Author Archive

Madrid restaurants

Ferðir

Ainhoa

Bárbara de Braganza 12. Phone: 308 6698. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.11000 ($88) for two. All major cards. (C1).

One of many Basque places, a modern and simple restaurant with classic cooking, situated in the north-eastern part of the center, near Paseo de Recoletos.

The dining room is partioned in two by a wooden grill and covered with mirrors on one side.

• Marmitako = pea soup with turnip, potato and tuna.

• Revuelto de pisto = scrambled eggs with chopped olives.

• Merluza a la parilla = grilled hake.

• Rape a la koskera = turbot with green bean sauce.

• Tarta et truffa almondes = almond cake.

• Idiázabal = Basque cheese.

Al Mounia

Recoletos 5. Phone: 435 0828. Hours: Closed Sunday & Monday. Price: Pts.9700 ($78) for two. All major cards. (C2).

The best Moorish restaurant in Spain is in central Madrid, near Paseo de Recoletos, combining cooking and atmosphere.

It is divided into a few rooms decorated from top to bottom in Moorish style, evoking memories from Alhambra in Granada and Mezquita in Córdoba. Guests sit in sofas at low sofa-tables and enjoy especially good service.

• Al Mounia panache = pancakes of the house.

• Brochette khefta = skewered meat balls.

• Chicken with almonds and meat fumé.

• Grilled lamb.

• Cordero mechoui = oven-braised lamb.

• Taginé = minced chicken.

• Alcuzcuz = Maghreb hash.

• Almond sweets.

• Mint tea.

Asador de Aranda

Preciados 44. Phone: 547 2156. Hours: Closed Monday dinner. Price: Pts.7600 ($61) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Castilian restaurant in a pedestrian area around the main department stores in the center. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Bajamar

Gran Vía 78. Phone: 548 4818. Fax: 559 1326. Price: Pts.15000 ($120) for two. All major cards. (A1).

The best-known seafood restaurant in town, receiving airborne fish every day, popular with tourists and businessmen, in a basement on the corner of Plaza de España and Gran Vía.

An aquarium with lobsters awaits customers when the have descended the staircase. The dining room is rather cool, sheathed in bright wood Scandinavian style, like a Norwegian hotel from 1965.

• Steamed lobster.

• Dublin Bay prawns in garlic oil.

• Baked apple.

• Torrija de la casa = rice pudding with cinnamon.

Botín

Cuchilleros 17. Phone: 366 4217. Fax: 366 8494. Price: Pts.9800 ($78) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Down the steps from the southwestern corner of Plaza Mayor, 100 meters down the street on the left side, Antigua Casa Sobrino de Botín, founded in 1725, one of the very oldest restaurants in the world. This was the venue of the final chapter of Hemingway’s rising sun, not surprisingly since he was a regular here. The place is also mentioned in his story on an afternoon death.

It was originally only on the ground floor but has been expanded into two upper floors. It is not only popular with tourists but also with locals. The tavern has old and quaint furnishings, including porcelain tiles on the walls and marble in the floors. The kitchen oven has been in use since the start of the restaurant.

• Black sausages Burgos.

• Ham on melon.

• Cordero asado = braised lamb.

• Cochinillo asado = braised baby pork.

• Cheese cake with raspberries.

Buey II

Plaza de la Marina Española 1. Phone: 541 3041. Price: Pts.7000 ($56) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Near the royal palace and the Sabatine gardens. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Café de Oriente

Plaza de Oriente 2. Phone: 541 3974. Fax: 547 7707. Price: Pts.13000 ($104) for two. All major cards. (A2).

One of the very best restaurants in central Madrid, a Basque one, run by Chef Bernardo Santos, influenced by Nouvelle Cuisine. It is opposite the Royal Palace, really two places in one as you have to enter an alley to get into the better one on the left side.

The solemn dining room is wealthy and homey at the same time. Service is excellent.

• Lobster salad.

• Asparagus mousse with sea lamprey and seaweed.

• Pigeon breast.

• Sliced beef fillet.

• Nougat ice-cream flambé with timbale.

• Black-currant sorbet with blackberry sauce.

Casa Gallega

Plaza San Miguel 8. Phone: 547 3055. Price: Pts.8000 ($64) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Galician cooking a few steps from Plaza Major and Plaza de la Villa. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Casa Lucio

Cava Baja 35. Phone: 365 3252. Fax: 366 4866. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch. Price: Pts.10200 ($82) for two. All major cards. (A3).

Near the far end of the restaurant mile leading off Plaza Mayor into Cuchilleros and Cava Baja, frequented by politicians and artists, bullfighters and television people.

Its two storeys are always full to the brim. Service is good for the regulars, less so for the others.

• Melón con jamón = ham on melon.

• Jamón de Jabugó = Jabugó ham.

• Shells.

• Revuelto de patatas con huevo = omelet with chips.

• Lenguado de la casa = sole.

• Solemillo = beef steak.

• Perdices = partridge marinated in vinaigrette.

• Arroz con leche = Milky rice pudding with caramel crust.

Casa Marta

Santa Clara 10. Phone: 548 2825. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.6000 ($48) for two. All major cards. (A2).

A few steps from the opera and Plaza de Orientes. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Casa Paco

Puerta Cerrada 11. Phone: 366 3166. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.9200 ($74) for two. No cards. (A2).

On the restaurant mile leading off Plaza Mayor along Cuchilleros and Cava Baja, a celebrity eatery with extremely simple furnishings.

The main decoration are the endless pictures covering a good part of the walls of many small dining rooms. Theater personalities frequent this place for beef and salad. Coffee is not served.

• Jamón serrano = ham.

• Cochinillo asado = braised pork.

• Solomillo de buey = beef filet.

• Flan = fruit flan.

• Tarta Santiago = tart of the house.

Club 31

Alcalá 58. Phone: 531 0092. Price: Pts.14000 ($112) for two. All major cards. (C2).

One of the best restaurants in Madrid, a kind of a ladies’ club at dinner and a gentlemen’s club at lunch, is near the corner of Alcalá and Plaza de la Independencia. Ángel Paracuellos practices classic cuisine.

It is a large, dark brown room that would be bare if it were not full of noisy people all the time. The furnishings are unusual. A large carpet is on one wall, another is of cork and the third of wood. Lots of waiters keep milling around.
• Souffle de rodaballo con bacon a las finas herbas = turbot mousse.

• Cacaroles de borgona con foie en nido de patata asado = snails with goose liver on a baked potato.

• Rodaballo al horno con setas = turbot with mushroom.

• Pata azulón a la naranja y compota de membrillo = duck in orange.

• Perdiz asada en hoja de vid = partridge with baked potato.

• Venado estilo australio, ciruelas, parsas y pinones = venison Australian style, with prunes and raisins.

• Crepes de manzana al calvados con sorbete al cava = flambéed pancakes with apple filling.

• Nuestra tarta milhojas = puff pastry.

Comedor

Montalbán 9. Phone: 531 6968. Fax: 531 6191. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: Pts.9600 ($77) for two. All major cards. (C2).

BetweenPlaza de Cibeles and Parque del Buen Retiro. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Cuevas de Luis Candelas

Cuchilleros 1. Phone: 366 5428. Fax: 366 1880. Price: Pts.9500 ($76) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Restaurant in old Madrid style with musicians, on the steps leading down from Plaza Mayor. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Don Pelayo

Alcalá 33. Phone: 531 0031. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards. (B2).

On the main street leading to Plaza Puerta del Sol. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Errota Zar

Jovellanos 3. Phone: 531 2564. Fax: 531 2564. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.9500 ($76) for two. All major cards. (B2).

One of the best of many good Basque restaurants in Madrid is on the short walk between the parliament building and hotel Suecia. The cooking is in traditional Basque style.

It is in a long, green room where guests sit in noble chairs at tables clothed in green linen.

• Gratinado de ostras sobre roseta de tomate a la muselina de aromáticos = gratinated oysters with tomato.

• Milhofas de paloma y foie a la gelatina de frambuesa = warm pigeon liver and duck liver in gelatine.

• Solomillo con foie-gras a las uvas = beef filet with goose liver.

• Ragout de cievres = venison in thick prune sauce.

• Bacalao al pil-pil = salt-cod.

• Suprema de perdiz en lecho de col fresada = partridge breast.

• Pudding de arroz con leche a la crema de cirulas farsas = rice pudding with plum puré.

• Charlota de peras con caramelo al Williams = pear tart with caramel sauce.

• Idiázabal = Basque cheese.

Espejo

Paseo de Recoletos 31. Phone: 308 2347. Fax: 593 2223. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards. (C1).

Directly on Paseo de Recoletos, one of the most beautiful restaurants in Madrid, a lively place in turn-of-the-century Art Nouveau style.

Lots of mirrors, porcelain tiles and leaded lampshades are the main attraction. The service is also very good. The cooking hails from Navarra and the Basque country.

• Espárragos Navarra = asparagus marinated in oil.

• Ensalade de langosta, melón y salmón ahumado = a salad of shrimp, melon, smoked salmon and small tomatoes.

• Escalopines de cordero = slices of leg of lamb.

• Pato e la laranja = duck in orange.

• Profiteroles de nata con chocolate = puff pastry with cream and hot chocolate.

• Flan al caramelo = caramel pudding.

Esteban

Cava Baja 36. Phone: 365 9091. Fax: 366 9391. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards. (A3).

Near the far end of the restaurant mile leading off Plaza Mayor into Cuchilleros and Cava Baja, frequented by journalists, media people and theater people.

Everybody seems to know each other. People amble between tables exchanging greetings just as at a party. The furnishings are old and dark and amusingly accidental. Old beams are much in evidence. The cooking is very old-fashioned.

• Alcachofas con almejas = artichokes with shells in a soup.

• Pimientos rellenos de bacalao = salt cod in paprika.

• Solomillo de corzo = venison filet.

• Rabo de toro estofado = ox tail dressing.

• Cordero asada = braised lamb.

• Torrijas de leche frita = rice pudding.

Grillade

Jardines 3. Phone: 521 2217. Fax: 531 3127. Price: Pts.8000 ($64) for two. All major cards. (B2).

In a short street between Gran Vía and Plaza Puerta del Sol. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Gure-Etxea

Plaza de la Paja 12. Phone: 365 6149. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.10000 ($80) for two. All major cards. (A3).

A Basque dining room situated in a half-timbered house on a small church square just west off the Cava Baja restaurant street.

The quality furnishings fit the excellent service and the premium cooking.

• Piperrada vaxca = omelet, green peppers and ham.

• Shrimp in crab soup.

• Besugo al estilo de Beneo = whole sea bream in oil.

• Merluza al horno = baked hake.

• Leche frita = pan-fried milk pudding.

• Flan de la casa = caramel pudding.

Ingenio

Leganitos 10. Phone: 541 9133. Fax: 547 3534. Hours: Closed Sunday dinner. Price: Pts.6100 ($49) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Between Gran Vía and the royal palace. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Julián de Tolosa

Cava Baja 18. Phone: 365 8210. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.13000 ($104) for two. All major cards. (A3).

On the main restaurant street in the old center. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Mentidero de la Villa

Santo Tomé 6. Phone: 308 1285. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards. (C1).

Restaurant with old furnishings near Museo Arquelógico Nacional and Paseo de Recoletos. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Mesón Gregorio III

Bordadores 5. Phone: 542 5956. Hours: Closed Wednesday. Price: Pts.8200 ($66) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Between the opera and Plaza Puerta del Sol. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Mi Pueblo

Costanilla de Santiago 2. Phone: 548 2073. Hours: Closed Sunday dinner & Monday. Price: Pts.6300 ($50) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Near Plaza Mayor. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Ópera de Madrid

Amnistía 5. Phone: 559 5092. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.7600 ($61) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Near the opera and Plaza de Orientes. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Paradis Madrid

Marqués de Cubas 14. Phone: 429 7303. Fax: 429 3295. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: Pts.10000 ($80) for two. All major cards. (B2).

A few steps from Plaza Canovás del Castillo and Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Platerías

Plaza Santa Ana 11. Phone: 429 7048. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards. (B2).

On a main square in old Madrid. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Posada de la Villa

Cava Baja 9. Phone: 366 1880. Fax: 366 1880. Price: Pts.9800 ($78) for two. All major cards. (A3).

Antique restaurant in Castilian style on the main restaurant street in the old center. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Rasputín

Yeseros 2. Phone: 366 3962. Hours: Closed Tuesday. Price: Pts.6400 ($51) for two. All major cards. (A3).

Russian restaurant near the royal palace. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Robata

Reina 31. Phone: 521 8528. Fax: 531 3063. Hours: Closed Tuesday. Price: Pts.7000 ($56) for two. All major cards. (B2).

A Japanese restaurant near Gran Vía. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Schotis

Cava Baja 11. Phone: 365 3230. Hours: Closed Sunday evening. Price: Pts.7800 ($62) for two. All major cards. (A3).

On the restaurant mile leading off Plaza Mayor into Cuchilleros and Cava Baja, specializing in beef steaks served on sizzling bricks.

It is long and narrow, with large paintings covering the walls, filled with local customers.

• Revuelto de trigueros = scrambled egg with green peas.

• Tomato salad.

• Merluza = hake.

• Solomillo = beef steak on brick.

• Flan de huevo = egg pudding.

• Two ice-creams with pineapple and whipped cream.

Sixto Gran Mesón

Cervantes 28. Phone: 429 2255. Fax: 523 3174. Hours: Closed Sunday dinner. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards. (B2).

Castilian restaurant near Plaza Canovás del Castillo. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Taberna del Alabardero

Felipe V 6. Phone: 547 2577. Fax: 547 7707. Price: Pts.10300 ($82) for two. All major cards. (A2).

Opposite the royal palace, a restaurant in 19th C. style, probably too elegant to be called a tavern. It has spawned descendants abroad.

The best atmosphere is in the innermost room, furnished with antiques. The cooking is a combination of Modern French and Basque, offering some imaginative courses.

• Tomatoes with crab filling and egg sauce.

• Paprika with wild mushroom and spinach filling and tomato sauce.

• Bacalao “Club Ranero” = salt-cod.

• Corazón de solomillo de toro = beef filet.

• Grouse with potato chips.

• Duck slices in orange sauce.

• Rice pudding.

• Melone and cream soup with raspberries.

Toja

Siete de Julio 3. Phone: 366 4664. Fax: 366 5230. Price: Pts.10000 ($80) for two. All major cards. (A2).

On the northwestern corner of Plaza Mayor, a popular and lively tavern offering Galician food.

The simple and large dining place is equally popular with locals and foreigners.

• King prawns in egg sauce.

• Crab.

• Shellfish.

• Merluza gallega = grilled hake with white potatoes.

• Grilled lamb shoulder.

• Tarta Toya = Napoleon pastry.

• Strawberries with cream.

Valle

Humilladero 4. Phone: 366 9025. Hours: Closed Monday dinner & Sunday. Price: Pts.7000 ($56) for two. All major cards. (A3).

A few steps from Descalzas Reales. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Viridiana

Juan de Mena 14. Phone: 523 4478. Fax: 532 4274. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.13000 ($104) for two. All major cards. (C2).

Exceptional cooking at a relatively economical restaurant between Plaza de la Lealtad and Parque del Buen Retiro. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Zalachaín

Álvarez de Baena 4. Phone: 561 4840. Fax: 561 4732. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch, Sunday. Price: Pts.19000 ($152) for two. All major cards

We include Zalachaín even if it is not in the city center, near the corner of Paseo de la Castellana and Maria de Molina. It is the best restaurant in Madrid and one of the top three in Spain, a Basque restaurant as the other two. It combines content with form, cuisine with ambience and service. A tie for gentlemen is obligatory.

The dining area is in a few venerable rooms of hardwood, a few tables in each, loaded with exquisite crystal and porcelain. The service matches the dignified atmosphere. The cooking of Chef Benjamín Urdáin is in a Basque version of French Nouvelle Cuisine.

• Ensalada de gambas con maíz dulce al sorbete de tomates = shrimp salad with sweet maize on tomato sorbet.

• Raviolis rellenos de setas, rufas y foie gras = mushrooms and goose liver in ravioli.

• Bacalao Tellagorri = salted cod.

• Pato azulón al chartreuse verde = duck in liqueur.

• Ragoût de bogavante con alcachofas = lobster ragout with artichokes.

• Escalopes de lubina con salsa de almejas = sea bass fillets with shellfish sauce.

• Biscuit glacé con chocolate fundido = coffee ice with chocolate sauce.

• Frutas del tiempo con sorbete = season’s berries with sorbet.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Madrid amusements

Ferðir

Corral de la Morería

Morería 17. Phone: 365 1137. Fax: 364 1219. (A3).

The Andalucian Flamenco dance, influenced by Moors and Gipsys, is at its Madrid best at this restaurant. The famous Blanca del Rey dances there in a red dress almost every evening.

The show continues from 23 in the night to 3 in the morning. Diners arrive at 21:30 and get the best tables. The food is acceptable, the atmosphere is perfect and the feeling is great, if Spaniards outnumber the tourists.

Dancers and singers sit on the stage and stand up to take solo turns. Lament and grief, pride and despair are forcefully expressed in wailing and rapid songs. The instruments are guitars and castanets, in addition to the clapping of hands. The ladies dance in colorful and substantial dresses and the gentlemen sing in high-heeled shoes.

Plaza de Toros

Alcalá 231.

The main bullfight arena in the world, built 1931 in Neo-Moorish style as many bullfight arenas in Spain, with seats for 26,000 people. Fights are performed Sunday afternoon, competing with soccer, sometimes also on Thursday. Bullfighting comes from Andalucía and has been performed since the Middle Ages. The present form is from the late 18th C.

This is not a sport or a competition between man and but. It is a ritual drama, almost always resulting in the death of the bull. Three matadors perform and each kills two bulls. There are three acts to the drama. First the matador shows some traditional movements, such as the Veronica, with the red muleta cloth. Then riding picadores come and put spears in the bull.

In the second act the assisting bandilleras put three arrows in the neck of the bull. Finally the matador arrives again in the third act with his muleta cloth, performs some ritual movements and kills the bull with a single, perfect estocada with his sword. Everything must be performed according to strict rules of conduct and etiquette. This is like a religious performance.

Cervecería Alemana

Plaza de Santa Ana. (B2).

On one of the major squares in the old and liveliest part of the center, a combination of a café, a pub and a snack bar.

This is one of the places made famous by Hemingway, a simple and straightforward café, bursting with conversation from morning to night.

The tapas snacks are popular.

Cuevas de Sésame

Principe 5. (B2).

A friendly basement piano bar in a side street leading north from Plaza de Santa Ana.

Guests sit on different levels at small tables. The walls are covered with paintings by well-known artists and the sayings of well-known intellectuals.

Sometimes he guests pick up their own musical instruments, but otherwise a pianist takes care of that.

La Trucha

Manuel Fernandez y Gonzalez 3. (B2).

The snack-bar in front of the relaxed Andalusian restaurant La Trucha is one of the more popular discussion venues in the lively Plaza de Santa Ana area, in a pedestrian alley leading off the northeastern corner.

Madrilenos stand at the bar in three or four layers and devour tapas.

Mesón

Ciudad Rodrigo. (A2).

In the arcade leading off the northwestern corner of Plaza Mayor, offering the best tapas snacks in town.

Try the squid, shellfish, mushrooms and some far-flung varieties.

Café Central

Plaza del Ángel 10. (B2).

An old café opposite Victoria hotel, reminiscent of French turn-of-the-century cafés, decorated with mirrors.

Jazz is often played live here at night, when people feel like it.

There are some other jazz cafés in this neighborhood.

Café de Oriente

Plaza de Oriente 2. (A2).

Opposite the royal palace, a café and a tapas bar and a meeting point for musicians and politicians.

The outdoor part of the café is popular in good weather.

The same name also applies to an excellent restaurant on the premises.

Círculo de Bellas Artes

Alcalá 42. (B2).

One of the most interesting morning cafés, often full of artists, on the traffic artery between Plaza Puerta del Sol and Plaza de Cibeles.

You can relax with your coffee in deep leather chairs and enjoy a good view either out to the street or into the gallery with paintings and leaded window panes.

To enter the café we must buy a ticket to the current exhibition.

Gran Café de Gíjon

Paseo de Recoletos 21. (C2).

The main discussion center of politics and culture, one of many cafés on this major avenue, just north of Plaza de Cibeles.

This is a typical 19th C. café, open and noisy. Large windows open to the heavy motor traffic on the avenue. The intellectuals hang out there for hours on end and express themselves eloquently.

Mallorquina

Calle Mayor / Plaza Puerta del Sol. (B2).

A quiet breakfast café on the first floor at the western end of Plaza Puerta del Sol.

This is the ideal place for breakfasting on café and bakeries, such as ensaimada, spiral pastry in Mallorca style.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Madrid walks

Ferðir

Old Madrid

A maze of narrow streets between Palacio Real to the west and Museo del Prado to the east, from Gran Vía in the north and the Rastro market in the south.

This is the leisure center of Madrid, full of tapas bars, cafés, pubs, restaurants and hotels. Most of the interesting sights of Madrid is in this part of town, on the periphery of this part or just outside it.

Two famous squares are the center of this center, Plaza Puerta del Sol and Plaza Mayor, 500 meters apart.

Our first walk in Madrid will start and finish at Plaza Puerta del Sol.

Plaza Puerta del Sol

Plaza Puerta del Sol. (B2).

The geographical and factual center of Madrid. All distances in Spain are measured from this plaza. The kilometer stone of “zero” is in front of the palace of the security police on the southern side of the square. All clocks in Spain follow the clock in the tower of that palace. The square itself is surrounded with conform and cream colored houses from the 18th C.

This is the place to start from, if you want to go somewhere in the center. Madrilenos meet here at all times of the day and night, arriving by bus or metro, both of whom are centered here. The lively plaza is also the venue of protests and processions. The only relatively quiet period on the square is in the early 5-7 morning hours.

North from the square the pedestrian Preciado and Carmen lead in the direction of the fashionable shopping and traffic street of Gran Vía. Some of the best known department stores are in these pedestrian streets, El Corte Inglés and Galerias Preciados. The main leisure part of Madrid is south of the square, full of tapas bars, cafés, pubs and restaurants.

Two major streets lead west off the plaza, Mayor and Arenal. The famous Mallorquina café occupies the first floor of the building between them. Under its windows there are always some women selling lottery tickets.

Puerta del Sol lottery ticket sales

Plaza Puerta del Sol.

The old people selling tickets for the state lottery are a common sight in the streets of Madrid. There are always some vendors with a sharp tongue at the western end of Plaza Puerta del Sol.

We turn our attention upwards and look for street signs on the buildings.

Street signs

Plaza Puerta del Sol.

Beautiful ceramic tiles with street signs have been put up in most of central Madrid. We can see some of them where streets lead off Plaza Puerta del Sol.

From the west end of Plaza Puerta del Sol we walk along Arenal in the direction of the opera palace. Arriving at the second street to the right, San Martín, we turn right and take a detour to Monasterio de Descalzas Reales at a square with a corresponding name.

Descalzas Reales

Hours: Open Tuesday-Sunday 10:30-13, Tuesday-Thursday 16-18. (B2).

A 16th C. convent for daughters of noble families. It became very rich and collected paintings. It has now been converted into a museum, showing famous works by Brüghel the elder, David, Titian, Rubens and others.

In the middle of the monastery there is a courtyard with 30 chapels.

We return to Arenal and turn right, pass the opera palace, Teatro Real, from the early 19th C and arrive at the square in front of the royal palace, Plaza de Oriente.

Plaza de Oriente

Plaza de Oriente. (A2).

The statue on the plaza is of Felipe IV, King of Spain, made according to drawings by Velázquez. The popular Café de Oriente is on our left, when we enter the plaza. The Palacio Real is in front of us, on the other side of the plaza.

We can make a detour into the Sabatini gardens on the northern side of Palacio Real, with a grandiose view to the palace.

Then we walk along the palace front to arrive at the tourist entrance through the courtyard on the southern side of Palacio Real.

Palacio Real

Plaza de Oriente. Hours: Open 9:30-12:45, in summer 16-18:30, in winter 15:30-17:15. (A2).

Built in the 18th C. on the foundation of an older palace that burned down in 1734. This one has 2,800 rooms and has stayed vacant since 1931. It is now a museum, open to the public, except for an occasional reception. The main attraction is the Throne Room, probably the most decorated room in the world, clothed in gold and velvet, with a ceiling painting by Tiepolo.

The apartment of Reina Maria Christina is now a tapestry museum. The apartment of Princesa Isabel is a museum of painting, embroidery, porcelain and crystal, containing works by Goya, Bosco, Rubens, Greco and Velázquez. The library of King Felipe V is now a book and coin museum. There is also a pharmaceutic museum and a museum of armor.

There is a special entrance to a carriage museum from the gardens Campo del Moro on the western side of the palace. The view from there up to the palace is imposing.

We leave the palace, turn right into Bailén past Catedral de la Almuenda for about 150 meters until we come to Mayor, which leads back to Plaza Puerta del Sol. We turn left at this corner of Bailén and Mayor and continue on Mayor just over 200 meters to arrive at Plaza de la Villa, the old City Hall square of Madrid. We turn right into the square and have Ayuntamiento on our right.

Ayuntamiento

Plaza de la Villa. (A2).

The City Hall of Madrid, built in the middle of 17th C. in Neo-Renaissance style.

The statue in the middle of the plaza depicts Admiral Alvaro de Bazán, the Spanish hero of the naval battle of Lepanto.

Casa de Cisneros is at the far end of the plaza.

Casa de Cisneros

Plaza de la Villa. (A2).

A 16th C. palace in Neo-Gothic Plateresque style with a noticable oriel window overlooking the plaza.

It is now a tapestry museum.

Hermeroteca is at the eastern side of the square.

Hemeroteca

Plaza de la Villa. (A2).

The Moorish palace has a Neo-Gothic entrance

It is now a library of periodicals.

Torre de Los Lujanes rises at the northern end of Hermeroteca

Torre de los Lujanes

Plaza de la Villa. (A2).

A 15th C. military defense tower, the prison of Francis I after the battle of Pavia.

At the northern side of Torre de los Lujanes the Punonrostro alley leads off the plaza. We follow the curved alley all the way south to San Miguel, about 200 meters in all.

San Miguel

Sacramento. (A2).

A 18th C. Baroque church with a convex street front.

We cross San Justo in front of San Miguel and turn into Letamendi which we follow to the San Pedro tower.

San Pedro

(A3).

A 14th C. tower, one of two Moorish towers in Madrid.

We continue on San Pedro past the church south to Plaza San Andrés and the adjoining Plaza Puerta de Moros, from where we turn left into the long Cava Baja, the main restaurant street in Madrid. Near the other end of the street we turn right into Bruno and walk a short way to arrive at Toledo where Catedral de San Isidro is in front of us.

Catedral de San Isidro

Toledo. (B3).

A 17th C. church in powerful and strict Jesuit style.

San Isidro is the patron saint of Madrid. The major festival of the year is held in his honor May 8.-15. It is a festival of music and cooking, bullfights and nightlife.

We go past the cathedral to the south and turn left into Estudios and continue to Plaza de Cascorro, where the Rastro market begins.

Rastro

(A3).

The main street market of Madrid is south from Plaza de Cascorro, in the street Ribera di Curtidores and most of the adjoining streets. This is a flea market, open Saturday & Sunday 10-14. It is a lively place with some pickpockets around so you have to be careful with your valuables.

This is the oldest and most colorful part of Madrid, with lots of alleys and the thickest Madrilenos patios.

We walk back Ribera di Curtidores, Plaza de Cascorro, Estudios and Toledo to Cava Baja, turn right into that street, cross Plaza Puerta Cerrada and walk along Cuchilleros.

Cuchilleros

(A2).

The main street of good restaurants Madrid, along with its continuation in Cava Baja in the other direction.

Among the restaurants on this mile are Casa Paco and Casa Botín in this part and Schotis, Esteban and Casa Lucio in the Cava Baja part.

We continue on Cuchilleros all the way up the steps and arcade of Plaza Mayor.

Plaza Mayor

(A2).

A comfortable square, completely free of motor traffic, a chosen place to sit down at a café. This is a rectangular square built in the beginning of the 17th C. All the buildings are in the same style, all three storeys and all with an arcade on the ground floor. We can walk in the arcade around the whole square.

In the middle of the square there is a statue of Felipe III. Nine arcades lead into the square, which otherwise is closed to the outside world.

This was formerly the main square of Madrid. Sentences were passed on heretics and they were executed here. Bullfights were here and coronations of kings. Now this is the tourist center of Madrid, also popular with locals. The Tourist Board office is at no. 3.

The square is the focal point of the yearly San Isidro festival.

San Isidro á Plaza Mayor

San Isidro is the patron saint of Madrid. The major festival of the year is held in his honor May 8.-15. It is a festival of music and cooking, bullfights and nightlife. The focal point of the festival is at Plaza Mayor.

If it is Sunday morning we can observe a quaint market in the square.

Plaza Mayor stamp market

Sunday morning stamp collectors gather at Plaza Mayor to exchange, buy and sell stamps. They clutch their large albums and huddle together at small tables, absorbed in their hobby.

We leave Plaza Mayor through the west arcade at the northwestern corner of the square, pass the Mesón tapas bar and turn left into Plaza San Miguel.

Plaza San Miguel

(A2).

A beautiful and lively food market is at the 17th C. square.

We return to Plaza Mayor, cross the square diagonally and leave it to the east at the southeastern corner and walk along Gerona and Bolsa past the Foreign Ministry of Spain to the squares Plaza del Ángel and Plaza de Santa Ana.

Plaza Santa Ana

(B2).

These two squares are the center of café nightlife in Madrid. The squares are dominated by the Victoria hotel, which fronts them both.

Here are Café Central, Cerveceria Alemana, Cuevas de Sésame and La Trucha, also the restaurant El Cenador del Prado.

From Santa Ana we walk north along Principe until we come to San Jerónimo where we turn left into Plaza Puerta del Sol where we started this walk through the old center of Madrid.

New Madrid

The newer part of central Madrid covers for our purposes two avenues and their neighborhood, Gran Vía and Paseo de Recoletos and the continuation of the latter in Paseo del Prado. It includes Plaza de España in the west and the Retiro park in the east.

Most of the important museums of Madrid are in the area around Paseo del Prado. They are Museo del Prado, Centro de Arte Reina Sofia and Colección Thyssen. We will end our walk through this part of the center at these important museums.

We start at Plaza de España.

Plaza España

Plaza España. (A1).

The square is far from beautiful, surrounded by ugly buildings from the last decades. It is important for the memorial of Cervantes the writer and the statue of his characters Quixote and Sancho Panza.

We turn our attention to the memorial and statues.

Don Quixote & Sancho Panza

Plaza España. (A1).

The bronze statue of Quixote and Sancho Panza has become a symbol of Madrid, vividly showing these extreme rather than typical characters from the well of Castilian history. Quixote is the aristocratic idealist and Sancho Panza is the earthy farmer, both in a way divorced from reality, just as many Castilians want to think of themselves.

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra was a contemporary of Shakespeare in the end of the 16th C. By writing the story of the travails of Quixote and Sancho Panza he was of the same importance to the Spanish language as Shakespeare was to the English language.

We leave the plaza at its eastern corner and walk along Gran Vía.

Gran Vía

Gran Vía. (B2).

The main tourist avenue in Madrid, lined with offices of airlines and car rentals, international thrash food restaurants and hotels. The center of Gran Vía is at Plaza de Callao, where two pedestrian streets, Preciados and Carmen lead down to Plaza Puerta del Sol, passing the main department stores of Madrid on their way, El Corte Inglés and Galerias Preciados.

A little farther to the east Gran Via joins with another traffic artery, Alcalá, which comes from Plaza Puerta del Sol. All the way to Paseo de Recoletos we are walking alongside the heavy traffic of beeping motorists.

To the south of Gran Vía is the old center of Madrid with a web of narrow alleys, lots of tapas bars, cafés and restaurants. To the north is a more recent part of the center, more frequented by young people, with louder music entering the streets from the establishments of leisure.

When we arrive at Paseo de Recoletos we observe the palatial post office on the other side.

Postes

Plaza de Cibeles. (C2).

Probably the most heavily decorated post office in the world, built in wedding-cake style at the beginning of the 20th C.

We are at Plaza de Cibeles. On the plaza there is a statue from the 18th C. depicting the goddess of fertility, Cybele, in a wagon pulled by lions.

We turn left into Paseo de Recoletos.

Paseo de Recoletos

Paseo de Recoletos. (C1).

The avenue is lined with cafés with outdoor sections on the green islands between the motor traffic lanes. Among them is an Art Nouveau glass house, belonging to Café d’Espejo. The best-known café at this stretch is Gran Café de Gijón.

When you enter the cafés the traffic noise drowns in the noise of the lively conversation. But the heavy motor traffic continues all day, all evening and far into the night.

Just before we arrive at Plaza de Cólon we pass Biblioteca Naçional, the national library.

We arrive at Plaza de Cólon.

Plaza de Cólon

Plaza de Cólon. (C1).

The plaza is dominated by a giant monument with a statue of Cólon or Colombus on top. The monument rises above fountains and a subterranean cultural center with a gallery and a theater. The entrance is at the monument.

At the back of the plaza there are monuments honoring famous Spanish explorers.

The palace to our right houses Biblioteca Naçional, facing Paseo de Recoletos, and Museo Arquelógico Naçional, the national museum of archeology, facing Serrano, open Tuesday-Sunday 9:15-13:15.

We turn our attention to the Cólon statue.

Cólon

(C1).

Columbus is a national hero of Spain, even if he was really an Italian, born in Genova. But it was Spain that was ready to finance his addiction to explorations, which enormously helped the European discovery of the Americas and made Spain for a century the major superpower on earth, amassing an empire covering most of Latin America.

It is no wonder that his memorial is a major landmark of Madrid.

We turn right into Serrano.

Serrano

Serrano. (C1).

The main fashion and antique street of Madrid, in fact the most expensive street in town, good for observing fashionable ladies walking with flourish on the pavement.

This is the Salamanca district, built by noble families in the 19th C., now a district of foreign embassies.

We continue on Serrano all the way to Plaza de la Independenzia with the Puerta de Alcalá in the center of the plaza.

Puerta de Alcalá

Plaza de la Independenzia. (C2).

A triumphal arch built according to drawings by Sabatini in the late 18th C. in memory of the investiture of Carlos III.

From the plaza we enter the northwestern corner of the Retiro park.

Retiro

(C2).

The large park is similar in size to Hyde Park in London, but much more covered in woodland. This park was laid out in the 17th C. for the summer palace of Felipe IV, converted into a public garden in the late 19th C.

We pass a marionette theater for children, fortune-tellers with Tarot cards, hot-dog stands and pickpockets.

On our left we pass lake Estanque.

Estanque

People rent pleasure boats to row around the lake.

