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Tuileries Palace


 

Up to 1871 the Tuileries Palace was a palace in Paris, France, on the right bank of the River Seine.

Tuileries Gardens and the Axe Historique

When the large empty space between the northern and southern wings of the Louvre now familiar to modern visitors was revealed in 1883, for the first time the Louvre courtyard opened into an unbroken Axe historique. The Tuileries Gardens (French Jardins des Tuileries) are surrounded by the Louvre (to the east), the Seine (to the south), the Place de la Concorde (to the west) and the Rue de Rivoli (to the north). Farther to the north lies the Place Vendôme.

Related Topics:
1883 - Axe historique - French - Place de la Concorde - Rue de Rivoli - Place Vendôme

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The Tuileries Gardens cover about 63 acres (25 hectares) and still closely follow a design laid out by landscape architect Andre Le Notre in 1664. His spacious formal garden plan drew out the perspective from the reflecting pools one to the other in an unbroken vista along a central axis from the west façade, which has been extended as the Axe historique.

Related Topics:
Tuileries Gardens - Landscape architect - Andre Le Notre - 1664 - Axe historique

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The Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume is a museum of contemporary art located in the north-west corner of the gardens.

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