysées and Saint-Lazare train station.
Formerly known as the Bois de Vincennes Zoological Park, the 14.5-hectare Paris Zoological Park recently underwent two years of refurbishment works, giving this famous zoological park major natural environmental features, and plenty of room for the animals to roam.
The animal habitats have been grouped five 'biozones', and the zoo has six restaurants and a 4,000 m2 tropical rainforest-filled greenhouse. It's visible from quite far away, thanks to the Big Rock, a 65m-tall artificial mini-mountain, which is an iconic symbol of the Paris Zoological Park.