A memorial to Alfonso XII is on the other side of the lake, designed in a wedding-cake style that is similar to the memorial of Victor Emanuel II in Rome.

We continue straight through the park, passing bridge, backgammon and chess players, excited lovers and peculiar dogs. Finally we leave the park by the southwestern corner and walk down Claudio Mayanno.

Claudio Mayanno

Claudio Mayanno. (C3).

Second-hand bookstalls line the street. The action is most interesting on Sunday morning when Madrilenos relax in the Retiro park.

We cross Plaza del Emperador Carlos V and walk a few meters southwest along Atocha and turn right into Santa Isabel where Centro de Arte Reina Sofia is at no. 52.

Centro de Arte Reina Sofia

Santa Isabel 52. (C3).

The old building is immediately recognizable by glass enclosures that have been erected around new outside elevators.

This extensive museum is similar in size to Museum Pompidou in Paris. It boasts of 20th C. Spanish masters, such as Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró and Pablo Picasso.

The main attraction is the Guernica by Pablo Picasso.

Picasso

Santa Isabel 52. (C3).

Guernica may be the best-known work of art in the 20th C. It describes the effect of a German aircraft attack on a Basque town in the Civil War of 1936-1939. Picasso painted it for the Republican government, that Franco displaced at the end of the civil war.

The painting was returned to Spain after the death of Franco and demise of Falangism and became a symbol of Spanish democracy. It has a place of honor in Centro de Arte Reina Sofia.

We return on Santa Isabel and Atocha to Plaza del Emperador Carlos V. There we turn left along Paseo del Prado, past Jardín Botanico and Museo del Prado on the other side. At Plaza Canovás del Castilio we arrive at Palacio de Villahermosa housing Colección Thyssen.

Colección Thyssen

Plaza Canovás del Castilio. (C2).

A museum of 787 works of art collected by the Swiss millionaire Thyssen-Bornemisza and put by him into the custodianship of Spain. It opened it doors in 1992.

Opposite Palacio de Villahermosa on the other side of San Jerónimó is the Palace luxury hotel. Behind Villahermosa on San Jerónimó is Cortes Españolas, the parliament of Spain. Opposite Villahermosa on the other side of Plaza Canovás del Castilio is another luxury hotel, the Ritz.

We cross Plaza Canovás del Castilio, turn right and walk to the entrance of Museo del Prado. If there are crowds waiting to enter the main entrance, it is often easier to walk on and enter the museum from the south side, where there tend to be less crowds.

Museo del Prado

Paseo del Prado. Hours: Open Tuesday-Saturday 9-15, Sunday 9-14. (C2).

Prado is one of a handful of major art museums in the world, in the same class as the Louvre in Paris, Uffizi in Florence, National Gallery in London and National Museum of Art in Manhattan. It started as the private collection of the Spanish royal dynasty.

When browsing the museum we may notice the violent nature of many of the works of art. The paintings are more brutal and bloody than the paintings of other museums of the same stature. Destruction, death and the Devil seem to have weighed heavily on the religious minds of the extremely Catholic Habsburg dynasty of Spanish kings.

Some of the major works of Goya, El Greco, El Bosco, Raphael and Rubens decorate the walls of Prado, in addition to several other masters. The collections of Prado are so large that only a tiny fraction can be exhibited at the same time in the extensive palace. It is difficult to give directions as the placing has tended to change.

There are some important works by Goya.

Goya

Goya was a major force in the Romantic period of European painting. He lived 1746-1828, famous for his violent paintings expressing extreme feelings and abhorrence of war and its terrors.

His paintings in Prado include the two Majas, the clothed and the naked Maja, the Execution of the Rioters, and Saturnus Eating His Son.

El Greco is another major master in Prado.

El Greco

El Greco dominated the Spanish scene of painting in the Renaissance period. He lived 1541-1614, born in Crete, studied with Titian in Venice and later fled to Spain as a vehement Catholic. He is famous for his strong use of powerful colors marking the pinnacle of Renaissance art. He lived in Toledo and painted for religious patrons.

His paintings in Prado include Nobleman with a Hand on His Chest and Adoration of the Shepherds.

El Bosco is another great master in Prado.

El Bosco

El Bosco was a Dutchman, also known as Hieronymus Bosch, lived 1450-1516, a member of a fanatic group of Catholics. His weird pictures are hair-raising and surrealistic attacks on hypocrisy, greed and lust. The extremely religious King Felipe II of Spain adored them.

His paintings in Prado include Garden of Delights and Adoration of the Magi.

Velásques is another Spanish master at the Prado.

Velásques

Possibly the greatest painter in Spanish history, 1599-1660, born in Sevilla and became the court painter of the kings in Madrid.

His paintings in Prado include Maids of Honor, probably the main diamond of the museum.

Memorable paintings by other masters include the Cardinal in Red by Raphael, and the many naked and fat ladies of Rubens.

This concludes the second walk through the center of Madrid.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Madrid excursions

Ferðir

Espagna

Andalucía

The real Andalucía is behind the coastal mountains of the south, in the river basin of Guadalquivir, around the historical cities of Sevilla, Córdoba and Granada. It is a country of endless sunshine and lassitude, fiestas and music. It is the country of bullfights and flamenco dances, lemons and sherry. The most agreeable months are March-April and September-October.

This is the home of gazpacho, the cold tomato soup with olive oil and vinegar, garlic and onions, often with bread crumbs, in endless variations. This is the home of the iced refreshment drink, sangría, containing red wine, carbonated water, fruit juice and a drop of brandy.

Sherry originates from Andalucía. The best sherry is fino, scraping dry, pale and light. It is the pre-prandial drink par excellence, emphasizing taste rather than numbing it. Real amontillado is darker and heavier, suitable for closing a meal.

Costa del Sol

The main tourist center of Spain, a Mediterranean coastline of nice beaches and garish hotels from Cabo de Gata to Algeciras. Málaga is the major city and Marbella the most stylish resort. Torremolinos is the main tourist center and we start from there.

The first leg of our Andalusia drive is 110 km and brings us from Torremolinos on Costa del Sol to Ronda. We drive on the cost east through Malaga and turn inland at San Pedro de Alcántara on the road to Ronda. It passes through the beautiful mountain landscapes of Serranía de Ronda

Ronda

The town is built on a mountain 750 meters above sea level at Tajo, the gorge of Guadelevín, which runs through the center of Ronda. The old town is on a separate rock and the newer one is on the edge of the mountain. There are two bridges between the two town parts. The older is Puente Romano and the younger Puente Nuevo. Both offer grandiose views into the gorge.

Take time to wander in the pedestrian alleys of the old town. There is an old, massive church with a Moorish minaret. Also the Renaissance Mondragón palace, the Salvatiera palace and the Moorish baths, which remind us that Ronda was the capital of one of the Moorish states in Spain. It is easy to walk between these places as the city center is only 15 hectares.

We have lunch at Don Miguel on the Tajo cliffs, beside Puente Nuevo.

Parador de Ronda

Plaza de España. Phone: 287 7500. Fax: 287 8188. Price: Pts.15800 ($126) without breakfast. 71 rooms.

A convenient abode for travelers, directly beside the Puenta Nuevo, formerly the town hall of Ronda. There are short distances from the hotel to Plaza de Toros and Carrera de Espinel and over the Puenta Nuevo to the old town center

Don Miguel

Plaza de España 3. Phone: 287 1090. Fax: 287 8377. Price: Pts.7000 ($56) for two. All major cards.

At the cliff’s edge beside Puenta Nouvo, a perfect observation point in Ronda, offering the best food in town.

The chef, Miguel Coronel, is a specialist on old receipes from the mountains of Andalucía.

• Revuelto de setas = omelet with mushroom.

• Faisán de la serranía rondena = pheasant from the mountains.

Puente Nuevo

One of the best vantage points for viewing the gorge.

In the newer town, 100 meters from Puente Nuevo, is Plaza de Toros, one of the oldest bullfight arenas in Spain, from 1785. Spanish bullfighting got it present form in Ronda. It was Francisco Romero, born in 1698, who formulated the complicated rules. His son, Pedro Romero became the most illustrious bullfighter in the history of Spain.

A quaint street, Carrera de Espinel, with old houses, leads off the arena.

From Ronda there are 86 km to Arcos de la Frontera. We drive through a mountainous area with the famous “white” towns glimmering in the sunshine, such as Castellar, Vejer and Zahara. This was for some the frontier between Islamic and Christian Spain and many towns still have “de la Frontera” or “on the frontier” in their name.

Arcos de la Frontera

The town sits on a rock above Guadalete river. The best view is from the main square which is on the edge of the rock.

The Plateresque church of Santa María is on the square. Also the hotel of Parador de Arcos de la Frontera in Casa del Corregidor, with some balconies hanging over the edge of the cliff.

Parador de Arcos de la Frontera

Plaza de España. Phone: 70 0500. Fax: 70 1116. Price: Pts.14200 ($114) without breakfast. All major cards. 24 rooms.

One of the famous Paradors of Spain, in the old Casa del Corregidor building on the main square in town.

It has a magnificent view from the dining room and from guest room balconies on the cliff’s edge. The cooking is rather good, specializing in Andalucian food.

• Gazpacho = cold tomato soup with vegetables.

From here there are 91 km to Sevilla.

Sevilla

The main city of Andalucía and in earlier centuries the main city of Spain, a Moorish city for more than five centuries, 712-1248, as testified by the city castle and the church tower. Sevilla became rich following the discovery of America in the end of the 15th C. The river Guadalquivir was navigable to Sevilla at that time.

Voyagers like Amerigo Vespucci, Cristóbal Cólon (Columbus) and Fernao de Magalhaes (Magellan) were here. This is also the city of Don Júan, Don Quixote, Cervantes, Velázques and Carmen. It is a lively city with over half a million people and lots of tourists. The World Fair of 1992 was held on a Guadalquivir island in Sevilla.

The famous Semana Santo starts at Palm Sunday and continues with processions for a week. Brotherhoods compete in marking the most decorative wagons with towers and sculpture. People dance and sing between the wagons. Feria de Abril is a festive week in April, when people raise tents, dine and dance and sing. Sevilla is also the home of the flamenco and sevilliana dances.
We start our walk at Catedral de Santa María.

Catedral de Santa María

Avenue de la Constitución.

The cathedral dwarfs the surroundings with its powerful tower and extensive flying buttresses, the third largest church in Europe, after San Pietro in Rome and St Paul’s in London. Everything of importance in Sevilla is near the cathedral, built in Late Gothic style in 1401-1506, after the destruction of an earlier Islamic mosque.

The western front with its complicated portals is well-known.

The cathedral is entered from the other side.

Catedral de Santa María interior

Hours: Open 10:30-13 and 16-18:30.

Enormous and cold inside, 56 meters in height, with 75 stained windows, some of them the original ones from the start of the 16th C.

Capilla Real on the left of the entrance is the burial place of a few Spanish kings.

At the southern end is the tomb of Christopher Columbus, carried by four figures representing the four kingdoms of Spain, Aragón, Castilla, León and Navarra.

Giralda

Hours: Open 10:30-13 and 16-18:30.

Beside the cathedral eastern entrance, the late 12th C. church tower was originally a minaret of an earlier mosque. It is 98 meters in height, wide and rectangular, as usual in Western Islam, built of pink brick.

The style is Moorish, from the reign of the Almohads, who were religious hardliners and opponents of gaudiness. The tower is therefore very formal in design, with regular pointed arches, horseshoe windows and delicate ornaments. A decorative top floor with a Christian belfry was added in the 16th C.

A spiral path inside the tower leads you up to an excellent view of the city.

We go to the north side of the cathedral to enter Patio de los Naranjos

Patio de los Naranjos

A garden of orange trees, laid out in Moorish times, a typical part of an Islamic mosque.

To get from the cathedral to the city castle we cross Plaza del Triunfo, with Casa Lonja on the right side.

Lonja

Hours: Open Monday-Saturday 10-13.

The Museum of West-Indies, Archivo General de Indias, in a palace that was built in 1572 as an exchange when Sevilla was the main city of America voyages. It was designed by Juan de Herrera who also designed the royal palace of El Escorial.

Old navigation charts and charts of towns in Latin America are in the museum.

The city castle, Alcázar, is in front of us.

Alcázar

Hours: Open Monday-Friday 9-12:45 and 15-17:45, Saturday-Sunday 9-13.

The oldest part of the castle is from Moorish times, the wall between the outer courtyard, Patio de la Montería, and the middle courtyard, Patio del León. Otherwise the castle is mostly from the reign of the Christian King Pedro the Cruel, 1364-1366.

The castle was designed in Mudejar style, clearly influence by the Alhambra in Granada, and the craftsmen were Mudejar Moors. Pedro the Cruel did not understand Arabic and did not know that their decorative scrollwork on the walls says: “There is no victor except Allah”.

Moorish style survived in Spain in competition with French and Italian styles for a long time after the Moors had been evicted from Spain. Alcázar in Sevilla is the best and the most straightforward example of Moorish style from the Christian era.

We go from the middle courtyard to the inner courtyard, Patio de las Doncellas.

Patio de las Doncellas

The ground floor of the inner courtyard is in Moorish Alhambra style with pointed arches on all sides. An upper floor of a mismatching arcade was added in the 16th C.

Behind the palace there is a large garden with rows of shrubs and trees, ponds and flowers and the garden house of Pedro the Cruel. Another garden, less formal, is on the left side.

The district to the east of the cathedral is Santa Cruz.

Santa Cruz

The Jewish ghetto in the Middle Ages became the district of nobility in the 17th C. It still is the quarter of well-off people who live in well-preserved houses with peaceful courtyards and narrow pedestrian alleys.

Lots of cafés, bars and restaurants are in Santa Cruz, especially on the squares, such as Dona Elvira, Venerables Sacredotes and Santa Cruz with a statue of Don Juan.

We walk to Plaza Dona Elvira.

Plaza Dona Elvira

The main square of Santa Cruz, a popular site of restaurants and cafés, accessible by pedestrians only. It has an Andalucian atmosphere of lassitude.

Alfonso XIII

San Fernando 2. Phone: 422 2850. Fax: 421 6033. Price: Pts.35000 ($280) without breakfast. All major cards. 129 rooms.

The classy hotel in Sevilla, a large palace 300 meters from the cathedral and just in front of the old tobacco factory of Carmen, now housing the University of Sevilla. Alfonso XIII was built on the occasion of the World Fair in 1929 and has ever since been the preferred abode of the rich and famous.

A nice tiled courtyard with a fountain and Moorish arcades graces the ground floor. There are lots of Moorish decorations. The mayor parties in town are held at the hotel. It has good parking facilities.

Fernando III

San José 21. Phone: 421 7307. Fax: 422 0246. Price: Pts.11600 ($93) without breakfast. All major cards.

A practical hotel in the old luxury district of Santa Cruz, 300 meters from the cathedral.

A modern building furnished in country style, sporting a swimming pool and rather large rooms, well equipped. Rooms with a balcony are preferable. The hotel has good parking facilities.

Albahaca

Plaza Santa Cruz 12. Phone: 422 0714. Fax: 456 1204. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.10600 ($85) for two. All major cards.

A beautiful city mansion in the middle of Santa Cruz, offering versatile cooking.

It combines beautiful ambience, good service and the best food of Santa Cruz.

• Sopa de frutos del mar = seafood soup.

• Lenguado a la naranja = sole in orange sauce.

• Entrecote de ternera grillé con trufas del olivar y verduras naturales = grilled veal entrecote.

• Mousse de queso con salsa de frambuesa = cheese mousse with raspberry sauce.

Egana Oriza

San Fernando 41. Phone: 422 7211. Fax: 421 0429. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch, Sunday. Price: Pts.13800 ($110) for two. All major cards.

The best restaurant of Sevilla is in the center, beautifully designed in an old house under the city walls.

The Basque cook is José Mari Egana, mixing Basque traditions and Andalusian material, such as game from the surrounding areas.

• Sopa de bacalao = saltfish soup.

• Ajo blanco = cold tomato and garlic soup with melon, a kind of gazpacho.

• Revuelto de patatas, ajetes, setas y pimientos = scrambled eggs with a potato and mushroom filling.

• Chipirones = small squid in flaky pastry.

• Pichón de Bresse asado con salsa de vino tinto = braised pigeons in red wine sauce.

• Helado de queso y miel con crema de nueces = cheese ice-cream in honey.

Hostería del Laurel

Plaza de los Venerables 5. Phone: 422 0295. Price: Pts.7800 ($62) for two.

An old and a traditional Andalusian restaurant on two floors in a Santa Cruz building and on the pavement outside.

There are tiled walls and arched doors, lamps of wrought iron and wooden sculptures.

• Espárragos = asparagus with three sauces.

• Tournedos Hostería del Laurel = beef tournedos in house style.

Isla

Arfe 25. Phone: 421 2631. Fax: 456 2219. Hours: Closed Monday. Price: Pts.10000 ($80) for two. All major cards.

Near the cathedral, but on the other side of Constitución avenue, in a side street, specializing in deep-fried and grilled seafood, mainly from Galicia and the coast of Cadiz.

Popular with local people, unknown by tourists, who seldom happen to be in this street. The furnishings are plain and the conversations are loud. Service is very good.

• Jamón de Cumbres Mayores = raw ham.

• Revuelto de salmón con champiñones y gambas = scrambled salmon with mushroom and shrimp.

• Tocino de cielo = crème caramel.

San Marco

Cuna 6. Phone: 421 2440. Hours: Closed Monday lunch, Sunday. Price: Pts.11000 ($88) for two. All major cards.

One of the best restaurants of town, about 600 meters straight north from the cathedral.

Situated in a beautiful town house from the 18th C., offering unusually good service. Asana Ramacciotti cocks in an Italian way in the kitchen.

• Boullabese a nuestro estilo = seafood soup.

• Couscous de pescado = fish couscous.

• Pato con aceitunas = duck in olive oil.

• Ravioli rellenos de lubina en salsa de almejas = ravioli with sea bass and shell sauce.

From Sevilla we drive 143 km to Córdoba.

Córdoba

Emirs from Damascus reigned here from 719 and kept power until 1236. It was for a long time the major Moorish city in Spain and a celebrated center of learning. It was the home of the famous Jewish physician Maimónides and the equally famous Moorish philosopher Averroes. At one time there were 300 mosques in Córdoba. The Mezquita is a memorial to this glorious past.

The city declined when the Moors were evicted in the 15th C and the Christians took over, allowing the irrigation system to disintegrate. It is now a city of 300,000 inhabitants.

The action is in Córdoba in May. The celebration is similar to the April celebration in Sevilla, with a week of music and dance. The patios celebration is also in May, with competition between house-owners on the most beautiful flower arrangements in their patios, which are open to the public for the occasion.

The Mezquita is in the center of Córdoba.

Mezquita

A true wonder of the world, built in 785 and broke at that time new ground in the history of architecture, as its horseshoe arches have a height of two storeys. It gives an impression of greater height and space. Later the mosque was enlarged several times, always in the same style.

Basically the Mezquita resembles other congregation mosques. Outside it is surrounded with powerful walls. Inside them the conventional garden of orange trees, Patio de los Naranjos, is a forecourt with an impressive minaret and a cleansing fountain.

We enter the mosque.

Mezquita interior

Hours: Open in summer 10:30-13:30 and 16-19, in winter 10:30-13:30 and 15:30-17:30.

A dense wood of 850 columns in 10 rows, seeming at places to be endless. The columns support double Moorish horseshoe arches, striped with alternate white limestone and red brick. As a whole the mosque is a silent dream world of endless refraction of light, changing at every footstep.

At the far end there is a Qiblah for prayers and the sacred Mihrab niche which shows the direction to Mecca. Also complicated series of interweaving arches.

An ugly Rococo cathedral has been forcibly erected in the middle of the mosque. The church stands in grotesque excess in comparison with the simple Moorish elegance.

When leaving the courtyard of orange trees we turn left into Torrijos and walk alongside the Mezquita to Amador de los Ríos, where we turn right and walk to the entrance of the Alcázar.

Alcázar

Amador de los Ríos. Hours: Open in summer 9:30-13:30 & 17-20, in winter 9:30-13:30 & 16-19.

The city castle is from the 14th C.

The most interesting part are the Moorish gardens behind the castle, on uneven ground with fountains, flowing water and ponds. It is a good place for resting after sightseeing in Córdóba.

We now return to the Mezquita for a walk in Judería.

Judería

The Jewish Ghetto surrounds the Mezquita with its narrow, winding pedestrian alleys and potted plants on the walls. We start our walk at the minaret corner of the Mezquita square. We enter the corner alley, turn right into Deanes and then left into Romero to the square of Salazar where we turn left and walk through a narrow alley to the square of Maímonides.

The museum of bullfighting is in Maímonides, open 9:30-13:30 and 17-20. We walk alongside the museum, past the handicraft market behind the museum and past one of the last two remaining Jewish synagogues in Spain, this one in a 14th C. house on the left side of the street, open Tuesday-Saturday 10-14 and 16-19. Finally we return by the same way to the Mezquita.

From the northern corner of the Mezquita forecourt we walk into the alley of Bosco and immediately turn right into Calleje de las Flores with beautiful potted flowers on the walls. At the end of the alley there is a small square with an excellent view to the minaret of the Mezquita. We then return the same way to the Mezquita.

Conquistador

Magistral González Francés 15. Phone: 48 1102. Fax: 47 4677. Price: Pts.16000 ($128) without breakfast. All major cards. 103 rooms.

The best hotel in Córdoba, a recent one, in Moorish style.

Maimónides

Torrijos 4. Phone: 47 1500. Price: Pts.13700 ($110) with breakfast. All major cards. 60 rooms.

An economical hotel just in front of the Mezquita.

There is a car park under the hotel.

Room no. 208 had a wonderful view over the main street in town, the minaret of the Mezquita and the lively entrance to the popular restaurant El Caballo Rojo. The room is luxuriously outfitted with leather furniture. The bathroom is in good condition, but the air condition is rather weak.

Caballo Rojo

Cardenal Herrero 28. Phone: 47 5375. Fax: 47 4742. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards.

Possibly the best restaurant of Andalucía, in a prime location just in front of the minaret of the Mezquita.

A simple restaurant on two floors at the end of a long courtyard. The service is good and the prices are economical. The popularity is such that there are often queues on the sidewalk. Chef Francisco Medina Navarro specializing in old receipes from Moorish times.

• Alcachofas a la montillana = artichokes of the house.

• Espárragos blancos de Córdoba a la Crema de almendras = asparagus with almond cream.

• rape Mozárabe = monkfish in Moorish raisin sauce.

• Cordero a la miel = lamb in honey.

• Surtido des postres = mixed desserts.

Churrasco

Romero 16. Phone: 29 0819. Fax: 29 4081. Hours: Closed Thursday. Price: Pts.8600 ($69) for two. All major cards.

One of the very best restaurants in Córdoba, economical in price, situated in the Jewish ghetto just over 100 meters from the minaret of the Mezquita.

It is in four rooms on two floors in a beautiful city mansion with a courtyard for alfresco dining. It has also one of the best wine lists in the whole of Andalucía. It is always busy and always popular with the locals. Rafael Carrillo is the chef.

• Jamón de pato = marinated duck.

• Salmon al vapor de las finas hierbas = steamed salmon with mayonnaise.

• Bacalao al estilo del chef = saltfish of the house.

• Magret de pato en salsa de dátiles = duck breast.

• Buey churrasco = beef from the coal grill.

• Cerdo churrasco = pork from the coal grill.

• Iles flottante = meringue.

Next we drive 166 km from Córdoba to Granada. We drive through the flatlands of Andalucía in the direction of the mountains.

Granada

Mainly famous for Alhambra, the most beautiful and important monument in Spain, perched on a hill above the city center. The city of 250,000 inhabitants sits at the foot of the Sierra Nevada mountain range, which shows its white snowcaps on a good day.

This was the last bastion of the Moors, when Christian kings pushed their power southwards. The Moors fled to Granada from Córdoba when it fell in 1236 and held on to power in Granada until 1492. Granada was an Islamic city for almost eight centuries and has now been Christian for only five centuries. Nothing remains from the time of the Moors except the palace of Alhambra.

We drive uphill to Alhambra.

Alhambra

Hours: Open Sunday-Monday, Wednesday and Friday 9:30-20, Tuesday, Thursday & Saturday 9:30-20:30 & 22-24.

The apex of Moorish architecture, the sole Moorish palace to survive almost intact to the present day. It reflects the desire of the sons of the deserts for an oasis of greenery and running water. The buildings themselves are a secondary matter, deferring to the open spaces, acting as frames around flowers, brooks and fountains. In and out becomes a united whole.

The building material is light, simple and transitory, an haphazard stucco mixture of brick, refuse and plaster. The landscape architecture and delicate ornaments are the focal point. It is surprising how the weak buildings have survived all these centuries and are now as sparkling as if they were abandoned yesterday.

To enter the Moorish palace, Palacio árabe, we pass the ugly and intruding palace of the Christian King Carlos V in a strict Renaissance style, clashing violently with the Moorish elegance. It is now a museum of history and art. Behind the ticket office is the oldest part of the complex, the 9th C. castle of Alcazaba, with singular views over Alhambra, Granada and Sierra Nevada.

We enter Palacio árabe and go to Patio de los Leones in the center of the palace.

Patio de los Leones

The delicate excess of intricate decorations in the arcades around the open-air gardens is well preserved. Sunlight reflects in the mathematically exact plastering rolls, beautifully colored porcelain tiles and in Arabic sayings. The ceilings sparkle with multicolored stalactites and a riot of wood-carvings.

Some of the rooms have roofs and others are in the open. There are several windows with views over the city. The most famous roofed room is Sala de Embajadores = the ambassadors’ room. The most famous open rooms are Patio de los Arrayanes = the courtyard of myrtles; and Patio de los Leones = the courtyard of lions. Alhambra is designed around these two courtyards.

From Patio de los Leones we enter the gardens, Jardínes del Partal, who extend with brooks and orange groves along the ridge of the hill to Torre del Agua, where Alhambra ends and Generalife begins.

We enter the gardens of Generalife.

Generalife

Hours: Open Sunday-Monday, Wednesday and Friday 9:30-20, Tuesday, Thursday & Saturday 9:30-20:30 & 22-24.

The summer palace of Alhambra with long walks, cordoned by cypress and laurel trees, rioting in blossoms in July and August. Otherwise the beauty of the flowers is at a zenith in May.

The small 14th C. summer palace is at the far end of the paths, offering a good view to Alhambra.

We leave Generalife and Alhambra and drive down to the city center to park near Catedral de Santa María and Capilla Real.

Catedral de Santa María

Hours: Open 10:30-13 & 16-19, in winter -18.

The 16th and 17th C. cathedral is entered by a footpath leading from the main street in the center, Vía de Colón. It was started in Gothic style but mainly built in Renaissance style.

It has a nave with two aisles on either side. An unusual, circular chapel is in the middle of the church, supposed to emulate the Church of the Holy Grave in Jerusalem.

Capilla Real is alongside the cathedral. It is entered from Vía de Colón on a footpath alongside the old exchange building, Lonja.

Capilla Real

Hours: Open 10:30-13 & 16-19, in winter -18.

A royal chapel in late Gothic style from the beginning of the 16th C., the burial place of Fernando and Isabel, who combined Aragón and Castilla to make a united Spain. The couple won their final victory over the Moors here in Granada and drove them out of Spain.

On the other side of the chapel is a Baroque City Hall from the 18th C.

To reach Alcaisería we walk on the footpath past Capilla Real and turn left.

Alcaisería

The ancient Moorish silk market, now a tourist bazaar with long arcades of boutiques.

The main market square in Granada, Plaza de Bibarrambla is at the other end of the Alcaisería.

We pick up the car in Via de Colón and follow signs out of town to Cartuija.

Cartuija

Hours: Open 10-13 & 16-19, in winter -18.

A Carthusian monastery on a hill above Granada, a perfect example of the exuberant Churriguera Baroque style of the late 17th C.

América

Real de la Alhambra 53. Phone: 22 7471. Fax: 22 7470. Hours: Closed November-February. Price: Pts.10000 ($80) without breakfast. All major cards. 13 rooms.

An economical hotel at the Alhambra entrance, surrounded by the Alhambra gardens, very clean and plain, built around a courtyard.

Parador de Granada

Alhambra. Phone: 22 1440. Fax: 22 2264. Price: Pts.23200 ($186) without breakfast. All major cards. 36 rooms.

A real dream of a hotel in the 15th C. monastery of San Francisco, surrounded by the Alhambra gardens on three sides. It is the flagship of the Spanish Paradors chain of hotels. The hotel is a gem inside out. The rooms are on two storeys around a peaceful courtyard and have a view to the Alhambra gardens, some of them also to the snow-capped mountains.

The cooking is also good, specializing in historical courses from Andalucía, such as: Gazpacho Andaluz = cold tomato soup; and Moorish courses, such as: Postre Albacain = Moorish dessert. Also: Habas con jamón = peas with dried ham; and: Tortilla del Sacromonte = omelet with brains, testicles and vegetables. Dinner for two costs 8500 pts.

Room no. 213 is large and with a spacious bathroom. All furnishings are luxurious.

Sevilla

Oficios 12. Phone: 22 1223. Hours: Closed Sunday dinner. Price: Pts.7500 ($60) for two.

One of the best restaurants in Granada is alongside the Capilla Real, furnished in typical Andalusian country style with large tiles, small pictures and platters on the walls, beams and lanterns in the ceiling.

Before the civil war intellectuals met here, such as Federico García Lorca, who was born in an nearby town. José Rodríguez López makes traditional Andalusian food in the kitchen.

• Sopa Sevilla = Hot milk soup with fish and shrimp.

• Tortilla Sacromonte = omelet with brains, testicles and vegetables.

• Jamón con habas = peas with ham bits.

From Granada we drive straight over the mountains to Costa del Sol and arrive at the coastal town of Almunécar. We drive on the coastal road through Nerja with its cave, all the way to Málaga. This leg from Granada to Málaga is 127 km.

Málaga

The main city of Costa del Sol, a township for 3000 years, already an important port in Roman and Phoenican times.

The twin castles of Alcazaba and Gibralfaro are on a cliff above the center of Málaga. We drive the winding road up to the cliff.

Parador Málaga-Gibralfaro

Gibralfaro. Phone: 222 1903. Fax: 22 1904. Price: Pts.12000 ($96) without breakfast. All major cards. 36 rooms.

One of the famous Spanish paradors, perching on the cliffside just under the the walls of the Gibralfaro castle above Málaga.

The rooms offer wonderful views over the Plaza de Toros in Málaga and the harbor. The dining room offers traditional food from Málaga.

Antonio Martín

Paseo Marítimo 4. Phone: 22 2113. Price: Pts.9000 ($72) for two. All major cards.

The best harbor restaurant in Málaga.

Other good harbor restaurants nearby are in the Maestranza street, Taberna del Pintor at no. 6, Nuevo Bistrot at no. 16; and in Vélez Málaga, Café de Paris at no. 8.

We are going on an Andalucía trip of several days from Costa del Sol to Ronda, Arcos de la Frontera, Sevilla, Córdoba, Granada and Málaga. We rent a car and are going to drive about 700-750 km.

Alcazaba

Hours: Open in summer Monday-Saturday 10-13 & 17-20, Sunday 10-14, in winter Monday-Saturday 10-13 & 16-19, Sunday 10-14.

Side by side, two Moorish castles, originally the major strongholds of the Moors in Andalucía. Alcazaba is the one which rises above the city center. It is now a museum of Moorish art. Inside the ramparts there are also Moorish gardens.

There are extensive views from Gibralfaro, the other castle on the cliff.

This is the end of our drive through Andalucía. We take a well-earned rest in Parador Málaga-Gibralfaro.

1991

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Barcelona

The capital of Catalunya is the second largest city in Spain with 2 million inhabitants, the main center of banks and commerce, more nervous and hurried than Madrid, similar to Western Europe and also the main link of Spain to the main part of the continent. People work in Barcelona and live in Madrid. They hang less out in cafés and have a quicker step on the city pavements.

Barcelona has broader avenues and more avenues than the larger Madrid. Still the traffic is much heavier in Barcelona, reaching congestion all over the center. Many famous buildings hail from the Art Nouveau period in the beginning of the 20th C. From that time we see bank palaces that seem like fairy-tale castles, different from the sober bank buildings of Europe.

Catalan is replacing Spanish as the official language in Barcelona. It is a different language, related to French, influenced by the proximity to Provençe. Free taxis use the sign “lliure” instead of “libre”. Street-signs and menus are now in Catalan. The explanations in Joan Miró’s museum are only in Catalan. The Spanish language is being evicted from Barcelona.

We start our walk through central Barcelona at Plaça de Catalunya.

Plaça de Catalunya

Plaça de Catalunya. (B2).

The large square with a fountain garden in the middle is the central square of Barcelona.

El Corte Inglés department store is at the eastern side of the square.

We walk past the department store and continue down the pedestrian Portal de l’Ángel. Gradually the street narrows to its end at Plaça Nova.

Plaça Nova

Plaça Nova. (B2).

On out left is a modern building with a large bas-relief by Picasso showing Catalans dancing Sardana, their national dance.

In front of us are two towers, the remains of the west port of the Roman city wall from the 4th C.

To the right of the towers is the bishop’s palace, Palau Episcopal. To the left is the house of the archdeacon, Casa de l’Ardiaca, originally from the 11th C. and renovated in the 16th C.

From the square we see the cathedral of Barcelona, Catedral de Santa Eulalia.

Catedral de Santa Eulalia

Plaça de la Seu. Hours: Open 7:30-13:30 & 16-19:30. (B2).

Built in the 14th and early 15th C. in a Catalan version of the Gothic style, with no aisles, only a nave with numerous chapels between the buttresses. In the 19th C. it was restored in the original style.

The white choir-screen of marble is from the 16th C.

On the right side there is an exit from the church to a peaceful cloister from the 15th C., with rambling geese.

The best time to be here is just after 12 on Sunday when the Sardana dance starts in front of the cathedral.

Sardana

Plaça de la Seu.

A complicated Catalan ring dance, banned during the Falangist regime of Franco, practiced in secret and became a symbol of the movement of Catalan independence. Arriving churchgoers, young as well as old, participate in the dance each Sunday. This happening is a moving experience, also for travelers.

We now enter the Barri Gòtic district.

Barri Gòtic

(B2).

The name of the old center of Barcelona, with its narrow and winding pedestrian alleys, lined with cafés and restaurants, derives from the Gothic 13th to 15th C. style of many houses.

We walk along Condes alley on the northern side of the church. Museu Frederic-Marès is on our left.

Museu Frederic-Marès

Condes. Hours: Open Tuesday-Saturday 9-14 & 16-19, Sunday 9-14. (B2).

The medieval royal palace, the residence of the counts of Barcelona, who became the kings of Aragón in 1137, the forerunners of the kings of Spain.

The palace is now a museum of Medieval art, especially sculpture.

We continue along the palace and the next one, Palau del Lloctinent.

Palau del Lloctinent

(B2).

The former Renaissance palace of the vice-king of Spain, now the National Archives.

We turn left, walk around this palace and enter Plaça del Rei

Plaça del Rei

Plaça del Rei. (B2).

The courtyard of the palace of the counts of Aragón, later kings of Aragón and finally kings of Spain.

To the left of the plaza is Palau del Lloctinent and Torre del Rei Martí. To the right is Capella de Santa Agata. In the center is Saló del Tinell.

We first observe Saló del Tinell.

Saló del Tinell

Plaça del Rei. (B2).

The 14th C. banqueting hall and throne room of the royal palace.

The steps in front are famous as the place where King Fernando of Aragón and Queen Isabel of Castilla received Christopher Columbus when he returned from his first voyage to America.

The tower to the left of Saló del Tinell is Torre del Rei Martí.

Torre del Rei Martí

Plaça del Rei. (B2).

An observation tower from the 16th C. with several levels of arcades.

To the right of the palace steps there is Capella de Santa Agata.

Capella de Santa Agata

Plaça del Rei. (B2).

A Gothic church from the 14th C.

Opposite the palace courtyard is Museu d’Història de la Ciutat.

Museu d’Història de la Ciutat

Plaça del Rei. Hours: Open Tuesday-Friday 9-20:30, Saturday-Sunday 9-13:30. (B2).

The Museum of City History is in the 16th C. Casa Clariana Padellòs and the surrounding buildings.

We continue along Casa Clariana Padellòs and turn left along Libreteria where we immediately arrive at Plaça de l´Ángel. We can take a detour of a few steps to the north to observe Capella de Santa Agata and the city wall from Plaça de Ramón Berenguer el Gran. Then we return to Plaça de l’Ángel, cross the traffic of Laietana, walk along Princesa and turn right into Montcada.

Montcada

Montcada. (B2).

In the 12th C. this alley of greenery on balconies was the main residence street of the nobility. The palaces on both sides are from the 13th to the 18th C.

Museu Picasso is at Montcada 15-19.

Museu Picasso

Montcada 15-19. Hours: Open Tuesday-Sunday 10-20. (B2).

The museum is in three palaces. It is entered through a typical Catalan palace courtyard.

The museum exhibits important works by Picasso who came to Barcelona at the age of 15 and learned to paint.

The fashion museum, Museu de tèxtil i de la Indumentària, is opposite Museu Picasso on the other side of Montcada.

We return through Montcada, Princesa and again cross Laietana and then walk along Jaume to Plaça Sant Jaume.

Plaça Sant Jaume

Plaça Sant Jaume. (B2).

The central square of the old Gothic center of Barcelona. On the right there is Palau de la Generalitat and to the left is the Ajuntament.

We turn our attention to Palau de la Generalitat.

Palau de la Generalitat

Plaça Sant Jaume. Hours: Open Sunday 10-13. (B2).

The Council of Catalunya is a large 15th C. palace.

Before we turn our attention to the other palace on the square we walk into the alley to the right of the Generalitat palace, Calle Bisbe Irurita, to a covered gallery connecting the Generalitat and the Canonges palaces.

Canonges

Calle Bisbe Irurita. (B2).

The 19th C. Neo-Gothic covered gallery connects the office of the Council of Catalunya to the office of the President of the council in the Canonges palace.

We return on Calle Bisbe Irurita to Plaça Sant Jaume and turn our attention to Ajuntament on the other side of the square.

Ajuntament

Plaça Sant Jaume. (B2).

The 14th C. City Hall of Barcelona.

We leave the square at its southern corner and walk along Ferran to Gegants where we turn left and walk on Gegants and Avinyó, typical Barri Gòtic alleys, all the way to Moll de la Fusta.

Moll de la Fusta

Moll de la Fusta. (B2).

An extensive promenade, lined with palm trees, running along the yacht harbor.

We turn right and walk along the promenade to the Monument a Colom.

Monument a Colom

Plaça Portal de la Pau. (B2).

A giant column with a statue of Christopher Columbus at the top.

We can use an elevator to the top of the column to enjoy the view.

On the harbor side is the Custom House of Barcelona.

Custom House

(B2).

A decorative palace, recently built in Historical style.

The Santa María replica is on the other side of the palace.

Santa María

(B2).

This full-sized replica of the caravel that brought Christopher Columbus on his first voyage to America is usually moored at the quay near the Custom House.

Opposite the Custom House, on the other side of the avenue, is the Drassanes.

Drassanes

Plaça Portal de la Pau. Hours: Open Tuesday-Friday 10-14 and 16-19, Saturday-Sunday 10-14. (B2).

The 14th C. shipyard of Barcelona, the only existing example of an industrial building of that age.

It is now a large maritime museum, Museu Marítim.

Here at Plaça Portal de la Pau is the southern end of Las Ramblas.

Las Ramblas

Las Ramblas. (B2).

The most popular promenade in Barcelona, leading from Plaça Portal de la Pau to Plaça de Catalunya, where we started this walk. It is a broad street following the contours of an earlier river. In its center is an island of trees and kiosks, cafés and shops, including flower shops and bird shops.

We pass the wax museum on our right in Museu de Cera, on the corner of Passatge Banca. Then we take a detour to the left into Carrer Nou de la Rambla, where Palau Güell is near the corner.

Palau Güell

Carrer Nou de la Rambla. (B2).

An Art Nouveau palace by Gaudí, with typical ironwork decorations. It is now a theater museum.

This is the Chinatown of Barcelona.

Barri Chino

(B2).

The Chinatown of Barcelona with lots of shady characters, including pickpockets and whores.

We return to Las Ramblas, cross it and walk into Carrer Colom, which leads in a few steps to Plaça Reial.

Plaça Reial

Plaça Reial. (B2).

A pedestrian square closed to motor traffic. It is a completely designed square with identical buildings and a ground floor arcade in the style of Plaza Mayor in Madrid.

Stamp and coin collectors meet in the cafés in the shades of the arcade on Sunday morning. At night the square is overtaken by hobos and drug addicts.

We return to Las Ramblas and continue northward. On the left side we see Gran Teatre del Liceu on the corner of Sant Pau.

Gran Teatre del Liceu

Las Ramblas. (B2).

The City Opera from 1846, refined and unobtrusive on the outside but spacious inside. It has been restored after a fire in 1993.

Opposite Liceu the Cardenal Casanas leads north to the squares of Plaça del Pia and Plaça Sant Joseph Oriol.

Plaça del Pi

Plaça del Pi. (B2).

These two squares under the church of Mare de Déu del Pi accommodate the flea market of the city center. They are also the venue of some artistic happenings.

Bordering Plaça del Pi on the northern side is a district of shops and shopping arcades, combining the maze of an Eastern bazaar with the polished cleanliness of the West.

We return on Cardenal Casanas to Las Ramblas and continue northward. On the left we come to La Bouqueria and cross the street to enter the market.

Boqueria

Las Ramblas. (B2).

The food market of Barcelona is formally named Mercat de Sant Josep and usually called La Boqueria. It is an Art Nouveau building of glass and wrought iron from the end of the 19th C.

Inside there are colorful oceans of fruit and vegetables, fish and meat. The action is mainly in the morning and dies out in the afternoon.

We return to Las Ramblas and come on the left to Palau de la Virreina.

Palau de la Virreina

Las Ramblas. (B2).

In colonial times the Vice King of Peru lived in this palace. It now houses some museums and exhibitions.

We continue on Las Ramblas, past trees and cafés, bird and flower shops, newspaper kiosks and possibly protest marches to arrive at Plaça de Catalunya where we started this walk. We cross the square to enter Passeig de Gracìa on the north side.

Passeig de Gracìa

Passeig de Gracìa. (B1).

This is one of many avenues of the new city center from the end of the 19th C. It was then the luxury apartment district of Barcelona, Eixample, and is now the luxury shopping district.

The producers of Cava, the Catalan sparkling wine, often have tents on the spacious pavement, offering pedestrians free samples of their product.

At no. 41 we arrive at the colorful Casa Amatller from 1900 by Josep Puigi Cadafach in Flemish Art Nouveau style and at no. 43 at Casa Batlló.

Casa Battló

Passeig de Gracìa 43. (B1).

Built by Gaudí in 1905, easily recognizable from its wavy balconies and curved roof.

These buildings are all in a radical Catalan version of Art Nouveau alias Jugendstil of the years around 1900. This style had more influence in Barcelona than in any other European city.

A little farther to the north is Casa Milà or La Pedrera, also by Gaudí and also from 1905, almost sea-sick in its form. We turn right on this corner and soon arrive at Sagrada Família.

Sagrada Família

(B1).

The symbol of Barcelona, the extravagant church of Gaudí, the famous architect of Barcelona, the Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família. Building started at the end of the 19th C. and is not finished yet. The many towers with their multicolored mosaic tips rise in a riot of grandeur above the city.

This fairy-tale construction cannot be described in text and not even in pictures, as the immense size is not properly reflected. The only way is to come here, stand in the roofless nave and gaze upwards to Gaudí’s towers.

From here we hail a taxi to Parc Güell.

Parc Güell

An amusement park designed by Gaudí. It was originally meant to be a district of 60 garden houses. The plan was never realized. What remains of the project is the pleasure garden of outrageously funny houses and absurdly amusing brick-walls, a dream world of children of all ages.

From here we take a taxi to the top of the Montjuïc hill.

Montjuïc

Montjuïc. (A2).

Accessible with a funicular from the harbor near Monument a Colom or by road, offering a good view over the city center, harbor and ocean.

A military museum, Museu Militar, is on the top of the hill. Below it is an amusement park with a Ferris wheel and diverse gadgets.

We start our walk down the northern side of the hill. First we arrive at Fundació Joan Miró.

Fundació Joan Miró

Montjuïc. Hours: Open Tuesday-Friday 11-20, Saturday-Sunday 11-14:30. (A2).

The Miró museum is a modern building showing works of art by one of the main practitioners of Abstract art in the 20th C., the Catalan Joan Miró.

On our way down the hill we next come to Palau Naçional.

Palau Naçional

Montjuïc. Hours: Open Tuesday-Sunday 9-14. (A2).

An imposing palace on the northern rim of the hill, overlooking the fairgrounds of Barcelona and Plaça d’Espanya, built for the World Fair in Barcelona 1929.

It now houses one of the world’s largest museums of Medieval art in the world, Museu d’Art de Catalunya.

On the slopes to the right and down from Palau Naçional there is the archeological museum, Museu Arquelògic, open Tuesday-Saturday 9:30-13 and 16-16, Sunday 9:30-14. Also the museum of ethnology, Museu Etnològic, open Tuesday-Saturday 9:20-20:30, Sunday 9-14.

On the slopes to the left and down from Palau Naçional we arrive at Poble Espanyol.

Poble Espanyol

Hours: Open 9-past midnight. (A2).

A living museum of folklore, a whole village composed of clusters of exact replicas of typical houses representing parts of Spain, such as Catalunya, Andalucía and Castilla. The houses are used as shops, artisan workshops, cafés and restaurants, representing town life in earlier times.

Variable programs are in the evening, dances, concerts, plays, exhibitions, performances and other entertainment.

We leave the folklore village by the northern entrance, turn right and walk to the area of Barcelona fairs. From there we have an imposing view up to Palau Naçional. We walk to Plaça d’Espanya, cross it and arrive at Plaça del Toro.

Plaça del Toro

(A2).

One of the main bullfight stadiums of Barcelona, built in Moorish style, like so many such stadiums in Spain.

We walk around the stadium and at its back arrive at Parc Joan Miró.

Parc Joan Miró

(A2).

A recreation area with a large sculpture by Joan Miró.

From here we take a taxi to the other end of the city center, to Parc de la Ciutadella.

Parc de la Ciutadella

(B2).

The World Fair of 1888 was held here. It is now a popular park for Sunday walks.

The small and modern city zoo is in the southern end of the park. To the north of the zoo is the city museum of modern art, Museu d’Art Modern, where Catalan artists are well represented.

The parliament of Catalunya is also in the park. To the south are the grounds of the Olympic Village from 1992.

This sightseeing walk in central Barcelona is finished. We are now ready for excursions in the surrounding country, Catalunya.

Catalunya

A cultural driving force in Spain, the country of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Gaudí, Salvador Dalí and Pau Casals, especially marked in the decades before the Falangist takeover. After the reemergence of democracy Catalunya has again sprung to the forefront of culture and politics, industry and commerce.

Zarzuela = seafood mixture, comes from Catalunya, also Bullabesa = a strong bouillabaisse, and rape = monkfish. A national dish is Crema Catalana = a milk pudding with caramel crust.

Catalunya is the country of Cava, a sparkling wine made in the Champagne manner. Cava is commonly sold in the streets of Barcelona and in special Xampanyerias-bars. Catalunyan wine is not as good as Rioja wine, but is improving, especially the wine from the district of Penedès.

Costa Dorada is an interesting part of Catalunya.

Costa Dorada

The sunshine coast south of Barcelona. The main town is Sitges, 30 km south from Barcelona, with a beach, cafés and a quaint old center.

Farther to the south, 100 km from Barcelona, is Tarragona, an ancient Roman town with a Medieval center and lots of antique remains, such as an arena and a city wall.

From Barcelona there is also a short way of 60 km to the mountain monastery of Montserrat with beautiful landscapes.

We can also drive north from Barcelona, to Costa Brava.

Costa Brava

One of the most beautiful coasts of Spain, with interchanging promontories and peaceful sand beaches. The town of Gerona is 100 km north from Barcelona, with the best preserved Medieval town center in Spain.

Art nouveau

Many famous buildings hail from the Art Nouveau period in the beginning of the 20th C. From that time we see bank palaces that seem like fairy-tale castles, different from the sober bank buildings of Europe.

Artists

A cultural driving force in Spain, the country of Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró, Gaudí, Salvador Dalí and Pau Casals, especially marked in the decades before the Falangist takeover. After the reemergence of democracy Catalunya has again sprung to the forefront of culture and politics, industry and commerce.

Catalan

Catalan is replacing Spanish as the official language in Barcelona. It is a different language, related to French, influenced by the proximity to Provençe. Free taxis use the sign “lliure” instead of “libre”. Street-signs and menus are now in Catalan. The explanations in Joan Miró’s museum are only in Catalan. The Spanish language is being evicted from Barcelona.

Cava

Catalunya is the country of Cava, a sparkling wine made in the Champagne manner. Cava is commonly sold in the streets of Barcelona and in special Xampanyerias-bars.

Catalunyan wine is not as good as Rioja wine, but is improving, especially the wine from the district of Penedès.

Colón

Avenída Catedral 7. Phone: 301 1404. Fax: 317 2915. Price: Pts.23500 ($188) without breakfast. All major cards. 138 rooms. (B2).

The good hotel of the city center is perfectly situated in front of the cathedral, the only four-star hotel in the old Gothic town.

It is rather old-fashioned but has been renovated on the inside. Many rooms are in light and flowery colors.

A room with a view to the cathedral is preferable.

Metropol

Ample 31. Phone: 310 5100. Fax: 319 1276. Price: Pts.12400 ($99) without breakfast. All major cards. 68 rooms. (B2).

An economical hotel in the Gothic center, 300 meters from Plaça Sant Jaume.

It is a dignified hotel with agreeable staff.

Room no. 404 is elegantly furnished in taste and includes a writing-desk. The marble bathroom is unusually large.

Regencia Colón

Sagristans 13. Phone: 318 9858. Fax: 317 2822. Price: Pts.14200 ($114) without breakfast. All major cards. 55 rooms. (B2).

An economical and recently renovated hotel just 100 meters from the cathedral.

The cheerful staff is efficient.

Room no. 57 is nice and refined and has a small balcony with a view to Torre del Rei. It has a flowery wallpaper and old furniture in perfect condition. The tiled bathroom functions well.

Suizo

Plaça del Ángel. Phone: 315 4111. Fax: 315 3819. Price: Pts.12600 ($101) with breakfast. All major cards. 48 rooms. (B2).

A tired, antique but usable and economical hotel in the Gothic city center, 200 meters from the cathedral.

The cleaning staff is just as tired as the hotel.

Room no. 211 is small, well furnished in an old-fashioned manner, with a balcony. The tiled bathroom functions well.

Agút d’Avinyó

Trinitat 3 / Avinyó 8. Phone: 302 6034. Fax: 302 5318. Price: Pts.11000 ($88) for two. All major cards. (B2).

In a Gothic alley a few steps from Plaça Sant Jaume, one of the best restaurants of the old city center, practicing traditional Catalan cuisine.

Beautifully designed with nooks and crannies on different levels with only a few tables on each level, with lots of steps and railings. Enormous paintings from the turn of the century and lots of antiques add to the perfect atmosphere. Politicians and business-people lunch here and joke with Mercedes Giralt.

• Sopa di bogavante = lobster soup with toast.

• Chicken and vegetable puré with ham cubes.

• Bacalao = plucked salt-fish.

• Langostinos = prawns in cheese gelatine.

• Shellfish in tomato sauce.

• Pato = duck.

• Wild strawberries.

Brassiere Flo

Junqueres 10. Phone: 319 3102. Fax: 268 2395. Price: Pts.8300 ($66) for two. All major cards. (B2).

Just west off Plaça de Catalunya, a large and noisy, happy and lively brassiere, one of the best restaurants in town, with French-Catalan cooking, open for orders until 1 in the morning.

Oysters are on exhibit at the entrance, the specialty of the place. The spacious dining room has large chandeliers and numerous pillars. Old posters and high mirrors line the walls. There are many regulars from the media and opera.

• Crema de bogavante = lobster soup.

• Ostras al cava = cheese-baked oysters in sparkling wine.

• Solomillo de buey = beef filet.

• Filet mignon de ciervo = venison filet with pear, raisins and pepper sauce.

• Crema catalana = milk pudding with caramel crust.

• Macedonia de frutas = fresh fruit.

Cuineta

Paradis 4 / Pietat 12. Phone: 315 0111. Fax: 315 0798. Price: Pts.11300 ($90) for two. All major cards. (B2).

A double restaurant behind the old cathedral of Barcelona, one kitchen with one menu, but two entrances and separate dining rooms, owned by antique dealers.

A beautiful place, paneled in hardwood and glass, full of antiques. Guests dine in comfortable arm-chairs and receive automatically a fino sherry while they are studying the menu.

• Espáragos gratinados = cheese gratinated asparagus with ham.

• Pate higos = paté of the house.

• Bacalao Cuineta = salt-fish with spinach and raisins.

• Lenguado plancha = grilled sole.

• Pudding with whipped cream and kiwi.

• Ricotta cheese with chestnuts and honey.

El Túnel

Ample 33. Phone: 315 2759. Hours: Closed Sunday dinner, Monday. Price: Pts.9500 ($76) for two. All major cards. (B2).

At the bottom of a narrow alley beside hotel Metropol lies hidden one of the best restaurants of the Gothic city center, 300 meters south of Plaça Sant Jaume.

It has been owned by the same family since 1923. Virgilio Casado cooks in the traditional Catalan manner according to the fresh food situation of the day. The restaurant is popular with locals who like the food and the quality paneling and other furnishings.

• Ensalada de judía verde con fois gras y trufas = salad with truffles and goose liver.

• Sopa de pescados con su rouille = tomato fish soup.

• Lenguado pieza grille = grilled sole.

• Turbot planche = grilled turbot.

• Cabrito = kid goat.

• Tarta Tatin = apple pie.

• Biscuit = ice-cream with chocolate sauce.

• Crema Catalana = milk pudding with caramel crust.

Gran Café

Avinyó 9. Phone: 318 7986. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch, Sunday. Price: Pts.12000 ($96) for two. All major cards. (B2).

A romantic, split-level restaurant in a pedestrian alley a few steps off Plaça Sant Jaume, offering traditional Catalan cooking.

The style is turn-of-the century Art Nouveau, with large windows, chandeliers and lamps. The place gets very romantic at night when dinner music is played on the piano.

• Amanida de bacalla marinat = salt-fish flakes, marinated in vinaigrette, with beans.

• Amanida de tofones i llagostins = shrimp and liver paté on salad.

• Mushroom salad with ham.

• Filet d’Ávila a la vinagreta = beef filet from Ávila with tomato vinaigrette.

• Burxets de filet al oporto = beef on skewers.

• Cheese-cake.

• Apple pie.

Neichel

Avenída de Pedralbes 16 bis. Phone: 203 8408. Fax: 205 6369. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch, Sunday. Price: Pts.14000 ($112) for two. All major cards.

The best restaurant in Barcelona is outside the city center, but included here as an exception, as it is also one of the three best restaurants in Spain. It is in the soccer stadium and university district in the west, hidden in a one-way drive behind a swimming pool. Surprisingly this is not a Basque restaurant, as Chef Jean-Louis Neichel is from Alsace in France.

The dining room is plain and unadorned and rather empty before it fills up with people. Large windows open out to lemon trees in the garden. The service is so perfect that every detail in the ultra-professional firing-up of a Havana cigar is observed. Evelyne Neichel directs the service. The cuisine is Nouvelle Française.

• Sopita de cigalas y centollo = shell soup.

• Esqueixada de atún al limón verde y bogavante con caviar de berengenas = lobster and tuna in aubergine.

• Croustillant de salmonete y hortalizas en un fumet de setas de bosque = red mullet in crust with wild mushrooms and mushroom fumé.

• Granizado de manzanas verdes y coulis de frutas silvestres = apple sorbet.

• Lomo de buey del Limousin en escalopas a las cinco pimientas aromáticas = filet slices from Limousin beef.

• La caravana de los finos postres = dessert wagon.

Quo Vadis

Carme 7. Phone: 302 4072. Fax: 301 0435. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.11300 ($90) for two. All major cards. (B2).

A traditional and simple restaurant with good food and good service in a street leading off La Rambla, a few steps from Palacio de la Virreina. It is open for orders until 2 in the morning, convenient for the opera audience from the nearby Liceu theater.

The raw material is not far away, as the food market of Barcelona, La Boquería, is almost next door.

• Six different mushrooms.

• Mixed vegetables in vinaigrette.

• Shrimp, egg, fish and salt-fish, pan-fried in oil.

• Seafood plate in tomato sauce.

• Cheeses.

• Fresh berries and fruits of the season.

Seynor Parellada

Argentería 37. Phone: 310 5094. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: Pts.7700 ($62) for two. All major cards. (B2).

Near the old city walls, 500 meters from the cathedral, a large and noisy restaurant, simple and friendly, rather economical, frequented by business people. The cooking is traditional.

Mr. Parellada himself walks around and takes care of the guests, not only the habitués.

• Carpaccio = marinated salmon.

• Esqueixada con escalibada = salt-fish salad.

• Calamars = small squid.

• bacalao con samfaina = salt-fish.

• Grilled sole.

Siete Puertas

Passeig d’Isabel II. Phone: 319 3033. Fax: 319 4662. Price: Pts.9500 ($76) for two. All major cards. (B2).

Situated on the harbor avenue, a large and lively restaurant, French in style, always brimming with people, founded in the early 19th C., one of the landmarks of Barcelona. Chef Antonio Roca specialized in rice and paella.

Guests sit on small chairs and long benches under walls of panel and tile. Large mirrors enlargen the already large restaurant.

• Esquixada = salt-fish in tomato.

• Espárragos = asparagus.

• Rodaballo = braised turbot.

• Paella Parellada = paella of the house.

• Biscuit = ice-cream with hot chocolate sauce.

• Sorbete de orujo con pasas = sorbet with raisins.

1991

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Espagna

The heart of Spain and the fountain of the Spanish language, called Castilian by the minorities in Spain. It is a barren plateau, overgrazed and sparsely inhabited, a country of shepherds and poets, warriors and priests. Castilla is also, as the name implies, a country of castles, including Manzanares el Real, Mombeltrán, Coca, Gormaz, Peñafiel, Belmonte and Sigüenza.

Many historic cities are in Castilla, including Segovia, Ávila, Salamanca and Toledo.

Castilla has brought Cochinillo asado = braised baby pork, and Cordero asado = braised lamb, to Spanish cuisine, also kid, partridge and venison. Well known is Manchego, the cheese from La Mancha.

We are planning a tour of 580 km from Madrid through El Escorial, Segovia, Ávila, Salamanca and Toledo back to Madrid. The first leg covers 50 km from Madrid to El Escorial.

El Escorial

Hours: Open 10-13:30 and 15:30-19, -18 in winter.

Felipe II of Habsburg was one of the most peculiar Spanish kings. He was an ultra-religious Catholic and built the religious royal palace complex of El Escorial. The palace is in strict and cold Renaissance style, designed by Juan de Herrera, and built in the late 16th C., when Madrid became the capital of Spain.

The form of the palace complex is a mathematical square with a Greek crucifix inside. The crucifix has a Renaissance church in the middle. In two of the four sections is a smaller Greek crucifix. Half of the complex was a monastery, a quarter was a university and a quarter was the royal abode.

There are many works of art in the palace, including the Agony of St. Moritz by El Greco. It is interesting to compare the austere apartment of the Habsburg king Felipe II on the 1st floor with the elaborate apartment of the Bourbon king Carlos IV on the 3rd floor. Most Spanish kings of recent centuries are buried under the floor of the central church.

From El Escorial we drive 50 km to Segovia.

Segovia

A city of 50,000 people 1000 meters above sea level, rising like a ship above the highland plateau. It is mainly famous for its Roman aqueduct and the city castle.

We find Acueducto romano just before we enter the walled center of the city.

Acueducto Romano

You will not miss the immense Roman aqueduct from 100 AD, when you enter the old center of Segovia. It is one of the best preserved remains in the world of buildings from the reigns of Vespanian and Trajan.

It still carries water to the old center on 167 arches. It is 728 meters long and 28 meters high at the square, where the street passes under it. It is built from hewn granite stones without any gluing material whatsoever.

If we can say that the aqueduct is at the stern of the ship of Segovia, the Alcázar can be called the stem of that ship. Between them there is an easy walk of 1 km through the old city center. On the way we pass a 16th C. Gothic cathedral, slender and splendid, with a golden patina in the sunshine. There are many interesting houses and alleys. We continue to the Alcázar.

Alcázar

Hours: Open 10-18:30, -15:30 in winter.

The city castle from the middle of the 14th C. rises above the highland plateau. Very few castles in Spain are as imposing in the landscape as this one.

It was for a while the residential palace of Queen Isabel. It is now an armory museum.

It pays to drive around the old center of Segovia and observe the castle, especially from the bridge over Eresma river and from the Vera Cruz chapel on the other side of the river.

Linajes

Dr Velasco 9. Phone: 46 0475. Fax: 46 0479. Price: Pts.10000 ($80) without breakfast. All major cards. 55 rooms.

The best and most interesting hotel in Segovia is in the 11th C. Falconi palace, hidden in a narrow street in the old center, just north of the cathedral and east of the city castle.

It is loaded with antiques. Try to book a room in the old style.

Mesón de Cándido

Plaza Azoguejo 5. Phone: 42 5911. Fax: 42 9633. Price: Pts.7200 ($58) for two. All major cards.

The best and most interesting restaurant in Segovia is just in front of the Roman aqueduct in a 15th C. house.

It is on several storeys in an old Segovian style, popular with travelers who are admiring the aqueduct.

• Sopa Castellana = an old Castilian soup.

• Truchas frescas Felipe V = trout.

• Cochinnillo asado = braised baby pork.

• Cordero asado = braised lamb.

• Perdiz estofada = partridge with dressing.

From Segovia we drive 67 km to Ávila.

Ávila

A completely walled town from the Middle Ages, now the domicile of 40,000 people. It is 1131 meters above sea level, the highest district capital in Spain.

The city walls are the main attraction of the town, floodlit at night, especially beautiful when arriving from the west. When we leave town on the road to Salamanca we shall stop at the viewpoint of Cuatro Postes on the other side of Adaja river to observe the town from the west.

We park in the old center, preferably near the cathedral at the eastern side of the walls. Then we inspect the Murallas on foot.

Murallas

The 11th C. walls are still intact, with their 8 gateways and 88 semicircular towers. The walls are 10 meters high. We can take a 3 km walk on the walls for a full circle.

Next we turn out attention to the cathedral.

Catedral

The fortified granite cathedral with crenellations is a part of the eastern wall of Ávila and looks like a fortress. It is one of the oldest Early-Gothic churches in Spain, built in the 12th C. Ávila was for a long time on the border of Islamic and Christian Spain and the church reflects that insecure period.

San Vicente is a little older Romanesque church from the early 12th C, just outside the northeastern corner of the city walls.

Palacio Valderrábanos

Plaza de la Catedral 9. Phone: 21 1023. Fax: 25 1691. Price: Pts.13700 ($110) without breakfast. All major cards. 73 rooms.

An historical hotel in an old Bishop’s palace opposite the cathedral, with a powerful Gothic entrance from the 15th C.

The elegant restaurant El Fogón de Santa Teresa is in the hotel.

The rooms are large and comfortable, luxuriously furnished.

Parador Raimundo de Borgoña<

New York introduction

Ferðir

History

The Dutch arrived in 1621 and lost the city to the English in 1664. After independence New York grew enormously and haargest city in the world by 1900. It is one of the main centers of immigrations to the United States. Manyd become the second largest city in the world by 1900. It is one of the main centers of immigrations to the United States. Many district are dominated by ethnic groups and serve as transit stations for new citizens.

Life

New York is always lively, sometimes friendly and even human at times. People talk freely with strangers, not only at the bar. Foreigners are accepted as people, partly because a third of the local people is born abroad. New York is not America and not Europe, but rather a melting pot of both and of the Third World too. Some parts of town are reminiscent of Cairo or Calcutta.

If there is a center of the world, it is Manhattan, the world center of art and museums. It also has outlets of all the famous shops of the world. It has 10,000 restaurants, including all the ethnic ones. It has newspapers and radio stations in 50 languages. Daily there are important happenings somewhere in Manhattan. Celebrities come by the dozens.

Manhattan is always changing. Some run-down districts have been renovated, mostly at the initiative of avant-garde artists. Restaurants, cafés and money have followed in their wake. People either love or hate New York. It is soft and hard at the same time, but mainly it is rapid and excited, sometimes frenzied. It is where the action is. It is the moment itself.

Embassies

Australia

636 5th Avenue. Phone: 245 4000.

Canada

1251 6th Avenue & 50th Street. Phone: 768 2400.

Ireland

515 Madison Avenue. Phone: 319 2555.

New Zealand

37 Observatory Circle, Washington DC. Phone: (202) 328 4880.

United Kingdom

845 3rd Avenue. Phone: 752 8400.

Accident

Phone: 911.

Ambulance

Phone: 911.

Complaints

Phone: 944 0013.

It is of no use to complain about anything. Stolen goods will not be recovered.

Travelers’ Aid, 944 0013, can give advice and help.

Dentist

Phone: 677 2510.

679 3966 (9-20), 679 4172 (20-9)

Fire

Phone: 911.

Hospital

St Vincent’s, 11th Street and 7th Avenue, 790 7997. St Luke’s Roosevelt, 58th Street and 9th Avenue, 523 6800.

Medical care

Phone: (718) 238 2100.

Pharmacy

Kaufman’s, 557 Lexington Avenue at 50th Street, 755 2266, is open day and night.

Police

Phone: 911.

Precautions

Avoid Central Park, the subway and deserted areas after dark. Stay where the crowds are and near the outer edge of the pavement. Hold fast to your handbag. Keep money in front pockets of trousers. Use credit cards as much as possible. Do not keep identification papers in the same place as your money. Do not leave valuables in hotel rooms.

Do not dress expensively. Walk with a good stride as if you knew your way. Tell rapists that you carry AIDS. Avoid fights. Have small bills in your outer pockets to hand to muggers immediately.

Banks

Most banks are open Monday-Friday 9-15. Some of them do not change foreign currency. Americans are not as used to foreign currency as Europeans are.

Credit cards

Credit cards are accepted almost everywhere.

Missing cards: American Express (800) 528 4800, Diners Club (800) 525 9135, Master Card – Eurocard – Access (800) 627 8372, Visa (800) 336 8472

Electricity

American electricity is 115-120 AC. For European appliances you need an adapter. American plug have two flat prongs.

Hotels

Copenhagen hotels are generally clean and well maintained, including plumbing. American hotel rooms tend to be larger than European ones and often have two double beds. A bathroom is taken for granted nowadays.

We only include hotels with private bathrooms, and in most cases we also demand a direct telephone line, working air-condition, and peace and silence during the night. Only hotels in the city center are included as we want to avoid long journeys between sightseeing and our afternoon naps.

The price ranges from $115 to $280, excluding breakfast, but including city taxes. Take note that hotels and travel bureaus generally quote prices without the 13,25% + $2 taxes.

We checked all the hotels in this database during the winter of 1995-1996 as everything is fickle in this world. We have also tested some other hotels that are not included as they were not on par with the best in each price category. Some expensive hotels in Copenhagen are in fact no better than our selection of smaller and cheaper hotels.

Money

The currency in the United States is dollar, $, divided into 100 cents, c. There are $100, $50, $20, $5 and $1 notes, and coins for 25c, 10c, 5c and 1c.

Prices

Prices are stable in the United States.

Shopping

Department stores and fashion shops are generally open 9/10-18 and in some cases on Thursday -20/21. Some are open Saturday and even on Sunday afternoon.

Everything is available in New York. Prices are generally low by European standards and the quality may also be low.

Tipping

Tips are not included in restaurant bills (checks). Normal tips are 15-20%. You can make it simple by doubling the amount of the 8,25% sales tax shown on the bill. Porters get $1 for each bag, room service gets 1$, room maids get $3-5 per week, toilet attendants 50c. Taxi drivers, barbers and hairdressers get 15%.

Toilets

Toilets are in restaurants, museums and department stores. You often have to pay 10c or tip 50c. Do not use the toilets in subway stations.

Tourist office

New York Convention and Visitors Bureau, 2 Columbus Circle. Opening hours: Monday-Friday 9-18, Saturday-Sunday 10-18, phone 397 8222.

Water

Tap water is drinkable but many use bottled water as a precaution.

Accommodation

There is no central agency for booking accommodation. New York Convention and Visitors Bureau, 2 Columbus Circle issues annually a free booklet: The New York Hotel Guide. Opening hours: Monday-Friday 9-18, Saturday-Sunday 10-18, phone 397 8222.

Airport

Carey Airport Express Buses depart for Kennedy and LaGuardia airports every 30 minutes from 125 Park Ave.(near Grand Central), Port Authority (42nd between 8th & 9th), the Hilton Hotel (near Rockefeller Center at 53rd & 6th, Holiday Inn Crowne Plaza (at 48th & Broadway), Sheraton Manhattan Hotel (7th between 51st & 52nd) and Marriott Marquis (at Broadway and 45th).

New Jersey Transit Bus departs for Newark Airport every 10-20 minutes form the Port Authority Bus Terminal. Olympia Trails Bus departs for Newark Airport every 20/30 minutes from Penn Station (at 34th & 8th), Park Avenue & 41st, and One World Trade Center.

A taxi takes one hour to Kennedy ($35) and LaGuardia ($20) and 40 minutes to Newark ($50). Between Kennedy and LaGuardia a taxi costs $15 and between Kennedy and Newark $60.

News

The New York Magazine, The New Yorker and the Village Voice list entertainment and culture activities in New York. Art News and Art Now concentrate on culture.

Phone

The United States country code is 1. The local code for Manhattan is 212, for other parts of London it is 718. To phone a number outside your area, first dial 1 before the local code. To phone long distance from a pay phone, first dial 0 before the local code. The foreign code from the United States is 011.

Post

The General Post Office, 8th Avenue and 33rd Street, tel. 967 8585, is open 24 hours a day.

Railways

Grand Central Terminal serves commuter trains from New York’s suburbs and Connecticut. Penn Station serves long-haul trains from other parts of the United States and Canada.

Taxis

You can hail taxis in the street. Only use yellow, licensed cabs. Their roof numbers are lit up when they are available. All cabs have meters and most can issue printed receipts. Many cabbies do not speak English and more cabbies do not know where to find addresses. For information phone 840 4572.

Bell Radio Taxi 691 9191, Big Apple Car 517 7010.

Traffic

Pedestrians should take great care in traffic. Many drive carelessly and some ignore red lights.

It is easy to find one’s way around in most of Manhattan, because of the numbering system of avenues and streets. Streets are numbered west and east from the 5th Avenue. They jump one hundred at each Avenue intersection. Even numbers are on the south side, odd numbers on the north. Addresses are often given with both avenue and street numbers.

The buses are cleaner and much more comfortable than the subway, which in turn is much quicker and is operated around the clock. The fare is the same. You pay with subway tokens from attendants at stations or from automats.

Cuisines

The 10,000 restaurants of Manhattan reflect the ethnic diversity of the city. You can travel around the world without ever leaving the island of Manhattan. Especially well represented are the cuisines of Latin America and the cuisines of the nations of the Pacific rim, such as Japan and China. France is of course well represented as everywhere else.

Restaurants

New Yorkers dine out every third day, according to researchers. They consider it a way of life and do not dress up to the occasion. Many of them are well versed in good food, making it possible to operate hundreds of excellent restaurants in addition to those who are bad or impossible.

Service

Generally not as formal as in most other countries in the world and generally not as educated. “Hi, I’m Joe”, is typical of American waiters.

Wine

California wine can be very good. It covers the whole spectrum from plonk to similar heights as French classified growths.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

New York hotels

Ferðir

Algonquin
59 West 44th Street, betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 840 6800. Fax: 944 1419. Price: $235 ($235) without breakfast. All major cards. 165 rooms. (C4).

A class in itself, the literary hotel of Manhattan, between Grand Central and Times Square, suitable for the theater. It is the traditional home away from home for writers and publishers, film and theater people.

The clientele is reflected in comforts such as shoe shining at night and late departure at 15. A lobby of oak, the bar and restaurant are famous meeting and negotiation sites in the literary business and the food is reputed to be the worst in town, suitable for the editors of The New Yorker.

Room no. 500 is rather small, comfortably equipped with agreeably outdated furniture. Most rooms are somewhat larger and more convenient.

Ameritana

1701 Broadway, 54th Street, 10019. Phone: 247 5000. Fax: 247 3316. Price: $115 ($115) without breakfast. All major cards. (B4).

Relatively small and very economical hotel in a central location. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Bedford

118 East 40th Street betw. Park & Lexington. Phone: 697 4800. Fax: 697 1093. Price: $180 ($180) without breakfast. All major cards. 200 rooms. (C5).

A comfortable hotel in Murray Hill, a quiet and respectable residential district just south of Grand Central, between United Nations and Empire State.

About half the rooms are studios with a sleeping area and a sitting area. They all have cooking facilities. The hotel suits families with children and offers special family prices.

Room no. 1202 is really a flat with a dining area in the drawing room, a kitchenette, good ironing facilities. In addition to the practicality, the furnishings are also tasteful.

Dorset

30 West 54th Street, betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 247 7300. Fax: 581 0153. Price: $235 ($235) without breakfast. All major cards. 490 rooms. (C4).

Old-fashioned and relaxed, peaceful and recently renovated, a luxury hotel on a relatively quiet street behind Museum of Modern Art, European in spirit, mostly filled with regulars.

Service is efficient and friendly. The rooms differ in size.

Room no. 822 is quiet in spite of being on the street side. It is comfortably furnished in an old-fashioned way, with two large beds, a kitchenette corner and a quality bathroom, not to forget enormous cupboards from the times when people traveled with coffers.

Elysée

60 East 54th Street betw. Park & Madison. Phone: 753 1066. Fax: 980 9278. Price: $200 ($200) without breakfast. All major cards. 99 rooms. (C4).

Agreeable small and recently renovated, in the middle of the fashion shops part of Midtown, popular with people who know what they want and want to be left in peace.

Marble and mahogany set the tone in the lobby. The rooms vary in size and each has its own name. The service fits the personal atmosphere of the hotel.

Room no. 505, “The Butterfly” has a quaint, long ante-room with a kitchenette corner, a good bathroom, laid in marble, and spacious cupboards. The room itself is commodious, with two large beds.

Gorham

136 West 55th Street, betw. 6th & 7th. Phone: 245 1800. Price: $115 ($115) without breakfast. All major cards. 116 rooms. (B4).

Very conveniently located in a relatively quiet Midtown street, next street to Museum of Modern Art, with the theater district on one side and the fashion shops on the other. There are short distances to all sites of importance in Midtown. Carnegie Hall and City Center Theater are neighbors and Times Square and Lincoln Center are not either far off.

The lobby is small as the hotel itself. The staff is friendly and efficient.

Room no. 1504 faces the street, spacious, comfortable and cozy, with two large beds and quality furniture. It is well equipped, including a kitchenette corner and a cloak room. The traffic noise does not reach it.

Inter-Continental

111 East 48th Street / Lexington Avenue. Phone: 755 5900. Fax: 664 0079. Price: $285 ($285) without breakfast. All major cards. (C4).

The best hotel of New York, the former Barclay, in the eastern Midtown, convenient for the United Nations building and fashionable shopping.

The lobby is grandiose, with a large aviary in the middle. The hotel is luxuriously furnished in and out. The service is exemplary and knows no problems. The procurement of theater tickets is perfect. This is even better than the Old World.

Room no. 537 is very warm and luxurious, with an unusually well equipped bathroom. It is quiet in spite of windows out to the traffic.

Iroquois

49 West 44th Street / 5th Avenue. Phone: 840 3080. Fax: 398 1754. Price: $115 ($115) without breakfast. All major cards. (C4).

Small and personal, rather worn hotel of good value in an old building almost beside the famous Algonquin.

There is no lobby to speak of and no breakfast room. Reception and service is friendly. Only a few rooms are on each floor and they are spacious.

Room no. 111 is large and clean, but parly with tired furnishings, including cigarette burns. The bed is good, also the shower.

Mansfield

12 West 44th Street / 5th Avenue. Phone: 944 6050. Fax: 740 2508. Price: $145 ($145) with breakfast. All major cards. (C4).

An friendly hotel recently refurbished in trendy modern style, centrally located in Midtown.

The marble lobby has a high ceiling. On the side there is a bar that doubles as a self-service breakfast room, where free coffee is available all day long. Thre is also marble on the stairs. Service is very attentive and friendly.

The ultra-modern room no. 410 is small, with black, functional and stylish furnishings. The night tables and the writing table turn on a vertical axis to save space when not in use. The tiny bathroom functions very well.

Marriott Marquis

1535 Broadway / 45th Street. Phone: 398 1900. Fax: 704 8930. Price: $180 ($180) without breakfast. All major cards. (B4).

A super-modern hotel tower design, right on Times Square. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Michelangelo

Equitable Center, 152 West 51st Street / 7th. Phone: 765 1900. Fax: 541 6604. Price: $255 ($255) without breakfast. All major cards. (B4).

A small hotel loaded with marble and works of art near Rockefeller Center. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Middletowne

148 East 48th Street near Lexington. Phone: 755 3000. Fax: 832 0261. Price: $175 ($175) without breakfast. All major cards. 190 rooms. (C4).

Rather small and very comfortable eastern Midtown hotel, with furnishings more or less chosen by Leona Helmsley, full of thick blankets and flowery curtains and large towels.

The friendly and talkative staff are rather slow and unorganized.

The rooms are very large, with two unusually large beds, a kitchenette corner and large cupboards. Everything is new and sparkling clean.

Pickwick Arms

230 East 51st Street, betw. 2nd & 3rd. Phone: 355 0300. Fax: 755 5029. Price: $100 ($100) without breakfast. All major cards. 400 rooms. (D4).

A budget hotel at a good easterly Midtown location, opposite the nice little Greenacre Park, probably the best buy in town.

The lobby is respectable and there is even a roof garden. The rooms are rather small. They are clean and equipped with air-condition. Take care to book a room with shower or bath.

Room no. 1110 is exactly large enough to fit in two large beds and other necessities. The bathroom is small and functional.

Pierre

5th Avenue & 61st Street. Phone: 838 8000. Fax: 940 8109. Price: $375 ($375) without breakfast. All major cards. 206 rooms. (C3).

With a Central Park location, the royalty hotel of New York, the abode of kings and presidents, full of lackeys turning around each other. It never looks busy, always relaxed. You have to be living off inherited wealth to feel comfortable here.

The public rooms are more formal than comfortable, partly furnished with antiques. Each lift has an operator that tries to land at the right floor and often succeeds. Every now and then gentlemen in smoking and ladies in dresses float over the thick and green carpets to enter extra long, chauffeured limousines. Luggage is never seen in the lobby.

Room no. 829 is not large, but very cozy and stylish. The bathroom is laid with marble and unusually well equipped with robes and towels, even a correct scale, and a variety of perfumes.

Plaza

5th Avenue / 59th Street. Phone: 759 3000. Fax: 759 3167. Price: $255 ($255) without breakfast. All major cards. (C3).

One of the most famous hotels in New York, in a perfect location, with good views to Central Park. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Salisbury

123 West 57th Street, 6th & 7th, 10019. Phone: 246 1300. Fax: 977 7752. Price: $175 ($175) without breakfast. All major cards. (B3).

A small and cozy hotel near Carnegie Hall. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Shoreham

33 West 55th Street, 5th & 6th, 10019. Phone: 247 6700. Fax: 765 9741. Price: $175 ($175) without breakfast. All major cards. (C3).

Recently renovated, near Rockefeller Center. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

St. Moritz

50 Central Park South / 6th Avenue. Phone: 755 5800. Fax: 319 9658. Price: $150 ($150) without breakfast. All major cards. 680 rooms. (C3).

And old and worn and sympathetic hotel at a prime location at the southern edge of Central Park, pre-war European in spirit.

The lobby seems always to very busy, not least because of the popularity of the ice-creams at Rumplemeyer’s, its overdecorated dining room with Austrian atmosphere.

Room no. 2007 is rather small, well equipped and with a perfectly functioning bathroom. It offers a view to Central Park.

Vista

3 World Trade Center / West Street. Phone: 938 9100. Fax: 444 3575. Price: $320 ($320) without breakfast. All major cards. (C10).

A very special location in the Financial District near Wall Street, perfect for visitors to the world of banking and money, also convenient for the artists’ districts of TriBeCa and SoHo. Renovations were finished at the end of 1995. It has a free limousine service to Midtown.

The reception in the stylish lobby is very efficient and user-friendly. It has an unusually large and well equipped fitness center. The views from the windows are spectacular in any direction.

Room no. 1240 is very bright, super-modern, with luxurious furnishings and a good view to the Midtown skyscrapers, beautifully silhouetted against the rising and falling sun.

Waldorf-Astoria

301 Park Avenue, 49 6 50th Streets, 10022. Phone: 355 3000. Fax: 872 7272. Price: $265 ($265) without breakfast. All major cards. (C4).

Completely renovated and again evoking its former glory. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Warwick

65 West 54th Street / 6th Avenue. Phone: 247 2700. Fax: 489 3926. Price: $250 ($250) without breakfast. All major cards. 4250 rooms. (C4).

In a quiet and perfectly located Midtown street, with good views to nearby skycrapers, offering some of the best rooms in town.

It is relaxed and seems smaller than it really is. Service is good, just as can be expected of a Midtown hotel.

Room no. 2511 is large and cozy, with two large beds, well maintained and with a well equipped bathroom.

Washington Square Hotel

103 Waverly Place / MacDougal Street, 10011. Phone: 777 9515. Fax: 979 8373. Price: $137 ($137) without breakfast. All major cards. (C7).

Right on the edge of the famous central square of Greenwich Village. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Wellington

7th Avenue & 55th Street. Phone: 247 3900. Fax: 581 1719. Price: $115 ($115) without breakfast. All major cards. 700 rooms. (B3).

A very practical and a pleasant hotel, recently renovated, well situated for theater enthusiasts, a few steps from Broadway.

The staff is friendly. The hotel itself is rather old but all the furnishings are new. Mirrors abound in the lobby.

Room no. 1935 is very comfortable, simple and polished. It is moderately spacious, very clean and functions well.

Wentworth

59 West 46th Street, 5th & 6th, 10036. Phone: 719 2300. Fax: 768 3477. Price: $100 ($100) without breakfast. All major cards. (C4).

Practical hotel with large rooms in the fashion district. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Windsor

100 West 58th Street / 6th Avenue. Phone: 265 2100. Fax: 315 0371. Price: $175 ($175) without breakfast. All major cards. (B3).

Quiet in spite of the excellent location, outfitted by Leona Helmsley, full of flowery and thick blankets and curtains, large towels and well equipped bathrooms.

The hotel was recently renovated.

Room no. 704 is large and comfortable, including two large beds, and with the extra bonus of positive scales that showed everybody to be 53 kilos.

Wyndham

42 West 58th Street, betw. 5th & 6th Av. Phone: 753 3500. Fax: 754 5638. Price: $160 ($160) without breakfast. All major cards. 200 rooms. (C3).

Centrally located just south of Central Park.

Dignified lobby and homey atmosphere, but no room service. Many actors and singers like to stay here with John and Suzanne Mados, the owners who live here.

Room no. 205 is American homey and warm, loaded with draperies. It has a kitchenette corner, a cloak room and a large anteroom.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

New York restaurants

Ferðir

Afgan Kebab House

155 West 46th Streeet / 6th & 7th. Phone: 768 3875. Price: $35 ($35) for two. No cards. (B4).

An economical Middle East restaurant near Times Square. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Ambassador Grill

1 United Nations Plaza, U.N. Plaza Hotel. Phone: 702 5014. Price: $90 ($90) for two. All major cards. (D4).

One of the most beautiful restaurants in New York, almost covered in mirrors, in a hotel basement opposite the United Nations.

Only the floor is not covered with mirrors. The rooms seems to expand endlessly in all directions. Service and food is excellent. The cuisine is American with French undertones.

• Salmon and liver salad.

• Lobster mousse.

• Lobster cake wrapped in cabbage.

• Duck supreme with asparagus.

• Strawberries with cream.

• Napoleon pastry with raspberries.

American Place

2 Park Avenue / 32nd Street. Phone: 684 2122. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch, Sunday. Price: $100 ($100) for two. All major cards. (C5).

One of the first important American Nouvelle restaurants in Manhattan has moved to a new site near Empire State. The new dining room is large and well spaced in Art Nouveau style. Larry Forgione has been the owner-chef since the beginning.

The waiters patiently describe in detail how each course is thought out and cooked, and also how it originated. They also can explain why this or that red wine suits better to this or that course. For a fixed price you can choose between eight first courses, eight main courses and American cheeses from a tray.

• Grilled Maine lobster and leeks with roasted peppers in vinaigrette.

• Leg of spring lamb with mashed potatoes.

• Marinated and grilled guinea fowl with mashed potatoes and buttered sugar beans.

• Banana Betty = vanilla sauce with crisp bananas.

• American goat cheeses.

American Nouvelle consists mainly of taking old granny recipes and adapt them to the light cuisine that originated in France about 1970. Thus many local American recipes have been saved from oblivion, just as when old buildings are saved by converting them to modern use.

Ballato

55 East Houston Street betw. Mott & Mulberry. Phone: 274 8881. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: $60 ($60) for two. All major cards. (C8).

The best Italian restaurant is a small and comfortable place on the border of Greenwich Village and Little Italy, offering the homey cooking of Italian grandmothers.

Guests have a view into the kitchen where many customers pay a visit to greet old acquaintances. You have to bring your own wine which you can buy in the shops around.

• Spaghetti, macaroni, manicotti, tagliatelle etc.

• Octopus.

• Shrimp.

• Veal.

• Zabaglione = whipped egg yolks, sugar and marsala wine.

Bo Ky

80 Bayard Street / Mott & Mulberry Streets. Phone: 406 2292. Price: $30 ($30) for two. No cards. (C9).

A practical Chinatown restaurant. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Bombay Palace

30 West 52nd Street betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 541 7777. Price: $65 ($65) for two. All major cards. (C4).

A very good Indian and luxurious dining room on two levels, centrally located in Midtown, just north off Rockefeller Center.

The place is popular with Sikhs.

• Tandoori chicken = chicken marinated in yogurt and curries and baked in a clay oven.

• Tandoori shrimps.

• Sashlik = lamb on skewers.

• Crispy bread.

Bouley

165 Duane Street / Greenwich & Hudson. Price: $160 ($160) for two. All major cards. (C9).

A French restaurant in TriBeCa, for several years considered by many to be the best restaurant in New York. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Brassiere

100 East 53rd Street betw. Park & Lexington. Phone: 751 4840. Hours: Open day & night. Price: $60 ($60) for two. All major cards. (C4).

An exception to the rule of bad food at 24 hours restaurants, a clean and modern basement in the shopping center of Midtown.
Very popular at 03 in the morning when night owls drop in for a breakfast before going to bed. Breakfast is trumps here.

• French onion soup.

• Burgundy snails.

• Beef steak.

• Beef tartar.

Cajun

129 8th Avenue / 16th Street. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch. Price: $57 ($57) for two. (B7).

A large Creole restaurants in southern Chelsea, near Greenwich Village.

A large dining room with simple furnishings, Mardi Gras posters on walls and paper napkins. A seven-strong Dixie band enlivens the place most nights.

• Gumbo = okra, rice and chicken soup with sassafras leaves.

• Blackened fish = Ocean trout coated in spices and burned on a pan.

• Creole salad.

• Grilled shrimp with chopped fish and rice.

• Steamed shrimp with cooked vegetables.

• Pecan pie.

• Bread and butter pudding with whiskey sauce.

Cajun cooking is better known as Creole cooking. It comes from New Orleans and Louisiana and is a mixture of French and Indian cooking. Cajun is a name for Frenchmen that first settled on the eastern coast of Canada and then later moved on to Louisiana.

Carnegie Deli

854 7th Avenue betw 54th & 55th. Phone: 757 2245. Price: $52 ($52) for two. All major cards. (B4).

The best delicatessen, in the northern part of Theater District, near Central Park, popular with actors and audience after theater.

The place is cramped and the waiters are rude, but the food is good.

• Cheese cake.

• Sandwiches.

• Pastrami.

• Corned beef.

Delicatessen are Jewish fast food eateries, specializing in sandwiches.

Cirque

58 East 65th Street / Park & Madison. Phone: 794 9292. Price: $145 ($145) for two. All major cards. (C3).

One of the top French restaurants in New York, on the Upper East Side. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Côte Basque

5 East 55th Street betw. 5th & Madison. Phone: 688 6525. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: $140 ($140) for two. All major cards. (C4).

A French master chef in a perfectly central Midtown location, Jean-Jacques Rachou offers excellent cooking in a beautiful dining room. Ask for a table in the main room behind the kitchen. There is no need to point things out from the menu, as everything is very good.

The room is warm and bright, lined with murals by Bernard Lamotte from the harbor in St-Jean-de-Luz. It is well spaced, with beautiful table service. Service is excellent and helpful and the guests are generally happy. Be careful in choosing from the expensive wine list.

• Seafood casserole with saffron.

• Pate of the house.

• Baby lamb.

• Tournedos Bordelaise.

• Meringue with wild strawberries and cream.

Dárbar

44 West 56th Street betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 432 7227. Price: $80 ($80) for two. All major cards. (C3).

The best Northern Indian restaurant is centrally located in Midtown, just south from Central Park, a heavily decorated place.

It is a solemn place with lots of Indian works of art and a grand spiral staircase to the balcony part of the dining room. It is a comfortable place of courteous service and sitar-music in the background. The spice tends to be hot.

• Tandoori chicken = chicken marinated in yogurt and curry and baked.

• Poppadum = crispy bread.

• Shaslik = meat on skewers.

• Spiced lamb.

• Mixed vegetables with beans.

Empire Diner

210 10th Avenue / 22nd Street. Phone: 243 2736. Hours: Open day & night, except 05-08 Monday morning. Price: $40 ($40) for two. All major cards. (A6).

The most famous diner in Manhattan, in black and chrome, open day and night.

Popular as a breakfast venue for night-owls at 03-04 in the morning.

Diners are an American invention, metallic places like railway wagons, often in Art Nouveau style.

Four Seasons

99 East 52nd Street betw. Park & Lexington. Phone: 754 9494. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: $140 ($140) for two. All major cards. (C4).

The most beautiful restaurant in New York and one of the most expensive ones, designed by Philip Johnson in a Mies van der Rohe building, located in Midtown. We climb the stairs to the first floor, walk past a large Picasso painting, bypass the Grill Room and enter the high and wide Pool Room.

Thousands of metal threads move in the breeze at the windows. The tables are well spaced and democratically set up around the central marble pond under the starred ceiling. There are waiters all over the place. In accordance with the name of the place, the menu and the decorations are changed four times a year. The chef is well-known Seppi Renggli.

• Mussels in curry with papaya and mango.

• Roasted pigeon breast.

• Mushrooms in lemon and pepper.

• Chopped spinach with cream sauce.

• Filet mignon beef steak.

• Veal slices with crab purée on artichoke.

• Tart of the house.

Gotham Bar & Grill

12 East 12th Street / 5th Avenue. Phone: 620 4020. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday lunch. Price: $115 ($115) for two. All major cards. (C7).

A large and stylish split-level dining room in post-modern design with excellent cooking and a lively clientele a few blocks to the north from Washington Square.

On the higher level thers is a long bar and one row of tables with green chairs. Most of the tables are on the lower level. Rectangular pillar support the high ceiling with large lampshades of cloth. The piping is visible in the ceiling.

• Seafood salad. scallops, squid, Japanese octopus, lobster & avocado in lemon and oil, flying fish roes.

• Smoked duck breast, basmati rice and yougurt salad with apricot-cherry chutney.

• Squab and grilled New York State foie gras, sweet corn, creamy polenta & cranberry beans.

• Loin of venison, pumpkin, rosemary poached pears, wild huckleberries & winter root vegetables.

• Almond cake with toasted almond ice cream, capote of clementines, mieola and blood orange.

• Gotham chocolate cake, served warm, with espresso ice cream.

• Seasonal berries.

Hatsuhana

17 East 48th Street betw. 5th & Madison. Phone: 355 3345. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: $85 ($85) for two. All major cards. (C4).

A very good Japanese sushi bar in Midtown, near Rockefeller Center.

It is preferable to sit at the long sushi bar, watch the work of the cooks and choose fish from the glass counter.

• Raw marinated tuna, trout, salmon, shrimp, squid, octopus, salmon and cod roes, shellfish, mackerel, etc.

Hudson River Club

250 Vesey Street / The World Financial Center. Phone: 786 1500. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: $110 ($110) for two. All major cards. (B10).

An exquisite split-level restaurant, combining tasteful ambience with fine cuisine, near the Winter Garden in the World Financial Center, with spectacular views for everybody over Hudson river to the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island and New Jersey.

Walls of wood and glass partion the dining area, making each segment rather cozy. There is abstract art on the inside walls and large windows on the outside walls. Reception and service are almost perfect. Good wines are sold by the glass.

• Wood ear mushroom consommé.

• Apple smoked venison salad.

• Mint cured and apple smoked salmon Napoleon.

• House pepper cured venison prosciutto.

• Steamed red snapper with tarragon and tomato.

• Grilled paillard of venison.

• Grilled swordfish with chive coulis.

• New York State cheeses with fruit.

• Candied walnut farmer‘s cheesecake, honeycomb and red currants.

• Black dirt onion and rocambole garlic jam.

Jackson Hole

232 East 64th Street betw. 2nd & 3rd. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: $30 ($30) for two. No cards. (D3).

The best outlet of the best hamburger chain in town is in Upper East Side.

The hamburgers are unusually thick and moist and the cooking time is carefully observed.

• Hamburgers.

Hamburgers are the essential type of American food, fatty and lazy.

John‘s Pizzeria

278 Bleecker Street south of 7th. Phone: 243 1680. Price: $30 ($30) for two. No cards. (B8).

Indisputably the best pizzeria in Manhattan, located in Greenwich Village.

Tired dining room and tired waiters, but the pizzas stay the same. People come from far away and stand in line to enter this pizza heaven.

• Pizza.

Pizzas are typically American, even if they originated in southern Italy. Americans made them famous and exported them all over the world.

Kuruma Zushi

18 West 56th Street, betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 541 9030. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. Price: $100 ($100) for two. No cards. (C3).

There are more Japanese restaurants in Manhattan than in the combined capitals of Europe. Best of them are the sushi bars and this is one of the best of them, situated in central Midtown, just south of Central Park.

It is very clean and tasteful. It is preferable to sit at the long bar and watch the cooks when they make the sushi. Their professionalism is astounding. This is also a good way to choose the raw fish that is on display under glass at the bar, only one type at a time at a leisurely pace.

• Raw marinated tuna, squid, shrimp, roe, etc.

• Saki = Japanese rice wine, served warm.

Sushi are small delicacies made of rice balls and marinated fish, which can also be rolled into seaweed.

Lutece

249 East 50th Street betw. 2nd & 3rd. Phone: 752 2225. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: $145 ($145) for two. No cards. (C4).

The best restaurant in New York, a worthy competitor to the best eateries of France, hiding away in a basement near the United Nations, owned by Chef André Soltner from Alsace. He is different from other super-chefs in not being on the road but in his kitchen, cooking for his customers and talking with everybody, including newcomers. His wife directs the service.

Most of the tables are in a glass-roofed outhouse behind the building, others are in two rooms on the first floor. The decorations are sunny French Mediterranean, with palm trees, tiled floors, brick pillars and white lattice. The amiability of the owners influences the waiters who are cordial all around and describe the menu in slow and understandable sentences.

• Artichokes.

• Game pate.

• Mussel soup.

• Leg of lamb with dressing.

• Gooseberry tart.

• French cheeses.

Mulino

86 West 3rd Street / Sullivan & Thompson. Phone: 673 3783. Price: $120 ($120) for two. All major cards. (C8).

Often considered to be the best Italian restaurant in New York, a few steps from Washington Square. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Nathan‘s Famous

1482 Broadway at Times Square & 43rd. Phone: 626 7322. Price: $30 ($30) for two. No cards. (B4).

The oldest and best known hot dogs restaurant in New York originated on Coney Island but this Broadway outlet has for a long time been the flagship, convenient for those passing through Times Square.

The sausages are superior and there are some other things on the menu.
• Sausages.

Nobu

105 Hudson Street / Franklin Street. Phone: 219 0500. Price: $125 ($125) for two. All major cards. (C9).

A TriBeCa restaurant, considered by many to be the best Japanese restaurant in town. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Oceana

55 East 54th Street / Madison & Park. Phone: 759 5941. Price: $120 ($120) for two. All major cards. (C4).

One of the very best seafood restaurants in the city, right in the center of Midtown. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Odeon

145 West Broadway / Thomas Street. Phone: 233 0507. Price: $75 ($75) for two. All major cards. (C9).

A fashionable Nouvelle American restaurant in southern TriBeCa. Usually the food is bad at celebrity eateries (e.g. Elaine) and must be bad, as else the in-crowd (e.g. Woody Allen) would believe that people were rather coming for the food than for the in-crowd and therefore the in-crowd would feel slighted and not be coming at all. Odeon breaks this general rule with excellent food.

It is very lively especially at late hours when the art crowd arrives in its uniforms, punk or otherwise. The place is more quiet at lunch when knowledgeable financiers come from nearby Wall Street. Stephen Lyle is a good cook, if not as good as Patrick Clark was. The menu is in constant change, which is a good omen.

• Snails, mussels and oysters.

• Crab cake with chili sauce.

• Salmon with lentils and parsley vinaigrette.

• Veal and chicken liver.

• Beef steaks.

American Nouvelle consists mainly of taking old granny recipes and adapt them to the light cuisine that originated in France about 1970. Thus many local American recipes have been saved from oblivion, just as when old buildings are saved by converting them to modern use.

Oyster Bar

Grand Central Station. Phone: 490 6650. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. Price: $84 ($84) for two. All major cards. (C4).

The best seafood restaurant in New York, offering the most exact cooking of the most fresh produce, is in the extra large and vaulted basement of Grand Central, lit by lots of bare bulbs and covered in lots of sound-reflecting tiles, reminiscent of a Paris metro station. No frozen fish is used and the simplest cooking is best, such as steaming and grilling.

The noise of the full dining room blends into a neutral background. The service is quick and efficient, friendly and no-nonsense Italian style. The waiters are informed about the cuisine and can tell the difference between the ten-sixteen different types of shells on offer each day. The daily changing menu usually lists more than 20 different species of fish.

• Oysters and shells.

• Lobster.

• Bluefish.

• Red Snapper.

• Catfish.

• Perch.

• Grouper.

American white wines, covering 120 types, all of them at reasonable prices, even though many rarities are included.

Palm

837 2nd Avenue / 44th Street. Phone: 687 2953. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: $110 ($110) for two. All major cards. (D4).

One of the very beast steak houses in New York and certainly the most famous one, near United Nations, filled with loud businessmen and journalists consuming lobster salad, sirloin steak and cheese cake in unison. Bookings for dinner are not accepted. Until recently this was a male stronghold, but now women journalists have invaded the sanctuary in force.

It is a rough place with sawdust on the floor and cartoons of famous journalists on the walls. There are two rooms and the lower one is more popular. Disinterested waiters recite in a hurry whatever they remember from the menu and expect orders of lobster salad, sirloin steak and cheese cake. No surprises here.

• Lobster salad.

• Sirloin steak.

• Cheese cake.

Rincón de España

226 Thompson Street betw. W. 3rd & Bleecker. Phone: 260 4950. Price: $64 ($64) for two. All major cards. (C8).

The main Spanish restaurant is just south of Washington Square in Greenwich Village, a dark and noisy place with guitars and singing.

The seating is very crowded and the service is very good and the customers are very happy.

• King crab salad.

• Octopus with garlic.

• Lamb cutlets.

• Paella = pan-fried rice with lobster, shrimp, mussels, scallops and chicken.

Rosa Mexicano

1063 1st Avenue / 58th Street. Phone: 753 7407. Price: $80 ($80) for two. All major cards. (D3).

The best Mexican eatery is a luxury restaurant in the northeast of Midtown, near Roosevelt Island Tramway, owned by Chef Josephine Howard, specializing in regional Mexican cooking.

It is a modern-looking restaurant, cleanly and well furnished in brown and beige, with tiles on the walls. The service is very good and extremely relaxed.

• Guacamole = avocados in spices and peppers.

• Ceviche = lemon-marinated fish.

• Enchiladas = tortilla corn cakes with chicken, onion and cheese.

• Pepitos = beef in sandwich with pan-fried peas.

Russian Tea Room

150 West 57th Street, betw. 6th & 7th. Phone: 265 0947. Hours: Closed for restoration. Price: $105 ($105) for two. All major cards. (B3).

A neighbor of Carnegie Hall, luxuriously outfitted and offering the most European atmosphere in the Western Hemisphere, founded in 1926 by members of the Imperial Russian Ballet who were stranded here during the Russian Revolution. It still continues to serve good food ins spite of being the perennial haunt of artists, especially of those who perform at Carnegie Hall.

The dining room is red, green and golden, heavy with haphazard decorations. The innumerable paintings do not match. There are lots of mirrors, chandeliers, samovars and disagreeing clocks. The usual lunch consists of vodka and champagne, blini and caviar. The Russian courses are explained on the menu. Take care not to be seated in the upstairs Siberia.

• Borscht = Russian beet-root soup with turnips, potatoes and vegetables.

• Blini = thick Russian pancakes served with butter and crème fraiche.

• Beluga, Sevruga and Oscietre = Russian quality caviar.

• French Champagne.

• Tea.

Sammy‘s Roumanian

157 Chrystie Street / Delancey Street. Phone: 673 0330. Hours: Closed lunch. Price: $85 ($85) for two. All major cards. (D8).

The most famous Jewish restaurant is in the Ghetto part of run-down Loiasaida, near the Orchard Street penny stores. It is neither Roumanian nor kosher, but very noisy and with a very happy atmosphere.

It has a low ceiling and lots of tired memorabilia and postcards on the walls. The piano and a fiddle are often in action.

• Cauliflower.

• Grilled beef.

• Veal sausages.

• Potato pancakes.

Say Eng Look

5 East Broadway / Chatham Square. Phone: 732 0796. Price: $40 ($40) for two. All major cards. (D9).

A consistent and good Chinese restaurant at the eastern edge of Chinatown, bordering on the Bowery, offering Shanghai cooking at reasonable prices.

It has an unhurried atmosphere, frequented by Chinese people. It is relatively tasteful, in red and black colors, with rather discrete pictures of Chinese dragons.

• Filet of eel.

• King sea cucumber with shrimp seeds.

• Sesame chicken.

• Roasted whole sea bass.

• Orange beef.

Shun Lee Palace

155 East 55th Street / Lexington & 3rd. Phone: 371 8844. Price: $95 ($95) for two. All major cards. (C3).

A nice Chinese restaurant conveniently located in Midtown. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Siam Inn

916 8th Avenue betw. 54th and 55th. Phone: 974 9583. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday lunch. Price: $55 ($55) for two. All major cards. (B4).

The best representative of Thai cooking is at the northern end of Theater District, near Central Park.

It is a clean and small hole in the wall with Thai handicraft on the walls, an unusually civilized service.

• Curries.

• Spice coated and marinated meat.

• Far East fruits.

Smith & Wollensky

201 East 49th Street / 3rd Avenue. Phone: 753 1530. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday lunch. Price: $110 ($110) for two. All major cards. (C4).

A justly famous, large and noisy steakhouse with tight sitting on two floors in a small corner building nestling between Midtown towers, serving large portions of excellent steaks done to order.

Above the wainscoat there is a tiled line and above it yellow walls with blackboard menus. Diners sit on small and barely comfortable chairs at small and rickety tables with white linen. The place is always full of suits who have taken their jackets off and laugh at locker room jokes. The service is well organized. Waiters wear jackets that are two numbers to small for them.

• Mushroom barley soup.

• Lobster salad.

• Shrimp salad.

• Filet mignon

• Lemon pepper tuna.

• Norwegian salmon

• Pan roasted Maki Maki

• Hashed prawns

• Veal piccata

• Cheesecake

• Maple pecan pie

Union Square Cafe

21 East 16th Street / 5th Avenue & Union Square. Phone: 243 4020. Hours: Closed Sunday lunch. Price: $110 ($110) for two. All major cards. (C7).

An outstanding and deservedly popular restaurant with rustic Italiano-American cooking in a simple setting a few steps from Union Square.

A charming restaurant in three parts, always bustling. There is a parquet on the floor and yellow walls above the green wainscoating. Outsize paintings enliven the area behind the bar, where many people prefer to dine. The main action is in the large room beside the bar, a few steps down. The chairs are comfortable and the linen is white.

• Fried calamari with spicey anchovy mayonnaise.

• Fruitwood-smoked salmon with fennel-olive tiperade and a salad of frisée, avocado and peppers.

• Black bean soup with lemon and a shot af Australian sherry.

• Yellowfin tuna burger with ginger-mustard glaze, grilled red onions and creamy cabbage slaw.

• Seared red snapper with basil aged balsamic vinaigrette, a savory medley of shiitakes, tatsoi and roast carrots.

• Mashed potatoes with frizzled leeks.

• Greenmarket apple streusel pie with lemon ice cream.

• Chocolate flan with chocolate almond tuile.

Zarela

953 2nd Avenue / 50th & 51st Streets. Phone: 644 6740. Price: $75 ($75) for two. All major cards. (D4).

A colorful Mexican restaurant near the United Nations. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Zen Palate

663 9th Avenue / 46th Street. Phone: 582 1669. Price: $57 ($57) for two. All major cards. (B4).

An attractive alternative Chinese restaurant in Theater District. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

New York amusements

Ferðir

Blue Note

131 West 3rd Street / 6th Avenue. Phone: 475 8592. (C8).

The most important jazz bar in Manhattan. All jazz players of fame play there and the players are mainly famous. The succeed each other at rapid intervals. Sarah Vaugh was brilliant and the amusing bodyguards happily panicked when the balloons burst, but the English foreign minister kept his cool. The atmosphere is unique in this really tiny place for all strata of society.

Blum / Helman

20 West 57th Street betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 245 2888. Hours: Open Tuesday-Saturday 10-18. (C3).

The Midtown gallery that has been known to be often the first Midtown gallery to take up artists that have been introduced in the SoHo galleries, bridging the gap between SoHo and Midtown. When Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg and Roy Lichtenstein were exhibited here they were still relatively unknown. It also handles many new artists.

C. B. G. B. & OMFUG

315 Bowery / Bleecker Street. Phone: 982 4052. No cards. (D8).

The main venue and birthplace of punk, in East Village, a former car repair station converted into a long and dark bar with neon lights. Normal people can have fun by coming here, just as they would visit the zoo, to observe blue hair-spears, chains, dog collars and black leather on young people who walk in trance in the screaming noise and inject themselves on the stairs.

Chippendale

1110 1st Avenue betw. 61st and 62nd. Phone: 935 6060. (D3).

A ladies nightclub, suitable for outings of sewing clubs who want to have fun by observing semi-naked go-go boys from the health centers and to push dollar bills down their G-strings.

Dia Art

141 Wooster Street betw. Houston & Prince. Phone: 473 8072. Hours: Open Wednesday-Saturday 12-18. (C8).

The most important location of this group of galleries is in the center of SoHo. It is an immense space, full of damp earth that contrasts with the white walls and track lights. The name of the gallery at this location is: The New York Earth Room.

Leo Castelli

420 West Broadway betw. Prince & Spring. Phone: 431 5160. Hours: Open Tuesday-Saturday 10-18. (C8).

The most famous gallery of modern art has for more than a quarter of a century been here in the heart of SoHo. Castelli has in this time introduced great artists who became the established masters of modern art, such as Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella, Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg. Most of them still feel beholden to Castelli.

Lone Star Café

240 West 52nd Street betw. 8th & Broadway. Phone: 245 2950. (B4).

Cowboy music has its main representative in Theater District. Texan country music attract homesick Texans in noisy circumstances and lots of beer and chili. It is convenient to get a seat on the balcony to have a view over the commotion. There are two bands each evening.

Mary Boone

417 West Broadway betw. Prince & Spring. Phone: 431 1818. Hours: Open Tuesday-Saturday 10-18. (C8).

For several years the most fashionable gallery in Manhattan, located in the heart of SoHo. It was the gallery of the eighties. Mary Boone is a disciple of Leo Castelli, the grand master of modern galleries. She is a social lion and has introduced controversial artists such as Rainer Fettig, David Salle and Julian Schnabel.

Michael’s Pub

211 East 55th Street betw. 7th & Broadway. Phone: 758 2272. (B3).

Most jazz venues are in Greenwich Village or further south. The most important Midtown site for jazz is best known for Woody Allen playing there in a ragtime band almost every Monday night. The rather recent and tasteful bar concentrates on classic jazz and the guests are mainly middle-aged tourists, who line up outside for three hours before it opens at 11:45.

Pace

32 East 57th Street betw. 2nd & 3rd. Phone: 421 3292. Hours: Open Tuesday-Friday 9:30-17:30, in summer Saturday 10-18. (D3).

Possibly the best known of the classical art galleries, in the western part of Midtown. It is a large gallery on two floors. It covers Pablo Picasso, Jean Arp, Ad Reinhardt, Isamu Noguchi and Mark Rothko.

Palladium

126 East 14th Street (Broadway). Phone: 473 7171. (C7).

A huge Greenwich Village dancing floor with loud disco music and video flashes. It has shown a great staying power for several years, unusual for nightclubs.

Robert Miller

41 East 57th Street betw. 2nd & 3rd. Phone: 980 5454. (D3).

The best gallery atmosphere in Midtown is here, a relative newcomer to the gallery scene. It exhibits new and old artists, also photos and antiques.

S. O. B.

204 Varick Street / West Houston Street. Phone: 243 4940. (B8).

The letters stand for Sounds of Music. This joint on the border of Greenwich Village and SoHo is the main venue for Latin American music, a noisy and lively place, especially at weekends. The bands change all the time and there is sometimes African music.

Sidney Janis

110 West 57th Street betw. 6th & 7th. Phone: 586 0110. Hours: Open Monday-Saturday 10-17:30. (B3).

Sidney Janis has since time immemorial been one of the most influential galleries in the city. he made de Kooning, Pollock, Rothko, Duchamp and Leger famous in the United States. He has sold many of the works who now have a place of honor in American museums of modern art. He introduced the Dada style to America. The gallery is in the center of Midtown.

Sweet Basil

88 7th Avenue South / Bleecker & Grove. Phone: 242 1785. (B7).

Modern jazz has its center in the western part of Greenwich Village, in an unusually decorous place with brick walls and paneling, enlivened by paintings of important musicians. It is small and crowded and the atmosphere is relaxed.

Village Vanguard

178 7th Avenue South / 11th Street. Phone: 255 4037. No cards. (B7).

For more than half a century this small and rickety, crowded and smoke-filled basement in the northern part of Greenwich Village has been one of the very top jazz venues in New York. Many famous musicians started their career in this intimate hole that has been imitated all over the world. The music is mainly classic jazz.

Chumley’s

86 Bedford Street near Commerce Street. Phone: 675 4449. (B8).

The most amusing bar in Greenwich Village, from 1920, completely unmarked on the outside to prevent strangers from finding it, so you have to remember the address. It is a neighborhood pub and nearly a private pub of the literary crowd in Greenwich Village.

First you walk up steps and the down steps to enter the dim pub, where talkative guests sit tight at small table of massive wood, carved with initials. Jackets of books by well-known and unknown regulars line the walls.

Fanelli‘s

94 Prince Street / Mercer Street. Phone: 226 9412. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. (C8).

A British pub since 1872 in the SoHo district of arts. Formerly it was a workingman’s hangout but now its red-and-white oilcloth tables have been taken over by trendy artists. It is often very crowded and most enjoyable at that time. Take a look at the beautiful entrance door.

P. J. Clarke‘s

915 3rd Avenue / 55th Street. Phone: 355 8857. Hours: Open late. (C3).

The most famous Midtown bar, in an old house of two floors, nestling on a corner under one of the Midtown towers. The owner, Daniel Lavezzo, refused to sell, when all the other lots on the block were bought to make way for the tower. And he still refuses.

There is a long bar with a few stools around it. A few tables are at the far end of the room. All furnishings are old and worn and so are the mirrors. In busy hours several layers of customers stand at the bar, most of them drinking beer. This is a popular venue for the happy hour after work and before the subway ride to the suburbia.

Café Central

Grand Central Station. (C4).

Spectacular view over the famous main hall of the railway station, offering coffee with good, fresh fruit for breakfast.

Café Europa

West 57th Street / 7th Avenue. (B3).

A comfortable café with tiny tables diagonally opposite Carnegie Hall, serving excellent fresh fruit with yogurt for breakfast.

Caffe Reggio

119 Mac Dougal Street betw. West 3rd & Minetta Lane. Phone: 475 9557. (C8).

The best known of very few real European cafés in Manhattan, a haunt of intellectuals in Greenwich Village, the most European part of Manhattan. It even has tables on the pavement, a curiosity in America.

Real coffee is sold, such as espresso and cappuccino, also very good chocolate and several types of tea. It is a popular after-dinner meeting place in the neighborhood and a convenient place for people-watching.

Gianni’s

South Street Seaport, 15 Fulton Street. Phone: 608 7300. (D10).

A rare sight in New York, a pavement café, in the touristy South Street Seaport, a good place for observing vacationers and Wall Street bankers from nearby towers.

Balducci’s

424 Avenue of the Americas betw. 9th & 10th. Phone: 673 2600. (C7).

In northern Greenwich Village, the main gourmet shop in Manhattan. It has the very best of everything, of fresh vegetables and fish and of ripe cheeses, 550 of them. It also has the best bakery in town. The shelves are full of jars of eccentric food from all the corners of the world, especially from Italy and France.

Bergdorf-Goodman

754 5th Avenue / 57th Street. Phone: 753 7300. Hours: Closed Sunday. (C3).

The most luxurious fashion shop on Manhattan is on Midtown’s central corner of the main fashion streets. It is an expensive shop, designed as a palace and it receives visitors like royalty. It has been in the forefront of introducing Italian fashions to the American audience.

Bloomingdales

1000 3rd Avenue / 59th Street. Phone: 705 2000. Hours: Open all week, except Sunday morning. (C3).

The upper class department store is on the border of Midtown and Upper East Side, seven floors of playing ground for interior designers and decorators. Thousands of New Yorkers and suburbanites follow Bloomingdales fashions as if in a trance.
In addition to the fashion goods there are the most strange goods from China, India and other corners of the world. The department of food and wine in the cellar is famous.

The store is a mixture of an Eastern bazaar and a disco. There is always something going on here. The place is sometimes a riot, the most interesting theater in town, a necessary stop for curious visitors, one of the landmarks of New York.

Brooks Brothers

346 Madison Avenue / 44th Street. Phone: 682 8800. Hours: Closed Sunday. (C4).

Near Grand Central, the shop for all bankers in America. It is from 1818 and has directed the conservative taste in men’s clothes ever since. It also sells clothes for conservative ladies and conservative children.

No notice at all is taken of swings in fashion. What was good in 1818 is also good today. Shoulder pads have always, are now and will always be banned here. It is also nice to know that the overcoat that was bought here in 1960 is still valid today. And some items are not expensive at all.

Casswell Massey

518 Lexington Avenue / 48th Street. Phone: 755 2254. (C4).

This pharmacy in hotel Inter-Continental in eastern Midtown is the oldest one in the city, from 1725, and reminds you of an outdated London specialty shop. It still sells perfume that was made especially for the wife of President Washington and a night crème that was made specially for Sara Bernhardt. And it is fun to observe the pharmacy jars from the 18th C.

Dalton

(C4).

One of the main bookshops on 5th Avenue.

Hammacher-Schlemmer

147 East 57th Street betw. 3rd & Lexington. Phone: 421 9000. (C3).

In eastern Midtown, the haven for the technically mad. It is the shop that introduced the world to pressing irons, electrical razors and pressure cookers. It has lots of strange things of the most ingenious kind, such as an automatic soup ladle, a computer for prophecies and a golf green. If you are an eccentric, this shop has exactly what you know that you need.

Henri Bendel

712 5th Avenue betw. 55th & 56th. Phone: 247 1100. Hours: Open all week, except Sunday morning. (C3).

The main fashion shop in Manhattan is on four floors in central Midtown and has become an avant-garde shop in fashion. It is designed as a collection of glittering boutiques where each designer has his own space. Some of them have even become famous at Bendel, including Mary McFadden. American fashion starts here. In spite of that the clothes seem to be wearable.

Macy‘s

34th Street / Broadway / 6th Avenue. Phone: 736 5151. Hours: Open all week. (B5).

The largest department shop in the world, west of Empire State, has been fighting for its life in recent years. It covers 200,000 square meters. It has gradually changed from being a downmarket shop into a shop with many quality goods and even fashions and gourmet food, serving the middle classes. The ground floor and the balcony is occupied by semi-independent boutiques.

Saks

611 5th Avenue betw. 49th & 50th. Phone: 753 4000. Hours: Closed Sunday. (C4).

Near Rockefeller Center in Midtown, this is the conservative fashion shop per excellence, tasteful and elegant. It is well organized and reminds you of Harrods in London, even if Saks only sells clothes and food. And it is never old-fashioned in spite of being conservative.

Tiffany

727 5th Avenue / 57th Street. Phone: 755 8000. Hours: Closed Sunday. (C3).

The most American shop in the world, because it could not have existed anywhere else. This shop on the main Midtown corner sells jewels, tableware and household ware, both tasteful and tasteless. It has its own style that does not follow other trends.

People buy wedding presents and wedding invitations with the Tiffany sign to make sure everybody knows where it is from. Silver rattles as gifts for newborn babies are popular.

Some goods are not expensive but packed in the blue Tiffany cases all the same, and that is the important thing for many people.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

New York walks

Ferðir

Circle Line

Pier 83 / West 43rd Street. Phone: 563 3200. (A4).

The most interesting and comfortable sightseeing trip is to travel by boat around the island, embarking from Pier 83 at the end of West 43rd Street. We choose a bright day, preferably in the morning, as the air tends to get misty in the afternoon. We arrive early enough to get a seat on the port side of the boat, the left side, as it travels counter-clockwise around Manhattan.

We nestle down in a comfortable chair and sip our favorite drink while we see the city glide past. This is the best way to learn the relative position of the main towers and districts of Manhattan. The round trip takes three hours.

Island Helicopter

1 Penn Plaza / 7th Avenue / West 32nd. Phone: 683 4575. (B5).

A modern and a quick way to have a look around Manhattan is to take a chopper ride from Penn Plaza at Penn Railway Station. We can choose flights of different duration, from seven minutes. An half-an-hour trip along the whole length of the island and to the Statue of Liberty costs $100. This trip should only be undertaken on a bright day, preferably on a clear morning.

Downtown

Often called Financial District, the southern end of Manhattan, where the city was founded by Dutch settlers. Their defensive wall against Indians was at the present Wall Street. Now the district is a pile of bank towers of steel and glass, the largest banking district in the world. Until recently this was like a graveyard during weekends and nights.

Now a popular tourist attraction has been built up at South Street Seaport where an old fishing harbor and its warehouses have been converted into boutiques, cafés and restaurants. On the eastern shore new housing development has injected new life into the area around World Trade Center, Downtown is therefore gradually coming to life again.

Very few are left of old buildings but those who survive are now the main attraction, much more beautiful than most of the modern towers. One thing that makes Downtown more likable than many other parts of town is the old chaos of irregular streets with real names instead of the organized numbers that pass as the names of the greater part of Manhattan streets.

We start our walk at the southern tower of World Trade Center, WTC no. 2 and first take the express elevator to the 107th floor, then an escalator to the roof on the 110th floor.

World Trade Center

2 World Trade Center. (C10).

From the top of World Trade Center we have an excellent view to the banking towers of the Downtown area of Manhattan, the Financial District. We also have a view to the Statue of Liberty and the Verrazano bridge in the south and to the Midtown office towers in the north.

The building of the towers was finished in 1974. At that time they were for a while the tallest buildings in the world, eight floors higher than Empire State. They are simple in appearance and stand apart from other Downtown towers.

The buildings of World Trade Center surround a central and a connecting area of 60 shops, restaurants, banks and other services, including an outlet of TKTS, which sells theater tickets at half price on performance day. There are famous sculptures by Koening, Rosati and Nagare on the square.

We return down to earth and exit into Liberty Street.

Liberty Street
Liberty Street. (C10).

The street connects World Trade Center and the recent developments in World Financial Center and Battery Park City with the main Downtown area. It ends in the west at the World Financial Center. An overpass links World Financial Center with the American Stock Exchange on the other side of Liberty Street. Another overpass links World Financial Center with World Trade Center.

We walk into the World Financial Center.

World Financial Center

(B10).

The four towers of World Financial Center house the headquarters of some of the world’s most important financial companies. At the heart of it is the beautiful and imposing Winter Garden with a 36 meter high roof of glass and steel, lined by boutiques and restaurants, opening to an esplanade and a marina on Hudson River.

The garden is often used for artistic events, free of charge. The audience then sits on the impressive marble staircase.
The World Financial Center is a part of the Battery Park City.

Battery Park City

(B10).

A recent development that is mainly residential and is supposed to house more than 25,000 people when it is finished, injecting human life into the Downtown area. It offers a fine walk on an esplanade that runs along Hudson River and has a good view to the Statue of Liberty. The area is on land that has been reclaimed from the river.

We return from Battery Park City and World Financial Center to Liberty Street which we follow to Broadway where we turn left. On the way we pass the red cube by Isamu Noguchi in front of the Marine Midland bank. On Broadway we soon arrive at St Paul’s on our left

St. Paul‘s Chapel

Broadway. (C10).

The oldest church in New York, built 1764-1766 in Georgian style, probably the most beautiful church of the city, inside as outside. Its beautifully illuminated nave is often used for free concerts.

A little farther on Broadway we arrive at Woolworth on the left side.

Woolworth

233 Broadway. (C10).

A Neo-Gothic tower inside as outside, built in 1913 as the tallest building in the world. We enter the lobby to have a look at the works of art on the walls and in the ceiling.

We cross the garden opposite Woolworth. City Hall is in the middle of the garden.

City Hall

City Hall Park / Broadway. (C9).

Probably the smallest city hall in the United States, built in 1812 in an Early American style resembling the French Renaissance Chateau style. When it was built it was so far out of town that the north side was not laid in marble as the other sides until 1954. No one was expected to see it from that side.

The small and peaceful garden in front of City Hall has a fountain by Delacorte. It was formerly the place for public hangings, nowadays for some official proclamations.

We return on Broadway to the south, pass Liberty Street and soon have the Trinity Church on our right side.

Trinity Church

Broadway / Wall Street. (C10).

A Neo-Gothic church from 1846, built of red sandstone. It stands in a peaceful, grass-grown graveyard and fronts the end of Wall Street like a dwarf among the giants. It still attracts attention, not only as a symbolic guardian of Wall Street but also because of the long spire on the massive tower.

We walk into Wall Street and do not forget to look back at the church.

Wall Street

Wall Street. (C10).

The main banking canyon of the world. At lunchtime the whole street is so crowded that it can be difficult to walk. The street winds slightly just as the defensive wall that the Dutch erected here against the Indians. There are banks in all the towers.

When we come to Broad Street we turn right and see the New York Stock Exchange on our right.

New York Stock Exchange

20 Broad Street / Wall Street. (C10).

Built in 1903 in Neo-Classical temple style. We can enter it and go up to a balcony to observe the commotion of the exchange floor.

A guide tries to explain to us how the exchange works. We look in awe at the mad shouting and waving of 3000 brokers on 900 square meters, strewn with paper. They look at giant screens and hammer the computer keyboards, which are on 16 transaction islands, 60 on each island, 960 in toto.

All transactions are immediately shown on the walls, not only these transactions but also those in London and Tokyo.

We return out to Broad Street, go to Wall Street, cross it and continue into Nassau Street past Federal Hall on our right and go to the plaza in front of the Chase Manhattan bank.

Chase Manhattan

Nassau Street / Liberty Street. (C10).

A famous sculpture by Dubuffet is on the plaza, four trees in black and white. There is also a cellar garden of stone and water by Isamu Noguchi.

We return on Nassau Street to Wall Street, turn right to Trinity Church, turn left on Broadway and walk to Bowling Green.

Bowling Green

Bowling Green / Broadway. (C10).

A small garden, the oldest public part in New York, surrounded by an iron fence from 1771.

The United States Custom House is at the far end of the garden.

Custom House

Bowling Green / Broadway. (C11).

A Beaux Arts building from 1907, a fine granite palace, now converted into the National Museum of the American Indian.

Behind Custom House we arrive at Battery Park.

Battery Park

(C11).

The southernmost tip of Manhattan, named in memory of a gun battery defending the city during the Civil War. The park is a relaxed area for strolling, popular at lunchtime when bankers come and eat out of paper bags.

Ferries leave Battery Park to cross Hudson and East Rivers. One ferry goes to the Statue of Liberty and another to Ellis Island. We take that ferry first.

Ellis Island

An island on the western side of Hudson River, formerly the immigration office of the United States. Everyone who fled the wars and deprivations of Europe went through these buildings to get a permit to settle in the United States haven. It was closed down in 1954 and is now an immigration museum with guided tours.

We return on the ferry to Battery Park to take another ferry to the Statue of Liberty on Liberty Island.

Statue of Liberty

Bartholdi designed it, the citizens of France paid for it in a collection and gave it to the United States in memory of the victory in the Independence War, in which the French supported the Americans. The statue has ever since been the national symbol of the United States and of freedom in general, a welcome sight for immigrants passing by on their way to Ellis Island.

The statue is 120 meters in height and weighs 225 tons. It is difficult to walk up the stairs and advisable to take the elevator up he 22 floors to the crown of the Goddess of Freedom. This is a pilgrimage that all true Americans must make once in their life just as Muslims make to Mecca.

The ferry from Battery Park to Staten Island also sails past Liberty Island.

We return to Battery Park. From the park we enter Water Street and turn left into Broad Street, where we find Fraunces Tavern on the corner of Pearl Street.

Fraunces Tavern

Pearl Street / Broad Street. (C11).

The brick building from 1719 is best known for being the restaurant where George Washington bid farewell to his officers at the end of the Civil War. The facade is original and the interior from 1927. The food at the restaurant is almost as old. There is also a museum in the house.

We return on Broad Street to Water Street and turn left.

Water Street

Water Street. (C10).

Once the waterfront of the city. On our right we pass Jeannette Park, also called Vietnam Veterans Plaza, an ugly place. The bank towers are on both sides of the street, each in its own style, some of them trying to look human on the ground floor.

We continue on Water Street for about 800 meters, turn right into Fulton Street. On the corner there is Cannon’s Walk.

Cannon’s Walk

(D10).

A 19th C. block with a lively market, cafés and shops.

We continue on Fulton Street and arrive on our left at Schermerhorn Row, between Front Street and South Street.

Schermerhorn Row

South Street Seaport. (D10).

A block of original Georgian warehouses, built 1811-1813, with wrought-iron ground floor fronts that were later added. It houses well-known shops and restaurants. The quaintest shop is the Brookstone ironmonger opposite the Gianni’s sidewalk café.

On the other side of South Street we come to the center of South Street Seaport, Pier 17.

South Street Seaport

South Street Seaport. (D10).

The old piers have been converted into an open-air maritime museum. It includes the tea clipper Peking, the Ambrose rig and a floating lighthouse. The warehouse on Pier 17 has been converted into a mall of boutiques for tourists, offering everything from fashions to whale hunting gear. It has some restaurants with a good view to Brooklyn Bridge and Brooklyn.

This is a kind of a theme park for tourists and a successful one. It shows how wise it is to protect old buildings and convert them into centers of attractions, as they are almost invariably more beautiful than recent buildings. South Street Seaport is now one of the landmarks of the city.

Alongside the Seaport on this side of South Street we arrive at the Fulton Fish Market.

Fulton Market

(D10).

The wholesale fish market is active in the early morning hours, especially after 06 in the morning. During the day the market building changes into a mall of small seafood shops.

We continue on South Street and turn left into Peck Slip.

Peck Slip

(D10).

An illusory mural of the Brooklyn Bridge covers one of the house fronts on the right side of the street.

Behind the mural we can see the pillars of Brooklyn Bridge.

Brooklyn Bridge

(D10).

The most beautiful bridge in Manhattan, built in 1883 and considered at that time to be an engineering feat, the first suspension bridge of steel wires and the longest bridge in the world at that time, with a span of 486 meters. There are excellent views from the elevated walkway over the motor traffic on the bridge.

From the bridge there is a short way on Pearl Street and its continuation in St James Place to Chatham Square on the Bowery, the starting point of a walk through the ethnic and exotic districts of lower Manhattan.

Exotica

The ethnic part of lower Manhattan is mainly on the east side. From the south it starts with Chinatown. Then comes Little Italy with the Jewish Loiasada to the east, and finally the formerly Polish and Ukrainian East Village to the northeast, now the center of punk. Chinatown and Little Italy have more or less retained their ethnic character but Loiasada has mostly lost it.

We start at Chatham Square where Bowery begins.

Bowery

Bowery. (D9).

The southern end of Skid Row, the refuge of drunks and hobos, stretching on Bowery from Chatham Square to 4th Street. The vagabonds are harmless but in some places you have to step over them.

We walk from Chatham Square into Mott Street. We are in Chinatown.

Chinatown

The district adjoining Downtown to the north and TriBeCa to the east, originally delimited by Bowery, Mulberry, Worth and Canal Streets but has now overflowed into the next streets. It heart is in Mott and Pell Streets. It looks Chinese. Posters are in Chinese letters and the pay phones have pagoda roofs. Seven newspapers in Chinese are sold on street corners.

The 150 restaurants are the main attraction of the district. They are among the most economical ones in Manhattan and some of them are very good. A pleasant Eastern scent emanates from the restaurants and food shops into the streets. The main action is on Sunday when Chinese from other districts and the suburbs arrive to shop and to dine out.

It is a poor district. People bet in casinos and sweat in the garment industry. Criminal gangs collect protection money from owners of shops and restaurants. But tourists are not aware of this shady side of Chinatown.

We walk along Mott Street.

Mott Street

Mott Street. (D9).

A street of Chinese signs and telephone pagodas, Eastern fragrances and lots of restaurants with a faraway cuisine.
We take a good time and have a look into side streets such as Pell and Bayard, have a Chinese lunch and enjoy being for a while on a different continent.

When we arrive at Canal Street we turn left one block and then right into Mulberry Street, the axis of Little Italy.

Little Italy

The district of immigrants from Sicily and Napoli is north from Chinatown, east from SoHo, south from Greenwich Village and west from Loiasada. It borders on Canal Street, Houston Street, Lafayette Street and Bowery. The central axis is Mulberry Street, which runs through the whole length of it. The Chinese have recently invaded the district from the south.

On Sunday Italians from other districts and the suburbs come here to buy pasta and salami and to dine in Italian restaurants. That day the merchants carry their goods out to the pavement and the restaurateurs their tables and chairs. Then the districts looks distinctively Italian. The espresso flavor wafts through the streets.

The main events are two week-long festivals, the St. Antonio festival in June and the St. Gennaro festival in September. Then Little Italy changes into a festival park.

We are in Mulberry Street.

Mulberry Street

(C8).

A long and narrow street that could have been imported wholesale from Palermo or Napoli. There are lots of small shops selling pasta and Italian specialties. People sit in sidewalk cafés and sip a glass of red wine or the excellent espresso coffee, waiting for time to pass until a proper lunch hour has arrived.

We continue on Mulberry Street to Houston Street, “howston” in Manhattanese, where we turn right. It is a lively street of junk shops, the border of Little Italy and Loiasada on the south and East Village on the north. We continue on Houston Street to Orchard Street where we turn right again.

Loiasada

Lower East Side is the full name of the district to the east of Little Italy and south of East Village. It reaches from Bowery in the west to East River in the east, Canal Street in the south and Houston Street in the north.

In the beginning of the 19th C. this was the Jewish ghetto and one of the poorest districts in New York, more densely populated than Calcutta. It has fostered many intellectuals and merchants. Most of the Jews have moved away and have left behind derelict synagogues. Black people have moved in, Chinese and mainly Puerto Ricans, so this is still a very poor district.

Jews still have shops here in Orchard Street or come here on Sunday to shop cheaply and to dine in kosher way. Prices are often very competitive in Orchard Street. It resembles an Eastern Bazaar. People haggle loudly and gesticulate. Pickpockets have a field day. Otherwise the district is quite safe, if people avoid going east of Essex Street.

We are in Orchard Street.

Orchard Street

(D8).

A kind of an Eastern bazaar or souk with lots of loud haggling and gesticulating. There are merchants in an Jewish Orthodox attire. Citizens of New York come here for the good prices.

If we return to Houston Street, turn left and then right into Bowery, we are entering East Village.

East Village

To the east of Greenwich Village, bordering on Broadway to the west, Houston Street to the south, East River to the east and 14th Street to the north. It is an old immigrant district of Ukrainians and Poles and has recently been converted into the punk district of Manhattan.

The most recent development is the moving in of artists from TriBeCa who are fleeing the rising rents. They will probably clean up East Village as they did before in SoHo and TriBeCa. The effect can be seen in the emergence of art galleries and rising rents in the very last years.

The punk music is mainly on Astor Place and St. Mark’s Place. The uniform is multicolor hair, leather clothes and steel chains. And of course they attract curious tourists. The punk shops are in the so-called NoHo district on the southern Broadway from 10th Street to Houston Street.

We can walk on Bowery to Astor Place and then follow 8th Street west to Greenwich Village, where we shall take another walk.

Greenwich Village

North of SoHo and west of East Village, the most European part of Manhattan, an old university and cultural district around Washington Square. It reaches from Houston Street north to 14th Street and from Broadway west to Hudson River. It is a world in itself, a district of low-rise residential buildings on winding streets, which are difficult to find, just as in Europe.

The City University is here, the world center of jazz, and the Manhattan center of experimental theater, often called Off Broadway. It is the most relaxed district in Manhattan. The bohemians started to move here in the Thirties and in force after World War II, when Greenwich Village became a kind of an American Left Bank of the Seine.

Later the gays came and the pop generation. The gays are mainly in the western part, west of 7th Avenue to Hudson River. Punk moved on to East Village and avant-garde art to SoHo, leaving Greenwich Village as a district of middle-aged flower people, almost an establishment. The villagers are socially conscious and stick together when needed.

Off Broadway theater is concentrated in Greenwich Village.

Off Broadway

Greenwich Village.

Modern theater, experimental and avant-garde, is less a hallmark of Broadway than of the so-called Off Broadway, which is a category of about 200 theaters all over New York, but mainly concentrated in Greenwich Village. New works are tried out there and in London before the successful ones move to Broadway. This change has occurred slowly since the end of World War II.

The weeklies New York and Village Voice show the offerings of Off Broadway. The problem is that Off Broadway has become such a classical theater that a new term has arisen: Off Off Broadway. That is where the action is supposed to be nowadays.

We start our village walk at Washington Square.

Washington Square

(C7).

The Sunday Room of Greenwich Village, a kind of St. Germain des Prés. Villagers congregate there to buy drugs, play chess, show off in roller-coasting, listen to traveling musicians and discuss how to defend Greenwich Village against lunatic city authorities who want to tear down anything of age and value. It gets livelier in the evening.

It is the largest park on southern Manhattan. Some years ago it had become intolerable due to loud radios. The introduction of pocket discos with earphones has saved the day, so that we can play a game of chess in peace and quiet.

Behind the northern side of the square there are two quaint alleys, Washington Mews and MacDougal Alley.

MacDougal Alley

(C7).

Formerly the entrance to the stables of the important people who lived in the Washington Square mansions, now the flats of intellectuals who have complete peace there in the vicinity of the lively square. MacDougal Alley and Washington Mews retain the atmosphere of village streets.

From MacDougal Alley we turn right into MacDougal Street, then left into West 8th Street and again left into Christopher Street. We have a look into West 4th Street before we turn once again left, into Bleecker Street. We are in Jazzland.

Jazzland

The area of jazz clubs and Off Broadway theaters, interesting food and crafts shops, antique dealers and eccentric shops, cafés and restaurants, partly residential and partly commercial. The streets are crooked and intricate, difficult to find. They remind you more of London than New York. This is the most comfortable part of the city, lively here and peaceful there.

On this side or east of Christopher Street is the conventional part of Greenwich Village. The gay district is to the west of Christopher Street. When we arrive into Bleecker Street the street scene gets livelier. In that street and in the side streets of Mac Dougal and Sullivan are the main shops of the area with beautiful displays of fruit and flowers on the sidewalk.

We are passing through an area of jazz holes such as Blue Note, Village Vanguard and Sweet Basil, cellars of folk music such as Folk City and City Limits, some gourmet shops and lots of good restaurants, cafés and bars.

From Bleecker Street we turn left into La Guardia Place, pass West Houston Street and continue south on West Broadway into the district of SoHo, the artists’ town.

Artists’ town

Manhattan’s superiority over other world centers of art centers around the depicting arts, painting and sculpture, etc. where Paris has lost its edge. All artists in such fields want to exhibit in Manhattan and the best market is there. Unknown artists make their breakthrough here and some make it into big money.

The traditional galleries are mainly at 57th Street, but modern art thrives in the galleries of SoHo and TriBeCa. West Broadway and Wooster Street are the main centers of the decorative arts.

We are now in SoHo.

SoHo

The most westerly of the districts that border on Canal Street to the south. It is delimited by Canal Street, 6th Avenue, Houston Street and Broadway. Its neighbor to the north is Greenwich Village. SoHo is a prime example of well-built and decorative industry buildings of wrought iron which were to be torn down in the early Sixties.

Happily it changed instead to a district of artists’ ateliers, galleries, wine bars and restaurants. Affluent artists live there, those who can afford the rising rents. Lately SoHo has also been changing into a district of fashionable shops.

The galleries are the landmark of SoHo. It is the motor and the navel of modern art. Paris has been relegated to second place after this Manhattan district.

We are on West Broadway, the main street of SoHo and TriBeCa.

West Broadway

West Broadway.

The main street of modern art galleries in New York, along with the parallel Wooster Street. The most interesting part is from West Houston Street in the north to Broome Street in the south.

We walk West Broadway to Broome Street, turn left and again left into Wooster Street and then right into West Houston Street and right again into Greene Street.

Greene Street

Greene Street. (C8).

The southern part of Greene Street has beautiful examples of the architecture of the buildings for light industry which characterize the district. The fronts are usually decorated with a giant order of columns. Affluent artists and those who want to be near successful artists have taken over the industry buildings and converted them into comfortable flats.

The fronts are usually made of cast-iron which has been formed into intricate forms, according to whims that were unbridled at the end of the 19th C. The cast-iron freedom was used to mass-produce replicas of different styles and periods, especially Renaissance and Classical. Later firescapes were added.

At the southern end of Mercer Street which runs parallel to Green Street there is the Museum of Holography.

From the southern end of Greene Street we turn right into Canal Street and then left into West Broadway. We have left SoHo and entered TriBeCa.

TriBeCa

The Triangle Below Canal Street is the full name of this district to the north of Downtown, west of Chinatown and south of SoHo. It composes a triangle bordered by Canal Street, West Broadway, Barclay Street and Hudson River. It is sometimes called SoSo, which means South of SoHo, as it is a continuation of that district to the south.

It was a district of well built and decorous warehouses and buildings for light industry. They have a structure of wrought iron. After a long period of disrepair, when this place was forgotten, the rents started to rise in SoHo and artists discovered TriBeCa and moved their ateliers over Canal Street.

They have breathed new life into the district. And the vicious circle has started again, rent is on the rise in TriBeCa and the artists are looking for cheaper accommodation. In the meantime bars, restaurants, discos and fashion shops have sprung up all over the district.

From West Broadway we turn left into White Street.

White Street

(C9).

Some of the best examples of the cast-iron buildings of light industry at the end of the 19th C. are in this street, similar to the buildings in Greene Street.

This is the end of our walk through the districts of modern culture in Manhattan, Greenwich Village, SoHo and TriBeCa.

West Side

This walk through the western part of Mid-Manhattan will cover three main areas, Theater District or Broadway; the fashionable Upper West Side; and Central Park, the lungs of Manhattan.

We will start our walk on Times Square in the Theater District.

Theater District

Sometimes called Broadway, the area between 42nd Street, 59th Street, 6th Avenue and 8th Avenue, crossed by Broadway. In this area around Times Square there are 42 theaters. For a century it has been the center of American theater, with the best actors, directors and critics. Americans come from all corners of the country to enjoy performances on Broadway.

This is the largest theater area in the world, larger than Covent Garden in London. In later years it has ceded first place in innovation to Covent Garden as it can be observed that plays and musicals that become a hit in London are moved to Broadway to cash on their fame. But the professionalism of Broadway remains at its high level.

To see what is on it is best to consult the list in New York magazine. In the center of Father Duffy Square, which really is the northern end of Times Square, there is a ticket office, TKTS, which offers tickets to the present day performances at half price. Often there are large queues outside the office. Inquire at 354 5800. Hotel concierges can fix tickets to everything.

We start our walk on Times Square.

Times Square

(B4).

The center of theater and cinema, sex and drugs, illuminated by neon advertising. Happily the area is less shabby than it was a decade ago. New developments, including large hotels, have contributing in moving the Times Square area into the Midtown mainstream.

We walk north Broadway, first through Father Duffy Square which adjoins Times Square.

Father Duffy Square

(B4).

It really is the northern end of Times Square, with a ticket office, TKTS, which offers tickets to the present day performances at half price. Often there are large queues outside the office. Inquire at 354 5800.

We continue our walk on Broadway.

Broadway

Broadway. (B4).

The Theater District of Manhattan is known by its main street, the Broadway, which cuts diagonally through it. In this area around Times Square there are 42 theaters. For a century it has been the center of American theater, with the best actors, directors and critics. Americans come from all corners of the country to enjoy performances on Broadway.

This is the largest theater area in the world, larger than Covent Garden in London. In later years it has ceded first place in innovation to Covent Garden as it can be observed that plays and musicals that become a hit in London are moved to Broadway to cash on their fame. But the professionalism of Broadway remains at its high level.

To see what is on it is best to consult the list in New York magazine. In the center of Father Duffy Square, which really is the northern end of Times Square, there is a ticket office, TKTS, which offers tickets to the present day performances at half price. Often there are large queues outside the office. Inquire at 354 5800. Hotel concierges can fix tickets to everything.

We continue our walk along Broadway, reaching Carnegie Hall on our right side.

Carnegie Hall

154 West 57th Street / 7th Avenue. Phone: 247 7459. (B3).

Before the arrival of Lincoln Center this was the main venue of classical music in New York, well situated just south of Central Park. Now famous symphony orchestras and famous soloists perform there, both classical music and jazz. The acoustics are excellent in the auditorium for 2,784 people.

We continue on Broadway to Columbus Circle.

Columbus Circus

(B3).

The tourist office of the city is in the Moorish tower on our left side. It has lots of valuable information for travelers.

We continue on Broadway to Lincoln Center.

Lincoln Center

Columbus Avenue betw. 62nd and 65th. Phone: 875 5400. (B3).

The world center of classical music is in the southern end of Upper West Side where a few modern and modernistic palaces surround a fountain square. It was built in 1962-1968 as a kind of a cultural Acropolis or Capitolum in honor of the gods of music, designed by some of the best known architects of America in a refined style of giant column orders.

When we enter the square from Columbus Avenue we have New York State Theater on our left, Avery Fisher Hall on our right and Metropolitan Opera House in front of us. Vivian Beaumont Theater and Alice Tully Hall are behind Avery Fisher Hall. To know what is on at Lincoln Center it is best to consult the lists of the New York magazine.

First we turn our attention to the Metropolitan Opera.

Metropolitan Opera

Lincoln Center. Phone: 362 6000. (B3).

The central point of Lincoln Center, a palace with a giant order of ten stories and five Romanesque arches fronting the square. Inside the windows we see two colorful murals by Marc Chagall, a carpeted lobby and an impressive staircase.

The Met as it is called can seat 3,788 people. It is considered one of the high points in the career of opera singers to perform at the Met. The season lasts from the middle of September to April. At other times of the year other ensembles have access to the palace, including ballet companies like American Ballet Theater and Royal Ballet.

Next we have a look at the New York State Theater.

N. Y. State Theater

Lincoln Center. Phone: 870 5570. (B3).

The home of New York City Ballet and New York City Opera. The ballet reigns in November-February and in April-July, and the opera reigns in July-November. At the front there are four pairs of a giant order of columns on seven floors. Inside there are four floors up to the golden ceiling, all of them with balconies. The palace seats 2,279.

On the other side of Lincoln Center there is the Avery Fisher Hall.

Avery Fisher Hall

Lincoln Center. Phone: 875 5030. (B3).

44 columns surround this symphony palace of 2,742 seats which in the decades leading up to 1992 was rebuilt several times on the inside to reach the desired acoustics. It is the home of the New York Philharmonic which has a season in September-May. In July-August there are inexpensive Mozart concerts and in September the New York film festival is held there.

Leonard Bernstein, Arturo Toscanini and Leopold Stokowski have been the dirigents of the Philharmonic. Now Zubin Mehta is in charge.

Next door to Avery Fisher Hall on its northern side is Alice Tully Hall.

Alice Tully Hall

(B3).

Entered from Broadway this is the main venue of concert music in New York, the home of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, seating 1,096. In September it is used for the New York film festival. In summer visiting artists perform at Alice Tully Hall.

Now we say good-by to Broadway and continue our walk on Columbus Avenue, the main street of the Upper West Side.

Upper West Side

North of 59th Street, south of 90th Street and west of Central Park, the residential district no. 2 after Upper East Side, a little less expensive and a little more tasteful. It boasts of the cultural Lincoln Center and the fashionable Columbus Avenue, which have spawned many restaurants and bars.

The inhabitants are generally younger than those on the other side of Central Park. You can even see children here. The night life is lively, especially on Columbus Avenue.

And we continue our walk north along Columbus Avenue.

Columbus Avenue

The newest fashionable street in Manhattan. It has blossomed after the infusion from the recent Lincoln Center, especially the stretch from 69th to 86th Streets. Fashion shops, bars and restaurants have mushroomed. Sidewalk hawkers are everywhere and we pass one market on our way, between 76th and 77th Streets.

We enter the castle on the opposite corner, the American Museum of Natural History.

American Museum of Natural History

Central Park West / 79th Street. Phone: 769 5100. Hours: Open Sunday-Tuesday 10-17:45, Wednesday & Friday-Saturday 10-20:45. (B2).

A large Upper West Side castle facing Central Park with a large museum inside, including a 30 meter long replica of a whale. There are 34,000,000 items in the museum.

From the museum we go on 77th Street to Central Park and soon arrive at the northern end of The Lake.

Central Park

Central Park.

The lungs of Manhattan are the result of a campaign by the author W.C. Bryant, designed by Olmsted and Vaux in 1856. It took 15 years to lay out this enormous park of 840 acres between 5th and 8th Avenues, 59th and 110th Streets. Lakes and hills were built and 100,000 trees were planted.

Its main characteristic is that pedestrian and motorized traffic are separated. We can criss-cross the park without ever crossing a street and the car traffic is mostly underground. The 46 winding paths offer ever-changing vistas. The southern part is the organized and detailed part with small lakes, groves and cliffs. The northern part is more informal and simpler.

Central Park is liveliest on Sunday when many Manhattanites use it as their drawing room. Some go on picnics in the park, others jog or cycle. There are groups in volleyball and baseball. A few compete on rollers, others row in boats. And quite a few sleep with the newspaper over their face. The park is safe in daylight and where the crowds are.

At The Lake we turn north, cross Balcony Bride at the northern end of The Lake and have a good view over the lake, the wooden hills behind it and the Manhattan towers in the background. We soon come to Belvedere Castle and Belvedere Lake on the highest ground in the southern park.

Belvedere Castle

Central Park. (B2).

A small castle in Disney style with a good view to the north over the large baseball fields where many games are going on simultaneously and to the south over the wooden hills of The Ramble.

In the east we see Metropolitan Museum of Art and the obelisk of Cleopatra’s Needle. We walk to the Needle, past sleeping and reading people. Often there are open-air concerts at Cleopatra’s Needle.

Finally we walk around Belvedere Lake and on its southern side we enter The Ramble.

The Ramble

(B2).

The wildest part of the park, with forested hills and cliffs, winding paths in ever-changing directions, and bridges over small streams. This is popular with lovers.

We continue south, cross The Lake on Bow Bridge with a good view, turn left and come to the Bethesda fountain with a sculpture of angels. There is a bandstand and an area for rollers. We make a detour east to Conservatory Pond to see statues of H.C. Andersen, the Ugly Duckling and Alice in Wonderland. Then we go back to the Bethesda fountain and turn south on The Mall.

The Mall

The pedestrian avenue passes a bandstand, then The Dairy, the information center of the park. The old Zoo is there on the left, popular and tired, no competitor to the real Zoo in Bronx. Adjoining it on the north side is a Children’s Zoo.

Opposite the Zoo we turn right off The Mall and take a path to the southern edge of Central Park, where we leave the park opposite 6th Avenue, formally named Avenue of the Americas.

Avenue of the Americas

Some famous towers line the avenue on the right, below the Hilton hotel. They are recessed from the avenue and have nice little plazas in front of them, with fountains and works of art. These are the towers of Equitable Life, Time & Life, Exxon and McGraw & Hill.

Much effort has been put into humanizing this area of steel, glass and concrete. Still the towers look pasteurized and emasculated. Their piazzas do not attract people and lack the spark of life. Better results have been achieved at older towers such as Rockefeller Center and at newer towers such as some of those east of 5th Avenue and in World Financial Center.

We finish this walk on 6th Avenue behind Rockefeller Center.

Midtown

The area between 42th Street, 59th Street, 8th Avenue and East River. A slice of its western side is the Theater District. Midtown is a collection of office towers, fashionable shops, luxury hotels and famous restaurants. These are some of the most expensive square meters in the world, glittering with wealth. This small and busy area can be considered the navel of the world.

The elegant shops of the world, French, Italian, British and American, have outlets on 5th Avenue and 57th Street, the crossroads of Midtown, south of Central Park. There ladies buy for $100 handbags with the large letters: “Gucci”, They pay out of their nose to carry around an advertisement. In return they can show that they can afford $100 for an handbag.

Lately SoHo has been evolving into a district of fashionable shops. Also Columbus Avenue between 69th and 86th Streets. The punk shops are in NoHo in East Village, on the southern Broadway from 10th Street to Houston Street. South Street Seaport has become a shopping center for tourists. Shopping has also moved out to the sidewalks all over town. But Midtown is still supreme.

We start this trip in the southern part, at Empire State Building, preferably in the morning, when the air is likely to be clear. We take two lifts up to the 86th floor and a third one to the 102nd floor.

Empire State

350 5th Avenue / 34th Street. Hours: Open 9:30-23:30. (C5).

Once the tallest building in the world and still one of the tallest. It has often been used as the symbol of New York and also as a good example of the grandiose architecture of skyscrapers.

The view from the top is usually above par in the morning when the sky is more clear than in the afternoon. On a perfect day you can see 70 km in each direction. Another interesting view is after nightfall, when the lights are on in the city.

When leaving Empire State we can either take a taxi or walk the 700 meters to the New York Public Library, also on 5th Avenue.

New York Public Library

5th Avenue / 42nd Street. (C5).

Neo-classical with Corinthian columns, two famous guardian lions and extensive front steps where people sit in groups, observe the pedestrian and motorized commotion and smoke whatever has been bought in Bryant Park behind the library. Impromptu speeches are delivered on the steps in the vein of Speakers’ Corner at Hyde Park in London.

Inside there are 5,5 million copies of books. It is the second largest library in the United States after the Library of Congress in Washington. There are several reading rooms, the main one on the second floor. There are often interesting exhibitions on the ground floor.

We walk around the library into 42nd Street to Bryant Park behind the library.

Bryant Park

42nd Street / 6th Avenue. (C5).

Until recently one of the main centers of soft drugs sales in town, but less so now, as the authorities have made successful efforts to get other people into the park by offering free lunchtime concerts and organizing space for antique booksellers and chess or backgammon players.

We return to 5th Avenue and turn left, walk 500 meters along the avenue and turn left into 47th Street.

Diamond Row

47th Street / betw. 5th & 6th. (C4).

This is the unofficial name of the 47th Street between 5th and 6th Avenues. Most of the shops are jewelers. 80% of the wholesale business in jewels is conducted in this stretch of 100 meters, behind and above the shops. Some of the jewelers have their goods in their pocket and make their transactions in the street, without any paperwork or signatures.

We return to 5th Avenue, turn left a walk a short way to the Channel Gardens in front of Rockefeller Center, passing several airline offices and fashion shops on the way.

Channel Gardens

5th Avenue / 50th Street. (C4).

A comfortable oasis of flowers and fountains and a pedestrian street leading to Rockefeller Center and a convenient meeting point. The city’s Christmas tree is put up here.

At the other end of Channel Gardens we come to the sunken Rockefeller Plaza with a café in summer and a skating rink in winter. A golden bronze statue of Prometheus guards the plaza.

Rockefeller Center

47th-50th Street. (C4).

It consists of the buildings around the plaza. The Art Deco towers were built just before World War II, connected by the extensive Rockefeller Plaza with luxury shops and restaurants.

The major tower is the RCA-building of 70 floors with a good view from the top balcony. Radio City Music Hall, the largest music auditorium in the world, seating 6,000 people, is behind the RCA-building.

We return through Channel Gardens to 5th Avenue, turn left, pass the Atlas statue by Lawrie in front of the International Building, cross the avenue and are in front of St Patrick’s Cathedral.

St Patrick‘s Cathedral

5th Avenue betw. 50th & 51st. (C4).

The major Catholic church in New York, built in Gothic style without buttresses in 1879, then far out in the country but now a dwarf under the office towers. In such a situation it is difficult to believe the fact that it is the 11th largest church in the world.

The long processions of the descendants of Irish immigrants on St Patrick’s Day end in front of the church. At that time there are oceans of people in the street and all bars full of thirsty people.

We continue on 5th Avenue and turn right into 53rd Street, where we see Paley Park on our left.

Paley Park

53rd Street betw. 5th & Madison. (C4).

A small lot has been converted into a relaxed garden where the sounds of falling water drown out the traffic noise. We can even sit down. This is a perfect example of good use of confined space.

We return to 5th Avenue, cross it and continue on 53rd Street to the Museum of Modern Art on our right.

Museum of Modern Art

11 West 53rd Street betw. 5th & 6th. Phone: 708 9500. Hours: Open Saturday-Tuesday 11-18, Thursday-Friday 12-20:30. (C4).
To walk through Museum of Modern Art is like walking through an illustrated history of modern art. We recall the works of art from pictures in books. MoMA, as the museum is usually called, owns many of the typical and best works by many of the 20th C. masters. And the museum is not even old, it founded in 1929 and was recently enlarged.

The museum covers mainly 1880-1960, that is Impressionism, Expressionism and Abstract art.

The air-conditioned museum is also a comfortable oasis in the crowded Midtown. Most relaxed is the back garden with sculptures and fountains, a café and a restaurant.

Joan Miro is one of the important artists in MoMA.

Joan Miro

A Catalan painter born in 1893, influenced by Cubism, Dada and Surrealism, one of the ideologists of Surrealism. Lived for many years in the Netherlands before returning to Spain where he lived in Mallorca.

Another important MoMA artist is Pablo Picasso.

Picasso

Born on the Costa del Sol in Spain in 1881, studied in Barcelona and settled down in Paris. Took an active part in developing several of the 20th C. styles of painting, including Cubism. The Young Women of Avignon is an example of that period.

Another famous artist is Piet Mondrian.

Mondrian

A Dutch painter born in 1872, lived in Holland, Paris and London. He went through many of the 20th C. styles of painting and founded the De Stijl movement. One of the main exponents of Abstract art. Broadway Boogie Woogie is a good example of his style.

Next we turn our attention to Henri Matisse.

Matisse

A French painter born on the Côte d’Azur in 1954. Learned and lived in Paris, one of the main proponents of Expressionism. The Dance is one of his most important and defining works.

Jackson Pollock shall be the last example on our visit to MoMa.

Pollock

Born an American, one of the main movers and shakers of Expressionism. “One” is one of his best-known works of art.

When leaving MoMA we return to 5th Avenue and observe the goings on.

Fifth Avenue

Most of the shops in this part of the avenue are fashions hops. A lonely bookshop, Dalton’s is between 52nd and 53rd Streets. Above it there is a tower with the number 666 on 5th Avenue and with excellent views from the bar on the top floor, Top of the Sixes.

We continue north on 5th Avenue, pass lots of fashion shops. At 56th Street we arrive at Trump Tower on the right side of the Avenue.

Trump Tower

5th Avenue / 56th Street. (C3).

A tower with a difference, with a ground floor of six storeys of expensive fashion shops and still more expensive flats above them.

We continue on 5th Avenue and stop on the corner of the 57th Street.

57th Street

57th Street.

Two streets form the main cross of the Midtown area, 5th Avenue and 57th Street. The latter one is a street of fashion shops on the ground floor and of art galleries on the upper floors. Near the center of the cross there are several well-known hotels and restaurants.

We continue on 5th Avenue to 58th Street, where we come to Grand Army Plaza.

Grand Army Plaza

5th Avenue / 59th Street. (C3).

A square of expensive shops and hotels. The Pulitzer fountain is in the middle of the square. Horse-drawn carriages wait for tourists who want to make a slow trip into Central Park.

Museum Mile is the part of 5th Avenue north of Grand Army Place.

Museum Mile

5th Avenue.

Many of the most famous museums in New York face the Museum Mile. First there is Frick Collection, then Metropolitan Museum, Guggenheim Museum and finally Cooper-Hewitt Museum. Near the mile we have Whitney Museum on Madison Avenue.

We continue on that way, by taxi or foot the 1 kilometer to the Frick Collection on the right side of the avenue.

Frick Collection

1 East 70th Street / 5th Avenue. Phone: 288 0700. Hours: Open Tuesday-Saturday 10-18, Sunday 13-18. (C2).

An important Upper East Side museum facing Central Park, popular for being rather relaxing. It is a city mansion with works of art from earlier centuries hanging on walls above the luxurious furniture of the collector.

Another kilometer by taxi or foot brings us to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on the left side of the avenue.

Metropolitan Museum

5th Avenue &/ 82nd Street. Phone: 535 7710. Hours: Open Tuesday-Thursday & Sunday 9.30-17:15, Friday-Saturday 9:30-20:45. (C1).

One of the largest museums in the world with more than 3,000,000 items. You have to make a plan for your walk through it. To visit it all in one day would be to much, a week is more to the point. This is a museum with a wide focus, a museum of art, of crafts, and of antiques. The rebuilt ancient Egyptian temple from Dendar is one of the central items.

Usually there are important temporary exhibitions.

Further 500 meters on 5th Avenue brings us to the Guggenheim Museum on the right side of the avenue.

Guggenheim Museum

1071 5th Avenue betw. 88th & 89th. Phone: 360 3500. Hours: Open Monday-Wednesday 10-18, Friday-Saturday 10-20. (C1).

Not only famous for being one of the most important museums of modern art in the world but also for its own architecture, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in a spiral form.

When we arrive at this Upper East Side location facing Central Park we take an elevator to the top floor and then descend down the spiral through the whole museum.

On our way down we go through the special galleries on the 6th, 4th and 2nd floors who have focused themes. The spiral itself is used for temporary exhibitions. The fixed artists include Kandinsky, Mondrian, Klee, Braque, Picasso and Calder.

Just a little further along on 5th Avenue on the same side of the street we arrive at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum.

Cooper-Hewitt Museum

2 East 91st Street / 5th Avenue. Phone: 860 6868. Hours: Open Tuesday 10-21, Wednesday-Saturday 10-17, Sunday 12-17. (C1).

An important Upper East Side museum facing Central Park. It has drawings by Rembrandt and Dürer.

If we want to finish this walk by going to the Whitney Museum we have to get to the corner of Madison Avenue and 75th Street.

Whitney Museum

945 Madison Avenue / 75th Street. Phone: 570 3676. Hours: Open Wednesday & Friday-Sunday 11-18, Thursday 13-20. (C2).

An Upper East Side museum of American Art, one of the important museums on Manhattan. The building itself is a work of art, designed by Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith, looking like a bunker turned upside down. The back garden of sculptures and the basement house about 50 works of art by Alexander Calder. The museum is well-known for its daring policy of buying art.

East Side

We use this designation to cover the affluent eastern side of Midtown and the Upper East Side. We start in the south at the United Nations Building and finish in the north at the Roosevelt Island Tramway.

We start on the corner of 1st Avenue and 43rd Street, in front of the United Nations building.

United Nations Building

1st Avenue / 42nd Street. (D4).

Designed by a committee of world-famous architects including Le Corbusier, Oscar Niemeyer and Sven Markelius, built 1947-1953. The exterior is mainly the work of Corbusier. It is the first tower in Manhattan which is completely covered in glass.

The tower houses the central offices of the United Nations. The small building in front is the meeting hall of the General Assembly. Behind there are some other buildings with smaller meeting halls. Most of the halls are open to the public when meetings are not in session. The entrance is from the corner of 1st Avenue and 45th Street.

Opposite the U.N. between 43rd and 44th Streets is one of the most beautiful towers of Manhattan, the UN Plaza hotel.

We walk along 42nd Avenue to the Chrysler Building on our right.

Chrysler Building

405 Lexington Avenue / 42nd Street. (C4).

An Art Deco tower from 1930, influenced by car designs of that time, with a top that is reminiscent of a Chrysler 1929 water cooler. It was temporarily the tallest tower in the world. Some have found it to be ugly but lately it has been considered one of the most beautiful in town.

A little further on 42nd Street we come to Grand Central Terminal.

Grand Central Terminal

Park Avenue / 42nd Street. (C4).

The main railway station of Manhattan, a large pile built in 1903-1913, covering rails, roads and ramps on several floors. Half a million people use the terminal each working day.

The Beaux Art front has a clock with a width of 4 meters. Inside there is a main hall of 10 floors, with 38 meters up to the star-studded dome. Downstairs there is the incomparable Oyster Bar.

We cross Grand Central in the north direction through the Met Life Building.

Met Life Building

Park Avenue. (C4).

This graciously curved tower straddles Park Avenue, designed 1963 by Walter Gropius, Pietro Belluschi and Emery Roth, one of the landmarks of skyscraper architecture. The tower looks best from the Park Avenue north side. And it spoils the former vista along Park Avenue.

From the top floor there is a good view to the east to other Manhattan towers and west to Chrysler Building and United Nations Building.

We walk along Park Avenue.

Park Avenue

Park Avenue.

The only avenue in Manhattan with a grass island in the middle. On the right side we see how spacious glass gardens have been designed in the ground floor of the towers.

We pass the Inter-Continental and Waldorf-Astoria hotels on the right side of the avenue and come to St Bartholomew’s Church on the same side.

St Bartholomew‘s Church

Park Avenue betw. 50th & 51st. (C4).

A decorous Neo-Byzantine church of pink brick from 1919, with a small churchyard that contrasts with the towers around just as the church itself does. Its days may be numbered as the ever smaller congregation is too poor to refuse ever more inviting offers from greedy entrepreneurs who want to build a skyscraper on the lot.

We cross 5th Avenue and walk 51st Street to Madison Avenue. Villard Houses are on that corner.

Villard Houses

Madison Avenue / 51st Street. (C4).

Three houses from 1884, looking together like a Italian Neo-Renaissance palace on the outside. On the inside they have Rococo decorations. These architecturally important houses among skyscrapers were saved by hotelier Helmsley who transformed them into the lobby, bar and restaurant area of the hotel he built behind them.

After a look around in Madison Avenue we return to Park Avenue and turn left. Soon we come to Lever Building on the left side.

Lever Building

(C4).

Characterized by its dark blue glass walls, designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill in straightforward Bauhaus Modern style, built in 1952. The tower does not utilize its air-space completely and allows the rays of the sun to play with its sides. It is such an architectural milestone that it is already a protected monument.

We cross Park Avenue and go on 54th Street to Lexington Avenue. On that corner is Citicorp Center.

Citicorp

Lexington Avenue / 54th Street. (C4).

One of the younger towers of Manhattan, from 1977, designed by Hugh Stubbins, distinguished by its steep top and its giant order of columns at street level. The columns allow space for the small St Peter’s church.

A subterranean and comfortable garden, The Market, under the tower gives access to a mall of shops and restaurants.

We turn our attention to St Peter’s.

St Peter‘s Church

Lexington Avenue / 54th Street. (C4).

This modern church makes a striking contrast to the oversized surroundings.

We return to Park Avenue, turn right and continue northwards. On our left we arrive at the AT&T tower.

A. T. & T.

Park Avenue betw. 55th & 56th. (C3).

One of newest towers of Manhattan, from 1984, designed by Philip Johnson and John Burgee, well known by its Chippendale top, one of the most controversial towers in town. It is an example of the modern reaction against Modernism, clothed in reddish marble instead of aluminium, glass and steel. It looks like something that the lamp of Aladdin brought here by mistake.

The ground floor of the tower is a public garden with chairs and coffee tables spread around, quite a nice place.

We go on Park Avenue to the next corner. There we have three choices. We can turn right and walk along 57th Street to Madison Avenue and turn left there.

Madison Avenue

The next avenue to the east of Park Avenue and is one of the most fashionable shopping streets in Manhattan. From 57th up to 72th Street it is lined with shops and art galleries. Otherwise it is best known for being the center of the advertising and public relations services in New York.

From the corner of Park Avenue and 57th Street we can also walk west on 57th Street and then turn left on 3rd Avenue and right on 51st Avenue. There we arrive at Greenacre Park.

Greenacre Park

A tiny park nestling under office towers, a comfortable resting place with chairs and tables and a soothing waterfall in the rear, drowning out the noise from the motor traffic.

From the corner of Park Avenue and 57th Street we can also walk east on 57th Street all the way to 2nd Avenue and turn left there to enter Upper East Side.

Upper East Side

From the beginning of the 20th C. the area north of 59th Street and east of Central Park has been the quality residential district in New York. It is a tasteful district of city mansions and residential hotels. Everywhere there are uniformed guards in lobbies and long, black limousines at the curb. Many elegant bars, restaurants and nightclubs cater to the inhabitants.

It is also the main museum district, boasting of Metropolitan, Guggenheim, Frick, Cooper-Hewitt and Whitney Museums. And the district of embassies and respectable institutions. The residence of the mayor, Gracie Mansion, is on the East River. That part of the district is called Yorkville and was once the area of German immigrants.

We walk on 2nd Avenue to 60th Street to arrive at the Roosevelt Island Tramway, opened 1976. From there we take a colorful airborne tram for a four-minute ride over the western branch of East River to Roosevelt Island. Remember to bring subway tokens as tickets are not sold here.

Roosevelt Island

A modern residential district has been designed on the island, devoid of motor traffic. The river banks of the island offer good views over the river.

This concludes our walk around the eastern part of Manhattan.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Paris introduction

Ferðir

History

Paris has for centuries been one of the centers and magnets of the world. When the Romans conquered it in 55 B.C. it wge on the Seine islands, inhabited by the Parisii tribe. It grew in Roman times and became the capital of France at the beginning of the Middle Ages.

Since then Paris has been the European center of religion and politics, learning and arts, quickly overtaking Rome and only yielding to New York after the Second World War. Sorbonne is one of the oldest universities in the world and for centuries the most famous one.

Paris is rich in monuments from most periods of its history. In spite of that it has not rested on its laurels. It is also famous for modern and avant-garde design, as can be seen at the Louvre pyramid, the Centre Pompidou and the Défense.

Life

Paris is the city of elegance and style. People conduct themselves in the streets as kings and queens. Elegance is everywhere, from hotel and restaurant decoration to everyday clothing. What would be considered casual elsewhere would be considered shabby and vulgar in Paris. The clean and efficient and stylish Metro is a symbol of the classy status of Parisians.

Parisians consider themselves to be citizens, discussing politics, design and cuisine as eloquently as ancient Roman orators, balancing the abandon of the south and the restraint of the north. They are proud and self-sufficient, and consider themselves to be equal to anybody, including kings and popes. On foreigners this often wrongly translates as haughtiness.

Paris is a lively city of liberal inhabitants. Its nightclubs are world leaders. Its vibrant sidewalk cafés constantly evoke fond memories in the minds of visitors to Paris. The home team and visitors hang around in cafés, squares and streets to kill time and observe fellow humans. Champs-Élysées and the boulevards Saint-Michel and Saint-Germain are the main centers.

Sights

Paris is the most beautiful metropolis in the world, crammed with famous churches and palaces, squares and avenues. Its center is the largest tourist city in the world. There are five kilometers as the crow flies from Arc d’Triomphe to Notre Dame and from Montmartre to Montparnasse. In no city center has the traveler more things to cover.

Not only does the city boast of centuries of basilicas and mansions, plazas and boulevards. It also excels in the necessities of life for travelers. Nowhere is a greater conglomeration of excellent restaurants and hotels, some of them even at a reasonable price. It is based on the natural culinary artistry and architectural taste of the Parisians.

Canada

35 Avenue Montaigne. Phone: 4443 3200. (B3).

United Kingdom

16 Rue d’Anjou. Phone: 4266 9142.

United States

2 Avenue Gabriel. Phone: 4296 1202. (C3).

Accident

Phone: 15.

Ambulance

Phone: 15.

Complaints

When you start complaining, every true Frenchman suddenly stops understanding English.

Dentist

Phone: 4337 5100.

Fire

Phone: 18.

Hospital

Centre Médical Europe, 44 Rue d’Amsterdam, tel. 4281 9333 is inexpensive. American Hospital, 63 Boulevard Victor-Hugo, tel. 4641 2525, and British Hospital, 3 Rue Barbés, Levallois, tel. 4758 1312, are private hospitals.

Medical care

Phone: 4337 7777.

Pharmacy

Pharmacie Dhéry, Galerie des Champs, 8th, 84 Avenue des Champs-Élysées, tel. 4562 0241 is open day and night.

Police

Phone: 17.

Precautions

There is very little petty or violent crime in Paris.

Banks

Hours: 9-16:30 weekdays.

At airports and railway stations they keep longer hours and are also open during weekends.

Credit cards

Credit cards are widely accepted in hotels, restaurants and shops. Visa and Eurocard (Access, MasterCard) have the largest circulation.

Electricity

French voltage is 220V, same as in Europe. Plugs are continental.

Hotels

Paris hotels are generally clean and well maintained, including plumbing. Small hotels can be very good, even if they do not have TV sets in guest rooms. Some of them are exquisite gems. A bathroom is taken for granted nowadays. “Deux lits” rooms with two beds are generally preferable to “grand lit” rooms with one bed of French marital size and are often larger.

We only include hotels with private bathrooms, and in most cases we also demand a direct telephone line, working air-condition, and peace and silence during the night. Only hotels in the city center are included as we want to avoid long journeys between sightseeing and our afternoon naps. The price ranges from FFr. 210 to FFr. 1,700, excluding breakfast.

We try to avoid the insubstantial breakfast at hotels in Paris. More tasty and economical is the coffee with baguettes or croissants on the corner café patronized by the locals. Breakfast is in most cases included in the stated price, as that is the normal price quoted.

We checked all the hotels in this database during the winter of 1995-1996 as everything is fickle in this world. We have also tested some other hotels that are not included as they were not on par with the best in each price category. Some expensive hotels in Paris are in fact inferior to our selection of small hotels in old city mansions.

Money

The currency in France is the Franc, FFr., divided into 100 centimes. There are paper money for 20, 50, 100, 200 and 500 FFr., and coins of a value up to 20 FFr.

Shopping

Most shops are open 10-18 all days except Sundays. Some small shops are closed during lunch.

Street numbers

Streets are numbered in the downriver direction and away from the Seine. Odd numbers are on your left side as you go up in numbers.

Tipping

A 15% service charge is generally included in restaurant bills. Some guests leave change up to the nearest FFr. 10. Taxi drivers expect at least 10% from foreigners, guides 10%, porters FFr. 5 per bag, toilet attendants, doormen and cloakroom attendants FFr. 2.

Toilets

Toilets are variable, but getting better all the time. You can use those of cafés for the price of a cup of coffee.

Tourist office

The Office du Tourisme has its head office at 127 Avenue de Champs-Élysées, 8th, open 9-18, tel. 4952 5354 and 4720 8898. Other offices are at the main railway stations and the Invalides airport station.

Water

Tap water is drinkable but many use bottled water as a precaution.

Accommodation

The Tourist Board offices seek accommodation for travelers. At Roissy / Charles de Gaulle airport there is an illuminated map showing vacancies and prices. Your can dial free of charge to individual hotels. Accommodation in private homes in all price categories is arranged by Paris Accueil, 8th, 23 Rue de Marignan, tel. 296 1426, open daily 9-19.

You should consider staying in one of the tiny hotels in old mansions, which have been transformed with French taste and love into personal and exquisite gems. Paris has far more of such elegant hotels than other world cities. Some of them are even cheaper than ordinary hotels elsewhere. Usually they are heavily booked so that you must reserve months in advance.

The season in Paris hotels covers the whole year. Any period can be difficult due to exhibitions and congresses. The expensive Paris hotels are as a group probably the most expensive hotels in the world.

Airport

The bus to Roissy / Charles de Gaulle airport leaves every 15 minutes from Porte Maillot. The trip takes one hour. Check-in at the airport is one hour before departure. All airlines except Air France use Terminal 1. Dial 742 5226 for current information on flight arrivals and departures.

Boats

Tourist boats leave for Seine trips from Pont Neuf, Quai Montebello, Port de la Bourdonnais, Port de Suffren and Place de la Conférence.

News

International Herald Tribune, which is published in Paris, and other important foreign newspapers are available at many kiosks in central Paris. The main French newspaper is Le Monde. There are six TV channels, TF1, FR2, FR3, M6, Are and La Sept, all in French, and additionally cable channels in many hotel rooms, including CNN and Sky.

Information on what is on is available in the weeklies Pariscope and Officiel des Spectacles in French and in the monthly Paris City in English. These papers are sold at most newsstands.

Phone

The French country code is 33 and the local code for Rome is 1. The foreign code from France is 19.

Post

The main post offices are at 52 Rue du Louvre, tel. 233 7160, and 71 Avenue des Champs-Élysées, tel. 359 5518, both open day and night.

Railways

The French railway system is inexpensive and effective. The TVG trains travel at speeds up to 300 km (185 miles) per hour.

Taxis

Phone: 200 6789.

You can wave cabs down in the streets. If you phone, the meter ticks on their way to you. Cabbies are generally honest but amazingly ignorant about the Paris map.

Traffic

Rush hours are 7:30-9 and 17-19. The underground Metro is probably the cleanest and one of the best in the world, open 5:30-1:15. It is convenient for getting around in the city. Cheap two-days, four-days and seven days tourist tickets are available with unlimited access to the whole system and all the busses. Some Parisians drive recklessly. Don’t drive yourself.

Coffee

French coffee is generally good. The cafés of Paris are meeting points and centers of society and culture.

Cuisine

French restaurants are the best in the world. The range and variety of French cooking is astounding. France is very rich in agricultural resources. There is a tradition of passion for cooking. Parisians love to eat out and to discuss cuisine and chefs, as others might discuss politics and politicians. Celebrated chefs are considered national monuments.

Western European and North American cooking is mainly derived from the French. The nearest rival to French cooking is Japanese cooking. In the last decades French chefs have emphasized their lead by inventing Nouvelle Cuisine, a light and lean version of the classic French cuisine, but more in line with modern considerations on health.

The last decade of the 20th Century has seen a resurgence in Cuisine de Terroir, earthy farmhouse cooking, partly as a counterweight to Nouvelle Cuisine and partly an evolution of farmhouse cooking under Nouvelle Cuisine influence.

Eating habits

The French do not eat much in the morning. They may have a café latte and croissants at the corner café. Lunch often starts at 13 and dinner at 20:30. Both lunch and dinner are hot meals and are equally important. The French like delicate food and consume it with due reverence.

Few French have drinks before eating as it spoils the palate. They are also careful with the wine and some only drink water. In good restaurants most people have bottled water though, l’eau minerale, often with gas, gaseuse.

Nouvelle Cuisine

French chefs have emphasized their position as the world leaders by inventing Nouvelle Cuisine, a light and lean version of the rich and classic French cuisine, but more in line with modern considerations on health.

The main rules of Nouvelle Cuisine are as follows: Raw materials are fresh, chosen according to the season, preferably not from the freezer and definitely not out of tins. Emphasis is put on seafood and vegetables.

Cooking times are shortened to conserve the taste and ingredients of the food. Precooking and reheating are abolished. Flour in sauces and soups is written off in favor of fumets and blenderized vegetables which are lighter on the stomach. Fats are used sparingly, pan-frying has decreased and deep-frying almost disappeared.

Prices

Prices have stabilized in France are on a par with other countries in Western Europe.

Restaurants

Rich and poor Frenchmen take interest in cooking and love to dine out. This tradition had made French restaurants absolutely the best in the world. Nowhere in the world is cooking as elevated as in France. Even fast food joints are good.

Lunch hour is 12:30-14, dinner 19:30-23. In most places the owner or some waiters understand some English. Paris restaurants are generally small and clean, sometimes accidentally decorated. They usually have linen tablecloths and linen napkins, most often white. Many restaurants offer set lunch menus at a lower price than dinner prices.

“Prix nets” or “service compris” on the menu means that a 15% service charge is included in the price.

Wine

French wine is absolutely the best in the world and priced accordingly. But the general quality is so high, that even the house wines are excellent. The French don’t drink plonk. The best French wine is graded in complicated ways which vary between regions, Bordeaux and Burgundy wines generally fetching the highest prices.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Paris hotels

Ferðir

Abbaye Saint-Germain

10 rue Cassette, 75006. Phone: 4544 3811. Fax: 4548 0786. Price: FFr.1000 ($196) without breakfast. All major cards. 42 rooms. (D5).

An 18th C. residence with elegant service and a private garden near Saint-Sulpice, between Jardin du Luxembourg and Boulevard Saint-Germain, just south of Rue de Mézieres, on the left side of Rue Cassette. The comfortable hotel is entered through a garden and an arcade.

Behind the glass entrance there is a large lobby with thick sofas in several seating areas in diferent color, separated by colomns, doubling as a breakfast room. Service is unusually good. The best rooms are on the ground floor.

Room no. 35 is spacious, wallpapered in yellow, with large and thick curtains, quality furniture of wood and bast, marble and glass, large chairs. The fully tiled bathroom has all the amenities, including a hair dryer.

Agora

7 rue de la Cossonnerie, 75001. Phone: 4233 4602. Fax: 4233 8099. Price: FFr.595 ($117) without breakfast. All major cards. 29 rooms. (E4).

A small and inexpensive hotel with the main attraction of being in a pedestrian district between the Pompidou museum and the Halles shopping mall, near the garish Rue St-Denis though. Its reception is on the first floor of a narrow house.

The small reception is snug and the staff are exemplary. The elevator of less than 2 cubic meters is probably one of the smallest in existence.

Room no. 52 in light blue color is quiet and clean, very small and sparsely equipped with tired furniture, such as a collapsible table and a stool. It lacked a wastebasket and just managed to fit in a TV set. The fully tiled bathroom is better, furnished with a smallish towel.

Angleterre

44 rue Jacob, 75006. Phone: 4260 3472. Fax: 4260 1693. Price: FFr.1100 ($216) without breakfast. All major cards. 27 rooms. (D4).

A lovely hotel in a former British embassy in the area between the Seine and Boulevard Saint-Germain, on the northern side of Rue Jacob, between Rue des Saints-Pères and Rue Bonaparte, entered through a gate and a courtyard.

The lobby includes a piano bar, a sitting area, a breakfast area and a garden with a fountain. The good service fits the excellent surroundings.

The extra large room no. 26 is exquisite, almost an apartment, entered through a foyer into a large bedroom area with massive and carved furniture of dark wood, including a beautiful wardrobe. A dining area is upstairs with a safe, prominent beams and two large windows offering a view to Rue Jacob. The marble bathroom in two parts has all amenities, including a jacuzzi bath.

Atala

10 Rue Chateaubriand, 75008. Phone: 4562 0162. Fax: 4225 6638. Price: FFr.900 ($176) without breakfast. All major cards. 48 rooms. (B3).

Conveniently situated between two buildings of the Chamber of Commerce, 400 meters from the Étoile and Arc de Triomphe.

The hotel has a rare plus in this city, a charming garden at the back. The fragrance of the flora helps to make it a coveted oasis alongside the throngs of Champs-Élysées.

Period furnishings in blue and moss green are in room no. 54, also chandeliers, not only in the ceiling but also over the beds. It is commodious and has a special anteroom. The TV set is conveniently fastened to the wall. The bathroom is well tiled and in perfect condition. The only minus is the bad sound isolation. The best plus is the enormous window to the garden.

Bradford

10 Rue Saint-Philippe-du-Roule, 75008. Phone: 4563 2020. Fax: 4563 2007. Price: FFr.800 ($157) with breakfast. All major cards. 48 rooms. (C3).

A good value in the district of fashion shops around Faubourg Saint-Honoré, only 100 meters from that street and 300 meters from Champs-Élysées.

This is a solid and an old-fashioned family hotel from the turn of the century. In spite of that it does not look tired. The staff is elderly and uncommonly friendly. The glass lift might be the oldest in Paris and some did not dare to use it. It served us well.

Room no. 56 is ample and has a balcony with a view to Tour Eiffel. The furniture is old-fashioned but not tired at all. Flowery decorations are on the wallpaper and window curtains. The bathroom is tiled in an old-fashioned white color.

Bristol

112 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, 75008. Phone: 4266 9145. Fax: 4266 6868. Price: FFr.3000 ($588) without breakfast. All major cards. 205 rooms. (C3).

The aristocratic hotel in Paris, at the main fashion street in town, Faubourg Saint-Honoré. The presidential palace, Élysée, is only 150 meters to the east at the same street. Therefore foreign diplomats stay at the Bristol, except the American ones who stay at the Crillon, alongside their embassy and fronting Place de la Concorde. Bristol is considered slightly more dignified.

The lobby is particularly splendid. Marble and Persian rugs flow into every corner, all the way to the well tended garden. Here is the famous Bristol bar, albeit not crowded with diplomats. Bristol has a swimming pool, all furnished in wood, on the top floor. There was some disorganization in the lobby due to overbooking. Really not as perfect as it should be.

Room no. 424/425 is splendid, expansive and furnished in style. A decorous writing table is at the big window overlooking the garden. In the middle there is a magnificent chandelier.

De Nice

42 bis rue de Rivoli, 75004. Phone: 4278 5529. Fax: 4278 3607. Price: FFr.390 ($76) without breakfast. All major cards. 23 rooms. (F4).

A practical hotel on a main street near Hôtel de Ville. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Deux Iles

59 rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75004. Phone: 4326 1335. Fax: 4329 6025. Price: FFr.830 ($163) without breakfast. All major cards. 25 rooms. (F5).

Very small and beautiful, with a soul, in a 17th C. building on the main and mainly pedestrian street of the lovely Saint-Louis island, an oasis in the geographical center of the city.

The lobby is comfortable and tasteful, with a sofa and newspapers.

Room no. 23 is small and pretty, with large beams in the high ceiling, antique and matching furniture, a window to the peaceful garden. The fully tiled bathroom is excellent.

Du Jeu de Paume

5 rue Saint-Louis en l’Ile, 75004. Phone: 4326 1418. Fax: 4046 0276. Price: FFr.810 ($159) without breakfast. All major cards. 32 rooms. (F5).

A sanctuary in the very center of Paris, in a beautiful 17th C. city mansion on the mainly pedestrian street that runs the lenght of the lovely Saint-Louis island, a personal and an elegant hotel, entered through a gateway from the street.

The unusual lobby has prominent structural elements of stones and beams and stretches up to the roof, showing off the 17th C. construction. A glass elevator brings you up to the room and gives a view to the public areas of the hotel. The stone and woodwork has pale colors. Breakfast is served in a glassed-in garden. A sauna and some business amenities suit small meetings.

The bright and quiet room no. 202 is rather spacious and very comfortable, with dark beams contrasting with pale walls. A small windows offers scant view. The bathroom is in two parts, well equipped, including a hair dryer.

Du Louvre

Place André-Malroux, 75001. Phone: 4458 3838. Fax: 4458 3801. Price: FFr.1800 ($353) with breakfast. All major cards. 300 rooms. (E4).

A business hotel suitable for businessmen and intellectuals, with the Louvre on one side and Comédie Francaise and Palais Royal on the other. The biggest antique market, Louvre des Antiquaires, is on the third side. The shopping streets Rivoli and Saint-Honoré are alongside the hotel. The position could not be better.

This is a big hotel, covering a whole block. In spite of that it is not especially impersonal. The man with the keys even recognized us and did not have to ask for the room number. But there was some noise from tourist groups in the lobby.

Room no. 441 is ample and well furnished in modern style. It is quiet which is almost a miracle in this location. All the appointments are in perfect condition, such as the bathroom facilities.

Duc de Saint-Simon

14 Rue Saint-Simon, 75007. Phone: 4548 3566. Fax: 4548 6825. Price: FFr.1200 ($235) without breakfast. No cards. 29 rooms. (D4).

A tasteful and peaceful hotel in an old mansion only 100 meters from the main boulevard of the left bank, Boulevard Saint-Germain. It has for a long time been one of our favorites.

The relaxing oasis of a hotel is entered through a courtyard, behind which there is a quiet lobby and a sitting room furnished with antiques. Many rooms have access to or views to miniature gardens.

The furniture in room no. 24 is antique, an easy chair, a chest of drawers and a writing table used as a breakfast table. It has pleasant wallpaper and nice pictures of horses. The bathroom is beautifully tiled and well equipped. All colors fit. The room is one of those which have access to a semi-private garden on the roof of the first floor.

Ducs d’Anjou

1 Rue Sainte-Opportune, 75001. Phone: 4236 9224. Fax: 4236 1663. Price: FFr.565 ($111) with breakfast. All major cards. 38 rooms. (E4).

Conveniently situated in an old building on a small square in a knot of pedestrian alleys in the 1st district, a stone’s throw from busy Rue de Rivoli, only 200 meters away from Forum des Halles, 400 meters from Beaubourg and 600 meters from the Louvre.

The personnel was unusually friendly. The receptionist recognized guests from the beginning and handed out keys without asking for room numbers.

Room no. 43 is small and nice, with two big windows, opening to the lively pedestrian square, making it almost possible to learn French in bed. When the window was closed, all was quiet. The equipment is convenient and tasteful, such as the flowery wallpaper and the French wardrobe, albeit too small. The bathroom is ample, well tiled and with an efficient shower.

Esméralda

4 rue Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre, 75005. Phone: 4354 1920. Fax: 4051 0068. Price: FFr.510 ($100) without breakfast. All major cards. 18 rooms. (E5).

A small hotel near the Seine and Notre Dame. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Hotel de Saint-Germain

50 rue du Four, 75006. Phone: 4548 9164. Fax: 4548 4622. Price: FFr.695 ($136) with breakfast. All major cards. 30 rooms. (D5).

A small hotel a few steps from the bustle of Saint-Germain. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Hotel Panthéon

19 place du Panthéon, 75005. Phone: 4354 3295. Fax: 4326 6465. Price: FFr.750 ($147) without breakfast. All major cards. 34 rooms. (E6).

Charming hotel on the Panthéon square. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Le Notre-Dame

1 Quai Saint-Michel, 75005. Phone: 4354 2043. Fax: 4626 6175. Price: FFr.790 ($155) without breakfast. All major cards. 26 rooms. (E5).

A few steps from Place Saint-Michel, on the corner of Quai Saint-Michel and Rue Saint-Jacques, combining a perfect central location with a view over the Seine, Ile de la Cité and Notre-Dame, illuminated in the evening and the night. The comfortable hotel is entered from the street through a glass door and stairs that lead to the first floor foyer.

There is a bar, a sitting area with newspapers, a good view and a blazing fireplace in the lobby of pre-war design.
Room no. 54 is spacious and bright, with matching furniture of good quality. Its main attraction is the evening view to

he lively pedestrian life on the quai and to the illuminated Notre-Dame cathedral. Double glazing gives good sound insulation from the outside, but you can hear the next room TV set. The well equipped bathroom is ordinary in style, with a marble washbasin though.

Lenox Saint-Germain

9 rue de l’Université. Phone: 4296 1095. Fax: 4261 5283. Price: FFr.780 ($153) without breakfast. All major cards. 32 rooms. (D4).

An attractive hotel in the western Latin quarter, at the eastern end of Rue de l’Université, just west of Rue des Saints Pères, on the southern side of the street.

The lobby has a marble floor and Persian carpets, a marble fireplace, three sitting areas and a breakfast bar.

The attic room no. 54 is on two levels. The foyer, with a spacious and fully tiled bathroom, leads into a living room with a high ceiling and antique furniture, including a writing desk and an oversized and gilded mirror. It leads out to a balcony with a table and chairs overlooking the street. Or up narrow stairs up to a bedroom with white beams, a sitting area and a TV set.

Lutèce

65 Rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75004. Phone: 4326 2352. Fax: 4329 6025. Price: FFr.820 ($161) without breakfast. No cards. 23 rooms. (F5).

Just behind Notre-Dame, on the small Ile de Saint-Louis island, which is like a jolly in the tow of the bigger Ile de la Cité. The hotel is on the street running through the length of the island, a convenient starting point for walks to both the Left and the Right banks of the river Seine.

It is so restrained that you have to search for its name on the outside. This modesty is in accordance with conservation rules demanding that the exterior of Ile de Saint-Louis houses remain unchanged, making the whole island a Louis XIII museum. Entering the lobby we see a big fireplace, comfortable seating, modern paintings and a vast flower arrangement, all in style.

Room no. 41 is on the smallish side. It looks out to the locals’ morning food shopping in the famous Rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Isle, a narrow 17th Century street with an endless row of specialty food shops. As befits a house of 250 years the rooms sports ancient beams, old furniture and a happy atmosphere for tired travelers. The bathroom is modern, tastefully tiled.

Noailles

9 rue de la Michodière, 75002. Phone: 4742 9290. Fax: 4924 9271. Price: FFr.850 ($167) without breakfast. All major cards. 58 rooms. (D3).

A modern and elegant hotel of metal, glass and wood near the Garnier Opera, on the west side of the street, between Rue du Quatre Septembre and Rue St-Augustin.

A refined reception with a comfortable sitting area and a small library is staffed by pleasant staff. A glass elevator leads up to the guest rooms.

Room no. 301 is spacious and tasteful with modern furniture and colors in black, white, gray and greenish brown. Even the painting on the wall is unusually aesthetic. The fully tiled bathroom is modern and exquisite and has all the amenities, including a hair-dryer.

Pavilion de la Reine

28 place des Vosges, 75003. Phone: 4277 9640. Fax: 4277 6306. Price: FFr.1700 ($333) without breakfast. All major cards. 35 rooms. (G4).

Dignified and elegant, suitably located in a 17th C. building at the northern side of the oldest and probably the most beautiful squares in Paris. The powerful front has large windows and iron railings. The dashing entrance leads from the square through an arcade, an iron gate and a peaceful garden to a magnificient glass door.

The baroque and solemn lobby has leather chairs, antique furniture and a blazing fireplace. Service is exemplary.

The excellent room no. 42 is covered in beautiful, thick and red wallcloth and bedcover, equipped with solid, antique furniture and has a window overlooking the garden. The bathroom in marble is in two separate parts, with all the amenities, including bathrobes.

Place du Louvre

21 rue des Prêtres-Saint-Germain, 75001. Phone: 4233 7868. Fax: 4233 0995. Price: FFr.800 ($157) without breakfast. All major cards. 20 rooms. (E4).

Charming hotel with antiques in a 16th C. building a few steps from the Louvre and the Seine. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Plaza Athénée

25 Avenue Montaigne, 75008. Phone: 4723 7833. Fax: 4720 2070. Price: FFr.3000 ($588) without breakfast. All major cards. 218 rooms. (B3).

The finest hotel in Paris and one of the best hotels in the world, on the fashion houses’ street Avenue Montaigne on the Right bank. Its attributes are the art noveau entrance, the Rollses and Mercedes’ in rows outside, the chauffeurs’ chatting round on the pavement and the sleek Doberman guarding the entrance. This is the correct address for the famous of the world.

The most famous aspect of Plaza-Athénée is the service, being the best in town. It is quick and efficient, without being servile. You get your bleu steak to your room five minutes after your order. A part of the magic comes from the staff being partners in profit. This is a relaxed hotel in spite of its size.

Room no. 102-103 fitted the price. It has a Persian carpet, an unused fireplace and period furniture, chandeliers even over the beds. The grand bathroom is delicately tiled and had bathrobes. The windows are directly over the entrance, with a view to the Rollses and Mercedes’, the chauffeurs and the paparazzi with their cameras.

Relais Christine

3 Rue Christine, 75006. Phone: 4326 7180. Fax: 4326 8938. Price: FFr.1600 ($314) with breakfast. All major cards. 51 rooms. (E5).
In a 16th Century convent on the Left bank, 250 meters from Boulevard Saint-Germain and 250 meters from Place Dauphine on Ile de la Cité. This is the heart of the old 6th district of cultural life in Paris, with famous restaurants abounding. The sign of the hotel is not obvious on the outside as is to be expected. The entrance to the lobby is through the garden.

The lobby is gorgeous as are the staircases showing the structure of the house. That structure is also evident in the arches in the cellar chapel where it is a must to have breakfast, albeit we never recommend French hotel breakfasts. Behind the lobby there is an amusing sitting room furnished with heavy chairs, massive paneling and respectful portraits.

Room no. 40 boasts of big beams in the ceiling, ancient furniture, such as a writing table, a floor lamp and a bedside table. The bedspread is heavy and all the walls are soft. The room is spacious and silent. It has all the modern amenities, in addition to an attractively tiled bathroom.

Récamier

3 bis place Saint-Sulpice, 75006. Phone: 4326 0489. Price: FFr.560 ($110) without breakfast. All major cards. 29 rooms. (D5).

A quiet left bank hotel. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Saint-Louis

75 rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75004. Phone: 4634 0480. Fax: 4634 0213. Price: FFr.770 ($151) without breakfast. All major cards. 21 rooms. (F5).

A small hotel, perfectley located on the Saint-Louis island in the Seine. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Select

1 place de la Sorbonne, 75005. Phone: 4634 1480. Fax: 4634 5179. Price: FFr.1300 ($255) without breakfast. All major cards. 67 rooms. (E5).

An art decco hotel with large rooms directly in front of the Sorbonne. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Tuileries

10 rue St-Hyacinte, 75001. Phone: 4261 0417. Fax: 4927 9156. Price: FFr.1000 ($196) without breakfast. All major cards. 18 rooms. (D3).

A renovated hotel in a 17th C. mansion a few steps from the Tuileries. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Varenne

44 Rue du Bourgogne, 75007. Phone: 4551 4555. Fax: 4551 8663. Price: FFr.600 ($118) without breakfast. All major cards. 24 rooms. (C4).

Quietly situated in the ministries part of the 7th district, 150 meters from the Rodin museum and 300 meters from Invalides and Esplanade. The entrance is through a courtyard.

The courtyard also serves as an outdoors breakfast room in suitable weather. The rooms on the street side have double glazing and those on the courtyard side are naturally quiet.

Room no. 25 is rather small, but furnished with tasteful, modern equipage and delicate wallpaper. The relatively bigger bathroom at the outside wall has excellent appointments. The windows look out to the breakfast courtyard.

Vieux Marais

8 Rue du Plâtre, 75004. Phone: 4278 4722. Fax: 4278 3432. Price: FFr.550 ($108) without breakfast. All major cards. 30 rooms. (F4).

An oasis in the old, aristocratic quarter of Marais, which until recently was dilapidated but has come into fashion again. The hotel is only 250 meters from the Pompidou museum in Palais Beaubourg.

In the tasteful lobby pleasant staff care about customers.

Room no. 25 is long and narrow, very flowery papered, not only in the room itself but also above the tiles in the bathroom.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Paris restaurants

Ferðir

Allard

41 Rue Saint-André-des-Arts, 75005. Phone: 4326 4823. Fax: 4633 0402. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: FFr.640 ($125) for two. All major cards. (E5).

On the Left bank, near the intersection of the boulevards Saint-Michel and Saint-Germain, in a corner house from the 17th Century, offering old-fashioned appointments and old-fashioned bourgeois cooking, far removed from Nouvelle Cuisine. Fernande Allard takes care of the kitchen, offering the same as ever, loaded plates of hearty food for hungry businessmen.

The guests sit tight, bistro-style, at small tables, which formerly bared the marble but are now covered with white cloth. The sawdust has disappeared from the floor, but the random pictures are still hanging on the walls. The waiters wear long, black aprons.

• Fromage de tête = pickled calf head.

• Jambon persillé = ham.

• Veau à la Berrichonne = veal with soft boiled egg, the Tuesday speciality.

• Coq au vin = traditional chicken in red wine.

• Gâteau de framboises = raspberry cake.

• Charlotte au chocolat = chocolate pudding.

Ambassade d‘Auvergne

22 Rue du Grenier-Saint-Lazare, 75003. Phone: 4272 3122. Fax: 4278 8547. Price: FFr.440 ($86) for two. All major cards. (F4).

The best known country cooking in Paris is quite near the Pompidou museum in Palais Beaubourg. The chef, Joseph Petrucci, is in fact an Italian, but his wife, Hélene Petrucci is a daughter of the Auvergne mountains in southern France and the cooking derives from there. The pricing is reasonable.

Madame Petrucci receives guests cordially. It is desirable to get a table on the ground floor, decorated in rustic style. There are beams of oak and a heavy table for ten in the middle of the dining room.

• Soupe au choux et au roquefort = Auvergne cabbage soup with cheese flavor.

• Poélé d’escargots à la confiture d’oignons = snails in fruit and onion jam.

• Saucisse d’Auvergne aux lentilles de puy = meat with lentils.

• Saucisse aligot = sausage with extremely elastic potato and cheese puré.

• Sorbet aux mures = mulberry sorbet.

• Coupetade = prune pudding.

Appart

9 rue du Colisée, 75008. Phone: 5375 1634. Fax: 5376 1539. Price: FFr.400 ($78) for two. All major cards. (B3).

A trendy and lively rendez-vous with generous helpings of traditional food and reasonable prices for the beautiful people near Rond Point of Champs-Élysées, on the north side of the street.

The interior is bourgeois and romantic, heavily decorated with bookcases, platters, paintings, wine racks, potted plants, candles and coffee boxes. The napkins are of paper and the service is by beautiful girls. Usually the place is full of convival young people seing others and showing themselves off.

• Rémoulade de pieds de cochon et fondue de poireaux au balsamique = pig’s trotters with leeks.

• Petits piments farcis á la morue sur coulis de poivron doux = small peppers filled with cod and sweet pepper juice.

• Cour de filet á la moutarde violette, pomme dauphin = beef fillet with violet mustard.

• Côtes d’agneau aux saveurs orientales, jus d’agneau á la menthe fraîche = roasted lamb ribs with oriental spices.

• Tarte aux pommes chaude “quatre coins” = warm apple pie.

• Tarte tiéde au chocolat, glace au pain d’épices = tepid chocolate cake.

Assignat

7 rue Guénégaud, 75006. Phone: 4354 8768. Hours: Closed dinner & Sunday. Price: FFr.160 ($31) for two. No cards. (E4).

A classic restaurant of very low prices a few steps from Pont Neuf. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Auberge des Deux Signes

46 rue Galande, 75005. Phone: 4325 4656. Fax: 4633 2049. Hours: Closed Saturdauy lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.900 ($176) for two. All major cards. (E5).

Marvelously restored medieval abbey with romantic atmosphere across the bridge from Notre Dame to the left bank, between Rue Saint-Jacques and Rue Dante.

There are heavy oak beams in the ceiling, Gothic vaults, bare stone walls, and windows facing Notre Dame. The fireplace is blazing and the ancient well is functioning. There are flowers and white linen on the tables and antique-fashioned carved chairs on the floor.

• Assiette de saumon fumé Norvégien = smoked Norwegian salmon.

• Six escargots géants de Bourgogne = six large Bourgogne snails.

• Magret de mulord bolle fruitiére

• Médaillon de capelin en crépine aux échalotes confites = capelin in a crépe of glazed shallots.

• Fondant d’ananas á la crème Chiboust sauce canelle = pineapple icing with cinnamon sauce.

• Sabayon champagne aux fruits frais = champagne zabaglione with fresh fruit.

Babylone

13 rue de Babylone, 75007. Phone: 4548 7213. Hours: Closed dinner. Price: FFr.220 ($43) for two. No cards. (D5).

An inexpensive west bank restaurant. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Baptiste

11 Rue des Boulangers, 75005. Phone: 4325 5724. Fax: 4337 8269. Price: FFr.170 ($33) for two. All major cards. (F6).

Near the ruins of the Roman arena in the Latin quarter, a cozy and inexpensive tavern in a quiet street.

Bourdonnais

113 Avenue de la Bourdonnais, 75007. Phone: 4705 4796. Fax: 4551 0929. Hours: Closed Monday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.780 ($153) for two. All major cards. (B5).

Situated near the corner of Avenue de la Bourdonnais and Avenue de la Motte-Picquet, between Tour Eiffel and Invalides. The restaurant also answers to the name of Cantine des Gourmets. Madame Micheline Coat directs the service and has got a master chef from the Negresco in Nice, Régis Mahé, who has elevated the culinary status.

This is a graceful and a snug restaurant, pink and white, seating 70, partitioned into three sections by glass shelves with porcelain and glass figures. The flower arrangements are in the house colors. Madame carries the heaviest decorations, five necklaces, two bracelets and golden glasses.

• Crème de poireaux et pommes de terre glacée = cold chives soup.

• Grillade de filets de rouget en vinaigrette = grilled red mullet.

• Suprème de saumon grillé au beurre de Noilly = lightly poached salmon.

• Rizotto et filets d’agneau au confit de poivrons doux = lightly braised lamb.

• Gratin de framboises sauce chocolat = raspberry puré with chocolate sauce.

• Nougat glacé coulis de framboises, amandes, pruneau, oranges confites = ice-cream with sugared fruits.

Cartes Postales

7 rue Gomboust, 75001. Phone: 4261 0293. Fax: 4261 0293. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.580 ($114) for two. All major cards. (D3).

A small and airy restaurant, almost Japanese in its spartan style, a few steps from Avenue de l’Opera, between the Garnier Opera and the Louvre. A Japanese chef cooks in the classic French manner, with the modern addition of exact timings in cooking.

The cool interior, somewhat enlived by fresh flowers, has white linen and white walls with a large window on one side and two rows of postcards on the other.

• Foie gras de canard Landais cuit en terrine = duck liver terrine.

• Fricassée des langoustines aux champignons de saison = prawn fricassée with mushrooms of the season.

• Croustillant de homard et son coulis = lobster in crust with own juices.

• Mille feuille de duode foie gras aux epices = spiced goose liver in pastry layers.

• Croustade de frangipane = pastry cream.

• Le gateau au chocolat et sa créme anglaise = chocolate cake with eggs-and-breadcrumb créme.

Chat Grippé

87 rue d’Assas. Phone: 4354 7000. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Monday. Price: FFr.750 ($147) for two. All major cards. (E6).

A restaurant of large mirrors and excellent food by Michel Galichon, near Jardin du Luxembourg just south of Rue Michelet.

The gray and red walls are decorated with outsize mirrors and ugly pictures of cats, the tables with pink linen. The carved and high chairs are beautiful and comfortable. Service is so-so.

• Feuilles de morue faiche en carpaccio, pain, tomate et olive = slices of marinated cod with bread, tomato and olives.

• Cêpes de poieraux vinaigrette á l’huile de truffe = boletus mushrooms with leeks and vinegar of oil and truffes.

• Saumon rôti aux courgettes = roasted salmon with zucchini and stockfish.

• Jarret de veau en osso bucco = boiled shank of veal.

• Suprême de pintade fermiére aux trompettes de la mort = guinea hen.

• Soufflé chaud au Grand-Marnier, sorbet chocolat noir = warm Grand Marnier soufflé and black chocolate sorbet.

• Mousseline de citron craquante, chips d’orange = lemon mousse.

Chez Clément

17 boulevard des Capucines, 75002. Phone: 4742 0025. Fax: 4242 9402. Price: FFr.300 ($59) for two. All major cards. (D3).

An inexpensive restaurant near Place de la Opera. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Corbeille

154 rue Montmartre, 75002. Phone: 4026 3087. Fax: 4026 5097. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.580 ($114) for two. All major cards. (E3).

A tiny and cozy first floor restaurant with old-fashioned decor and excellent cooking by Franck Deshayes near the Boulevard Montmartre end of the main street between the boulevards and Les Halles.

A large table for a group is downstairs and a few tables upstairs, where people sit on sofas in nooks. Large and illuminated flower frescis are on the walls. Marc Pruniéres takes care of the excellent service.

• Fricassée de champignons sauvages = browned pieces of wild mushrooms.

• Foie gras de canard des Landes = duck liver from Landes.

• Rémoulade de céleri-rave et coquilles Saint-Jacques marinées = remoulade of celery root and marinated scallops.

• Ravioles de homard a l’estragon = lobster ravioli with tarragon sauce.

• Daurade royale rôtie á la lie de vino = sea bream roasted in wine.

• Tiramisu á la liqueur d’armagnac = coffee flavored cheesecake in armagnac.

• Croustillant aux poires carmélisées á la cardamon = caramelized crust of pears flavored with ginger.

Delmonico

39 avenue de l’Opera, 75002. Phone: 4261 4426. Fax: 4261 4773. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. Price: FFr.560 ($110) for two. All major cards. (D3).

A stalwart of traditional French cuisine and tradtional restaurant design on the main avenue between the Garnier Opera and Palais Royal, on the west side of the avenue just south of Rue d’Antin. Chef Alain Soltys and the FFr. 168 menu are the main attraction.

The dining room is open and refined, with a large flower decoration in the middle, comfortable chairs and sofas in red color, a marble wall, mirrors and modern lights in the ceiling, white linen and good service.

• Terine de caneton aux figues = duckling terrine with figs.

• Marinade de thon a l’aneth et citron vert = marinated tuna with dill and lime.

• Matelote de cabillaud riz basmati = stewed codfish with brown rice.

• Côte de porc confite á la tomate et á l’estragon = marintated pork cutlet with tomato and tarragon.

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• Chaud-froid de poires glace safran = pear gelatine with saffron ice.

• Quadrille á l’ananas sauce chocolat blanc = pinapple cake with white chocolate sauce.

Divellec

107 Rue de l’Université, 75007. Phone: 4551 9196. Fax: 4551 3175. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: FFr.1100 ($216) for two. All major cards. (C4).

An airy and an appealing culinary temple directly on the Esplanade. Jean le Divellec is in charge, having moved here from Pacha in Rochelle at the Biskay bay. He buys for the kitchen and supervises it, but in contrast to other renowned chefs in the city he does not stay at the herd. Instead he patrols the dining room to take care of the guests.

There are big windows out to Esplanade. As is usual in this class of prices and quality the decorations are aesthetic. Mirrors abound, tables are well spaced and the table service is tasteful. Service is particularly exact, under the critical eyes of the owner. There is an economical lunch menu of the day at FFr. 170.

• Courtbouillon de raie, merlan, rouget et coquilles Saint-Jacques = clear soup of ray, whiting, red mullet and scallops.

• Cassoulette d’huîtres à la laitue de mer = four oysters on sea-weed.

• Escalope de saumon au Saint-Émilion = lightly poached salmon in red wine sauce.

• Rouget poêlée en laitue = red mullet on lettuce.

• Poires au laurier = raspberries and pears on laurels.

Dodin Bouffant

25 Rue Fréderic-Sauton, 75005. Phone: 4325 2514. Fax: 4329 5261. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.470 ($92) for two. All major cards. (F5).

The best seafood restaurant is on the Left bank, near the river bank opposite Notre-Dame, only 250 meters away. World famous chef Jacques Manière is in charge in the kitchen. This is one of the gastronomic temples of Paris.

It is a big and noisy brassiere, remarkably inexpensive. Its reasonableness shows both in food and wine prices. It is also suitable for night-owls as dinner can be ordered after midnight. On the other hand furnishings and decorations are not exciting.

• Plateau de fruits de mer = A whole bowl of shellfish and crabs.

• Huîtres de l’Isle de Ré, no. 1 = oysters.

• Perdrix rotie embeurrade chous, rosé = partridge with cabbage.

• Tête de veau au romarin = pickled calf head.

• Desserts from the trolley.

Drouant

18 rue Gaillon, 75002. Phone: 4265 1516. Fax: 4924 0215. Price: FFr.1000 ($196) for two. All major cards. (D3).

An exquisite restaurant dominated by a marble staircase, near the Garnier Opera, on the eastern side of the street, a few steps from Rue Saint-Augustin.

Large paintings, open spaces, creamy yellow linen and excellent service for business diners. The prices in the adjoining café are much lower.

• Bisque de homard parfumée á la badiane = lobster bisque perfumed with badian anise, served with bread cubes.

• Foie gras de canard cuit au torchon aux baies de poivre et sel de Guérande = duck liver paté with pepper and salt.

• Canard sauvage rôti aux figues = roasted wild duck with figs.

• Carré d’agneau de Pavillac rôti á la sarriette = roasted ribs of Pavillac lamb.

• Moëlleux au chocolat, crème au café de Colombie = coffee cream chocolate cake.

• Tarte fine aux figues, glace au miel d’acacia = fig cake glaced with acacia honey.

Duquesnoy

6 avenue Bosquet, 75007. Phone: 4705 9678. Fax: 4418 9057. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.1050 ($206) for two. All major cards. (B4).

The refined, small luxury restaurant of chef-owner Jean-Paul Duquesnoy is near the Alma bridge on the Seine, on the avenue connecting it with École Militaire, just north of Rue de l’Université.

The walls are bright and airy above the quality wainscoting, decorated with paintings. The antique wicket chairs at the well-spaced tables with white linen are comfortable. Francoise Duquesnoy controls the professional waiters.

• Petite marmite de poulette et ses abats parfumée au madére Sercial, a l’æuf coulant = earthenware pot of chicken with giblets in madeira sauce.

• Duo de morue rôtie et brandade parfumée charlottes de Moirmoutier et jus de veaux = roasted cod and stockfish.

• Chartreuse de pigeonneau au foie gras, sauce aux truffes = squab and cabbage with goose liver and truffle sauce.

• Millefeuille léger, poire caramélisée, sauce e créme glacée aux noix = caramelized flaky pastry with glazed walnut sauce.

• Fruits exotiques carmélisés au sucre Muscovado, avarin aux raisins de Malaga, sabayon au rhum = caramelized exotic fruit in sugar, raisin sponge cake and rum zabaglione.

Fermette Marbeuf 1900

5 Rue Marbeauf, 75008. Phone: 4723 3131. Fax: 4070 0211. Price: FFr.540 ($106) for two. All major cards. (B3).

A ravishing and a reasonably priced brassiere-bistro in the expensive fashion district just south of Champs-Élysées. It was made famous by chef Jean Laurent, but now Gilbert Isaac reigns in the kitchen.

It is decorated in a turn-of-the-century Belle Epoque style with painted tiles, lots of mirrors and glass. An elaborate system of mirrors is in the ceiling. an original glass decoration from the turn of the century is over the bar in the middle. All this combines to make the place unusually thrilling and elegant. Many noisy French jet-setters frequent it at lunch.

• Six huitres no. 3 = oysters.

• Salade vaudoise au foie gras d’oie = goose liver salad.

• Coeur de filet grillé = grilled beef filet.

• Agneau de lait rôti = roasted milk lamb.

• Assortiment des fromages = three cheeses.

• Fraises de bois de Malaga = forest strawberries from Malaga.

Gourmet de l’Isle

4 rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile. Phone: 4326 7927. Hours: Closed Monday & Tuesday. Price: FFr.300 ($59) for two. All major cards. (F5).

An inexpensive restaurant centrally located on the Saint-Louis island. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Grand Louvre

Piramide du Louvre, 75001. Phone: 4020 5341. Fax: 4286 0463. Hours: Closed Tuesday. Price: FFr.520 ($102) for two. All major cards. (E4).

The glass pyramid of Louvre is a magnificient entrance to this large quality restaurant with friendly service and agreeable cuisine in traditional style, optically impressive.

The interior archtecture is modern and not exactly romantic, but the service is friendly. Sofas line walls and columns, the chairs are comfortable and the linen is white. The menu is the same at lunch and dinner.

• Tartare de champignons de Paris aux volailles = fresh mushrooms tartare in creamed poultry sauce.

• Trois foies gras de canard faqon André Daguin = three duck livers in the Daguin style.

• Filet de sandré en écailles de pomme de terre = pike perch fillet with potato scales.

• Escalope de foie gras frais de canard = pan-fried duck liver, chef’s style.

• Croustade gersoise aux myrtilles = traditional Gascony blueberry pie tart.

• Piramide au chocolat sur créme anglaise = chocolate pyramid on vanilla sauce.

• Créme brûlée = caramelised custard with fresh lavender.

Grand Véfour

17 Rue de Beaujolais, 75001. Phone: 4296 5627. Fax: 4286 8071. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. Price: FFr.1280 ($251) for two. All major cards. (E3).

Possibly the most beautiful restaurant in the world is in the Palais Royal buildings around the Palais Royal garden. The restaurant is one of the institutions of France, under strict protection of conservation authorities. The decorations have been restored in the original style. Good service in the classic manner is stressed here. There is good value in a set lunch menu.

The main dining room, seating about 50, is the main attraction, every inch decorated almost two centuries ago in the Directory style. It has mirrors on golden walls and delicate pictures in the ceiling, on the walls and in the carpet. Everything is delicate, from the black Directory chairs to the painted mirrors. A photo describes better this glittering apparition.

• Petits violets aux copeaux de foie gras = goose liver.

• Feuilleté de rouget à la crème de tomate = red mullet in tomato cream.

• Magret de barbarie aux fruits = duck breast with fruits.

• Poulet de Bresse au safran = roast chicken from Bresse.

• Cheeses and raspberries from the trolley.

Jacques Cagna

14 Rue des Grands-Augustins, 75006. Phone: 4326 4939. Fax: 4354 5448. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.1040 ($204) for two. All major cards. (E5).

In the oldest part of the 6th district, near the river and almost alongside the charming Relais Christine hotel. Young master-chef Jacques Cagna settled here on the first floor of a 17th Century house. It is difficult to get a dinner table at this culinary temple but sometimes the place is not full at lunch, in spite of a terrific lunch menu at the reasonable price of FFr. 175.

The dining room is comfortable, seats about 70, but seems much smaller. It is dominated by beams fortified by irons, giving an atmosphere of solidity. Walls and chairs are salmon pink. Old paintings grace the walls. The cutlery is fine. Service is quiet and efficient. Cagna makes the rounds when he has the time. He is an adherent of Nouvelle Cuisine.

• Petits filets de daurade crus marinés à la tomate et à la ciboulette = transparently white bream, marinated in lemon juice, with tomato and leeks.

• Terrine de foies de volailles aux pistaches, petits oignons au coriandre = bird liver paté with nuts and onions.

• Escalope de saumon au coulis de homard à l’estragon, zeste de citron et d’orange = poached salmon in lobster sauce with very thin peel flakes.

• Filet de barbue à la mousse de homard sauce corail = brill in lobster mousse and coral sauce.

• Glacé au caramel et aux noix = nut-and-caramel ice cream.

• Cheese from the trolley.

Jules Verne

Tour Eiffel, 2nd floor, 75007. Phone: 4555 6144. Fax: 4705 2941. Price: FFr.1120 ($220) for two. All major cards. (B4).

One of the superior gourmet temples in Paris and the quaintest one is on the second of the three floors of the Eiffel Tower, offering a devastating view in all direction. The southern foot of the Eiffel tower is reserved for the entrance to Jules Verne. A doorman received us downstairs before we entered the elevator. Upstairs we start at the bar for the view from that direction.

Designed by famous Slavik, the restaurant resembles a dining room of a 21st Century spaceship or maybe the nuclear submarine of captain Nemo in Jules Verne’s story. All furnishings are in black and silver. In combination this has a consistent atmosphere of an unreal world of dreams. Extremely thin office lamps decorate the tables. Customers sit in comfortable swivel chairs.

• Baignade de melon et fraises des bois au Banyuls = Pink melons with wild strawberries.

• Salade de sole à la vinaigrette de framboises et citron vert = sole on chicory and lettuce with cucumber strings and parsley in vinegar.

• Panache de veau aigrefeuille = a mixture of ris de veau, rognons and veal with potato strings.

• Pièce de boeuf poêlée aux échalotes et au persil = rare beef with string beans and carrot strings.

• Pâte de truffes et crême café, sauce vanille = chocolate tart.

• Miroir aux framboises, crême anglaise = raspberry tart.

• Coulommiere and Münster from the cheese trolley.

Lescure

7 rue de Mondovi, 75001. Phone: 4260 1891. Hours: Closed Saturday dinner & Sunday. Price: FFr.300 ($59) for two. All major cards. (D3).

An inexpensive restaurant a few steps from Place de la Concorde. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Lucas Carton

9 place de la Madeleine, 75008. Phone: 4265 2290. Fax: 4265 0623. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.1400 ($275) for two. All major cards. (D3).

One of the top restaurants of the world is on the west side of the Madeleine square, finally a suitable temple for the culinary genius of Alain Senderens, formerly of Archestrate on the left bank. He specializes in combining food and wine for a perfect fit. The restaurant combines everything, luxury, ambience and gastronomy, truly a major ambassade for French nouvelle cuisine.

Elegant and charming Éventhia Senderens greets visitors warmly. The decor is aristocratic art noveau, with lots of mirrors and polished wood, cozy nooks and comfortable chairs. This is certainly the place for you to feel finally arrived in the world. Service is extremely attentive without being obtrusive. Every course is offered with a glass of a fitting wine.

• Foie gras de canard au chou, á la vapeur, avec Juranqon moëlleux 1985 = steamed duck paté on cabbage.

• Asperges et belons au beaurre de vodka aux herbes et caviar, avec Wodka Zubrowka = asparagus and belon oysters in vodka butter with herbs and caviar.

• Filets de rouget poêlés aux olives, citron et câpers, avec Château de Beaucastel 1991 = pan-fried fillets of red mullet, with olives, lemon and capers.

• Homard á la vanille, avec Meursault 1988 = lobster in vanilla.

• Canard Apicius rôti au miel et aux épices, avec Banyuls 1978 = roasted duck in honey and spices.

• Pigeon aux navets caramélisés á la cannelle, avec Cahors 1992 = squab on turnips caramelized in cinnamon.

• Le vrai mille-feuille á la vanille, avec Muscat de Rivesaltes 1993 = Napoleon vanilla cake.

• Gâteau au chocolat coulant á la crème d’amandes améres, avec Vin d’Arbois = chocolate cake with almonds.

Main à la Pâte

35 Rue Saint-Honoré, 75001. Phone: 4508 8573. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: FFr.520 ($102) for two. All major cards. (E4).

The best Italian restaurant in Paris is conveniently situated at Rue Saint-Honoré just near Forum des Halles. This place is not in the French tradition, as here it is the woman that cooks and the husband that serves, Ida and Livio Bassano. They offer an outstanding lunch menu of three courses and wine for only FFr. 75 per person.

Go upstairs into the flower room on the first floor. Most of the flowers may be of plastic but still bring some Mediterranean atmosphere to the place. Grape paintings are under the glass plates on the tables. This is the place for Italian specialties, pastas, risottos and polentas.

• Prosciutto di San Daniele = a 1961 ham from the Venice area.

• Giardinetto x 4 = mixture of four pastas; canneloni, agnolotti, tagliatelli and cappelletti.

• Orrecchio d’elefante = thin veal.

• Osso buco = stewed veal shank.

• Italian salad mixed at the table.

• Bel Paese and Gorgonzola from the cheese trolley.

Marc Annibal de Coconnas

2 place de Vosges, Rue de Birague, 75004. Phone: 4278 5816. Hours: Closed Monday & Tuesday. Price: FFr.640 ($125) for two. All major cards. (G5).

An excellent restaurant a few steps from Place de Vosges, conveniently located and well designed, ovned by Claude Terrail of Tour d’Argent fame.

From the lobby there is a view into the kitchen. The dignified dining room is L-shaped, rather narrow, divided by an arch. Red draperies, large paintings and large mirrors are on the walls and red leather chairs at solid tables of wood.

• Mariniére de moules au Noilly = marinated mussels.

• Terrine de foie gras frais maison = fresh goose liver terrine of the house.

• Poule au pot du bon Roy Henri = boiled chicken soup.

• Petites cailles au chou braisé et raisin frais = quails with braised cabbage and raisins.

• Craquelin de pommes, poires et noisettes = crunchy cake of apples, pears and hazelnuts.

• Soufflé chaud au Grand Marnier = hot Grand Marnier soufflé.

Miravile

72 quai de l’Hôtel-de-Ville, 75004. Phone: 4274 7222. Fax: 4274 6755. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.680 ($133) for two. All major cards. (F5).

An excellent and cozy restaurant on the river bank avenue, just east of Rue de Lobou, opposite the west end of the Saint-Louis island.

The dining room is small and friendly, with comfortable antique chairs, yellow linen and yellow walls, periodically disturbed by metro vibrations.

• Tartalettes des calamars sautés au safran = tartalettes of octopus fried in saffron.

• Mille-feuille craquant de homard chantilly aux herbes = flaky pastry with lobster in cream sauce with herbs.

• Sole meuniére au beurre de vieux vinaigre = sole sautéed in butter and aged vinegar.

• Tarte feuilletée aux pommes = flaky apple pastry cake.

• Pétales de pamplemousse au caramel = grapefruit crown with caramel sauce.

Muniche

27 Rue de Buci, 75006. Phone: 4261 1270. Fax: 4566 4764. Price: FFr.520 ($102) for two. All major cards. (E5).

A noisy brassiere designed by Slavik, situated a few steps from Boulevard Saint-Germain, a stone’s throw from the church. The brassiere style in Paris comes from Alsace. Many Parisians from the entertainment industry come here to dine, as the place is open for dinner orders until 3 o’clock in the morning. The cooking is elevated classic German, very filling.

In the middle of the dining area there is a bar and a buffet with glass tiers above. On the sides there are platforms with mirrors and alcoves for four. In the middle of the floor the tables are packed tightly. This is a noisy place. The experienced waiters run to and fro and there is much clinking at the buffet where glasses are washed.

• Claires no. 2 = oysters.

• Soupe au oignons = onion soup.

• Jarret et choucroute = lightly smoked ham with sour cabbage, the German “Eisbein mit Sauerkraut”.

• Poule au pot = boiled chicken.

Nicolas Flamel

51 rue Montmorency, 75003. Phone: 4271 7778. Fax: 4271 7879. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.420 ($82) for two. All major cards. (F4).

One of the most romantic and pretty restaurants in town, with mediocre food and service, in one of the oldest houses in town, from 1407, in the Beaubourg area between Rue Beaubourg and Rue Saint-Martin.

The ground floor is more agreeable than the second one. The ancient pillars and beams are much in evidence. Service is sporadic and haughty, the cooking average and unimaginative, preventing the visit becoming unforgettable, but the price is right.

• Ravioles aux trois fromages a la créme de champignons = ravioli of three cheeses and mushroom sauce.

• Saucisson Lyonnais = warm Lyon sausages with lentils.

• Filets de rouget á l’huile d’olives, étuvée de poireaux = fillets of red mullet in olive oil and dry-cooked leek.

• Coeur de rumsteak á la créme de roquefort = beef fillet with roquefort sauce and potato pie.

• Crumble aux poires á la cannelle = pear crumble with cinnamon.

Pactole

44 boulevard Saint-Germain, 75005. Phone: 4633 3131. Fax: 4633 0760. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch. Price: FFr.560 ($110) for two. All major cards. (F5).

The famous restaurant of Roland and Noëlle Magne is cozy and central, situated on the corner of Boulevard Saint-Germain and Rue des Bernardins, about 300 meters from Notre-Dame. Check before you come whether the patrons are will be on the premises.

A blazing fireplace and an oversize mirror greet diners who enter from the busy boulevard. The dining room is decorated with chandeliers, bouquets and a lot of impressionistic paintings. This is one of the places where out of priciple English is not spoken by the haughty waiters, and is none the worse for that.

• Ravioli d’escargots à la crème d’ail = snail ravioli in vinegar sauce.

• Salade d’arichaud et haricots vers aux escalopines de foie gras = artichoke and green beans with goose liver slices.

• Escalopines de dindoneau au fenouil = slices of young turkey with fennel.

• Carré d’agneau du Limousin rôti á la violette de Toulouse = ribs of Limousin lamb roasted in a salt crust.

• Pomme au four farcie aux figues au beurre de cidre = oven-baked apples and figs with cider butter.

• Fromages de France = French cheeses.

Petit Laurent

38 rue de Varenne, 75007. Phone: 4548 7964. Fax: 4266 6859. Hours: Closed Saturday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.620 ($122) for two. All major cards. (D5).

A beautiful restaurant in Louis XVI style with an excellent kitchen on a main west bank street, just east of Hôtel Matignon, the residence of the prime minister. Chef Sylvain Pommier changes his mainly seafood menu every day.

Large curtains, cream-colored walls and white linen characterize the small and comfortable dining room. Service is not without its faults.

• Terrine de faisan au foie, confiture d’oignons = pheasant terrine.

• Foie gras de canard, haricots verts en salade = duck liver paté with green beans in salad.

• Fricassée de pintade á la citronnelle = guinea hen in a white lemon sauce.

• Poélée de Saint-Jacques au beurre de curry = scallops fried in curry butter.

• Crème Catalane á la canelle et citron = milk cream flavored with cinnamon and lemon.

Petit Prince

12 rue Lanneau, 75005. Phone: 4354 7726. Hours: Closed lunch. Price: FFr.300 ($59) for two. All major cards. (E5).

An inexpensive restaurant between Panthéon and Sorbonne. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Petit Saint-Benoît

4 rue Saint-Benoît, 75006. Phone: 4260 2792. Price: FFr.260 ($51) for two. No cards. (D5).

An old bistro of low prices in the heart of the left bank. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Petite Chaise

36 Rue de Grenelle, 75007. Phone: 4222 1335. Price: FFr.340 ($67) for two. All major cards. (D5).

The oldest restaurant in Paris, founded just three centuries ago, in 1681. It is the aristocrat of cheap neighborhood restaurants, situated near Saint-Germain. It has an extensive menu with a fixed FFr. 170 price, including wine and service.

The atmosphere is Parisian. The restaurant has old and tired paneling and old paintings on red walls. Chairs and tables are tightly packed. The table clothes are sparkling white and the napkins are of linen. It is an example of the French respect for dining that even in some of the cheapest places the napkins are not of paper.

• Jambon d’Auvergne = ham.

• Mousseline d’avocat = avocado mousse.

• Poulet à la mentonaise = chicken.

• Paté de boeuf au roquefort = beef paté.

• Plâteau de la ferme = cheeses.

• Sorbet framboise = raspberry sorbet.

Pharamond

24 Rue de la Grande-Truanderie, 75001. Phone: 4233 0672. Hours: Closed Monday lunch & Sunday. Price: FFr.580 ($114) for two. All major cards. (E4).

One of the most Parisian restaurants, near Forum des Halles, unassuming on the outside but glorious and quite lively inside. The cuisine hails from Normandy.

This is one of the landmark restaurants of Paris, with Belle Époque decorations from the turn of the century, giant mirrors magnifying the space, flower tiles between the mirrors and a wooden staircase. It is noisy at lunch when all the businessmen are talking at the same time. Service is good and prices fair.

• Terrine de saumon et brochet = fish paté with lettuce and crème fraiche in vinegar.

• Ris de veau à la crème = Normandy ris de veau with cream.

• Bar au beurre bland = poached bass.

• Fricassée de lotte au safran = monkfish.

• Framboises = raspberries.

Pied de Fouet

45 rue de Babylone. Phone: 4705 1227. Price: FFr.280 ($55) for two. No cards. (D5).

An inexpensive left bank restaurant. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Récamier

4 Rue Récamier, 75007. Phone: 4548 8658. Fax: 4222 8476. Hours: Closed Sunday. Price: FFr.680 ($133) for two. All major cards. (D5).

In a particularly peaceful pedestrian street leading to an out of the way garden near Saint-Germain on the Left bank. Chef Robert Chassat has extensive offers on the menu.

In summer it is cheerful to dine on the pavement outside but in winter it is better to retreat to the glassed room inside. Behind that there is an Empire dining room and a well lit bar with a big flower bouquet. The trimmings are old-fashioned with painted wood and checkered wallpaper above. Curtains and glass walls divide the restaurant into smaller units. Service is charming.
• Toast de foie gras de canard = duck liver on toast.

• Fricassé d’escargots frais aux champignons sauvages = fresh snails with forest mushrooms.

• Châteaubriand Récamier = beef bleu.

• Cassoulette de ris de veau aux champignons = ris de veau with mushrooms.

• Cheeses from the trolley.

Roi du Pot-au-Feu

40 rue de Ponthieu, 75008. Phone: 4359 4162. Price: FFr.280 ($55) for two. All major cards. (C3).

An inexpensive restaurant near Champs-Elysées. (Shortlisted for evaluation and inclusion)

Taillevent

15 Rue Lamenais, 75008. Phone: 4495 1501. Fax: 4225 9518. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. Price: FFr.1210 ($237) for two. All major cards. (B2).

An elegant temple of cuisine and service near Arc de Triomphe. For decades it has been one of the grand restaurants of Paris and has in addition climbed up the culinary ladder in recent years. The owner is the dining room inspector Jean-Claude Vrinat, and the chef is Philippe Legendre. You have to reserve weeks or even months in advance.

The restaurant is superbly and majestically decorated in the style of Napoleon III. Heavy wood is much in use, chandeliers and flower arrangements. The carpet is thick and expensive. All furnishings match in style. The same can be said about the service, which is among the best in the world, a little on the stiffer side. The well-dressed customers match the style.

• Flan tiede aux champignons des bois = forest mushrooms.

• Terrine de rougets au beurre d’anchois = red bass paté with anchovy butter.

• Mousse de foies blonds à l´huile de noix = foie gras mousse.

• Pigonneau à l´hydromel = roast chicken.

• Cheeses and desserts from trolley.

Tour d’Argent

15-17 quai de la Tournelle, 75005. Phone: 4354 2331. Fax: 4407 1204. Hours: Closed Monday. Price: FFr.1800 ($353) for two. All major cards. (F5).

Owner Claude Terrail has the motto: “Nothing is more serious than pleasure” at this majestic and elegant top-floor restaurant, for decades famous for its numbered ducks, opposite the Tournelle bridge, with an excellent view to Notre Dame.

You are received downstairs by a doorman who leads you through the restaurant museum to the elevator, where a boy whisks you up to the haven of refined dining. Service is perfect without being mechanical. The ducks are flambéed on an elevated stage in front of a map of historical Paris. Everything is beautiful, including the ceiling and the paintings on the walls.

• Quenelles de brochet André Terrail = pike dumplings.

• Saumon fumé d’Écosse = smoked salmon from Scotland.

• Foie gras d’oie des trois empereurs = goose liver.

• Nage de rougets au safran fenouil et olives noires = poached red mullet with saffron, fennel and black olives.

• Caneton á la broche aux navets confits et cæur de salade = duckling on spit with candied turnips and salad.

• Mille-feuille d’ananas caramelisé, sabayon au kirsch = caramelized flaky pineapple pastry.

• Flambée de pêche á l’eau-de-framboise = flambéd peaches in raspberry liqour.

Trumilou

84 Quai de l’Hôtel-de-Ville, 75004. Phone: 4277 6398. Fax: 4804 9189. Hours: Closed Monday. Price: FFr.300 ($59) for two. All major cards. (F5).

On the Right river bank opposite Ile Saint-Louis, an old tavern for habitués, inexpensive and large. Plain food and no decor.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Paris amusements

Ferðir

Bains

7 Rue du Bourg-l’Abbé, 75003. Phone: 887 3440. Hours: Closed Monday. (F4).

A former bathhouse near Beaubourg has been converted into a punk center called Bains-Douches, which was on top when we were in Paris last time. Each night has its theme. The place also has a swimming pool and a cinema. Beware though that fortunes of this and the disco types tend to rise and fall in no time at all. The famous ones today can be forgotten tomorrow.

Castel

14 Rue Princesse, 75006. Phone: 326 9022. (D5).

The sole top nightclub on the Left bank, quite near the Saint-Germain church. The customers are the best dancers and the most diligent ones in Paris. Castel has the additional bonus that it is possible to make conversation and hear your own words. Also the decorations are the most tasteful of such disco nightclubs, a little overwhelming in the cellar.

Restaurant Princesse with its mirrors on the first floor is surprisingly good. A trick to get inside is to try to book a dinner table at Princesse. But then you should not sound like a tourist on the phone as this is the most heavily closed of all closed nightclubs in Paris. It is a haunt of actors, journalists and page-one girls, all very well dressed.

Crazy Horse

12 Avenue George V, 75008. Phone: 723 3232. (B3).

The best strip-tease in Paris, just near the Plaza-Athénée on the Right bank. Nowhere else is the show better organized into the minutest details. Alain Bernardin is responsible. All technical and optical tricks are used to lift the show far above most others in this genre.

Keur Samba

79 Rue la Boétie, 75008. Phone: 359 0310. (C3).

The center of insomniacs and of noise levels around 140 decibels in Paris, in the the middle of the fashion and nightclub district on the Right bank. It hails from Senegal, and Africans are conspicuous among the customers, for example East-African mannequins and under employed UNESCO diplomats and officials who arrive when other places close down for the morning.

Lido

116 Champs-Élysées, 75008. Phone: 563 1161. (B3).

By far the best place for all-round entertainment in classic Paris style, in the same district as most of the best nightclubs and discos. It is far better than Moulin Rouge at Pigalle which receives busloads of tourists. The spectacles of Lido are performed by elephants, waterfalls, magicians, acrobats etc.

Petit Journal

71 Boulevard Saint-Michel, 75005. Phone: 326 2859. Hours: Closed Sunday. (E6).

The best known of many jazz cellars, a small place beneath a tavern offering relatively inexpensive midnight suppers. The owner, André Damon, has both famous and unknown jazzists performing. Some come from the States, but all of them play classic jazz. The atmosphere is almost homey.

Régine’s

48 Rue de Ponthieu, 75008. Phone: 359 2113. (B3).

This one has been copied in New York and other cities. Also here it is difficult to get inside, but possible even without a membership card. In any case ties can be rented, if the doorman consents to allow you inside. Bobby Barrier directs and Régine sings. This the main club of the top fashion people. Here dances are introduced before they go out to conquer the world.

Theatre National de Chaillot

Place du Trocadéro, 75016. Phone: 727 8115. (A4).

One of the two main national theaters. Due to language difficulties it is not easy for others than French-speaking people or theater people to enjoy theater in Paris in full. As You Like It by Shakespeare was on the last time we visited the city.

Bar du Caveau

17 Place Dauphine, 75001. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. (E4).

Lawyers and politicians hang out at this wine bar in peaceful Place Dauphine on Ile de la Cité. This square is an oasis smack in the city center.

Écluse

Place de la Madeleine, 75008. Hours: Closed Sunday. (D3).

This is a chain of wine bars. They are green on the outside and brown on the inside, decorated with wide mirrors and having an ancient atmosphere, zestful and cozy at the same time. They specialize in Bordeaux wines, some of them sold by the glass, at reasonable prices.

Some other addresses of bars in this chain are: 64 Rue Francois I, 75008; 15 Quai des Grands Augustins, 75006

Harry‘s Bar

5 Rue Daunou, 75002. Hours: Open to 4 A.M. (D3).

The most important Paris bar in the American style, near the opera square, not relative of the original namesake in Venice. This one offers over 150 different whiskies and an unlimited number of cocktails. The atmosphere is both lively and civilized. This is the haunt of American intellectuals and correspondents.

Henri IV

13 Place du Pont-Neuf, 75001. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. (E4).

On the Ile de la Cité, just by Pont Neuf, those barrister and judges who are not at Bar du Caveau at the moment, are here having a glass of red wine. The specialty is Burgundy.

Pub Saint-Germain

17 Rue de l’ancienne Comédie, 75006. Hours: Open all day, all days. (E5).

The major beer pub of Paris, a few steps from the boulevard of the same name. Available are 300 different types of bottled beer and 20 of watted beer. It is open 24 hours a day.

Willi‘s

13 Rue des Petits-Champs, 75001. Hours: Closed Saturday & Sunday. (E3).

One of the best wine bars in Paris, near the garden of Palais Royal. A British host serves at least 250 different wines, some of them by the glass. Many of his customers are bankers and journalists.

Angélina

v
226 Rue de Rivoli, 75001. (D3).

The best chocolate in Paris is here, in a big, traditional café in the arcades of Rue de Rivoli, opposite the Tuileries. The chocolate comes in several versions. The same goes for the coffee and tea. The café is often crowded.

Café de la Paix

12 Boulevard des Capucines, 75009. Phone: 260 3350. (D3).

It goes that every American in Paris passes at least once each day in front of this peculiar café at the side of the Opéra. And it offers a good view to the square and boulevards around. It has been renovated in the original style of this typical tourist café.

Christian Constant

20 Rue du Bac, 75007. (D4).

The best baker and confectioner, in the antiques quarter of the Left bank. Adjoining the shop is a small tea room, where polished Parisian ladies meet in the afternoon to sip one of the 40 different teas with honey or with one of the five varieties of sugar. And of course something sweet to nibble at.

Cour de Rohan

59-61 Rue Saint-André-des-Arts, 75006. (E5).

In a pedestrian street behind Rue de l’Ancienne Comédie, in the atmosphere of the 18th Century. It is an unusually elegant café on two floors. It is furnished with antiques, but most of the guests are of the younger generations. For sale are many varieties of tea, juice, table wine, coffee and chocolate.

Deux Magots

170 Boulevard Saint-Germain, 75006. Phone: 4548 5525. (D5).

The most famous sidewalk café in Paris, opposite Saint-Germain-des-Prés. We can choose between observing the church tower stones of seven centuries, the performances of actors and artists on the square, or simply the classic Parisian subject, people passing by. You can spend the whole day here as the happenings are non-stop.

Now this has become a tourist place. Formerly it was a haunt of French authors and intellectuals. all the way back to the 18th Century when they were frequented by Voltaire and Rousseau, in the 19th by Victor Hugo and Balzac, Baudelaire and Zola, and in the 20th by Sartre, de Beauvoir and Camus. The last three sat in the cafés here around the church.

Ébouillante

6 Rue des Barres, 75004. (F5).

At a footpath behind the Saint-Gervais church, leading from the river bank Quai de l’Hôtel-de-Ville, a tiny and an amusing café in the style of a fishing village tavern in Normandy. It is crowded with artists and youths from the youth hostels in the neighborhood. The atmosphere is relaxed and rural. The walls are decorated with sundry objects.

Lipp

151 Boulevard Saint-Germain, 75006. Phone: 4548 5391. Hours: Closed Monday. (D5).

Opposite Saint-Germain-des-Prés on the other side of the Boulevard, the haunt of famous Parisians, including politicians. The owner, Roger Cazes, takes great care that all well known Frenchmen get a good table on the crowded ground floor and that all tourists are sent upstairs to Siberia.

The food is nothing to write home about, in an ancient sauerkraut-style. But in the afternoon places are obtainable for coffee on the ground floor. That part of the restaurant is beautifully decorated with tiles and wood, big mirrors and exquisite chandeliers. The interior is from 1914. Remember that the specialty is beer rather than coffee.

Battendier

8 Rue Coquillère. (E4).

One of the oldest sausages and tripe shops of the city and probably the most fascinating. It has for more than one and a half century been here, opposite the demolished Halles. The best known products are tripe sausages, blood sausages, the many patés and Parma ham. Fresh goose liver is sold around the year. Wine and patisserie is also available.

Bell Viandier

25 Rue du Vieux-Colombier. (D5).

Near Saint-Sulpice on the Left bank is an old-fashioned hole-in-the-wall for beef, amusingly furnished. Beef is available from several breeds, local and imported, cut in correct sections according to French tradition or done into ready-made dishes. Also on sale is lamb, including a special Ester lamb. And famous blood sausages. This is the best beef shop in the city center.

Berthillon

31 Rue de Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75001. (F5).

The best ice cream shop of Paris is in this shopping alley on Ile de Saint-Louis. Often a waiting line stretches into the street. The specialties of the house are more than 30 in number, excluding sorbets such as a champagne sorbet. This is the mother shop, but Berthillon ices can also be bought in many other places. The fame has not put up the prices.

Caves Miard

9 Rue des Quatre-Vents. (E5).

The most engaging wine shop is near the Saint-Germain church. The furnishings are from 1850. The shops does not specialize in regions and has an all-round choice. In between there are bottles of grand wines such as Château Cheval Blanc and Château Yquem.

Civette

157 Rue Saint-Honoré. (E4).

The major tobacco shop, aged two centuries, is between Palais Royal and the Louvre. In stock are all brands of tobacco available in France. The havanas are kept in humid rooms. There are also endless rows of pipes and all kinds of articles for smokers.

Coesnon

30 Rue Dauphine. (E5).

On the Left bank, near Pont Neuf, the best sausage maker in Paris sells the greatest number of different sausages and patés. This is also the main choucroute shop in town.

Constant

26 Rue du Bac. (D4).

The specialty of Christian Constant in the antiques quarter of the Left bank is confectionery and chocolates. The latter are made of chocolate and crème fraiche without any preservatives. And this is not only the best confectioner in Paris but also one of the best patisserie makers.

In addition he makes a lot of ice creams and sorbets and does not either use preservatives or colorings in them. He also sells 40 different teas. And finally he is a caterer.

Corcellet

46 Rue des Petits-Champs. (E3).

A pleasant shop near the Biblioteque Nationale. Paul Corcellet mainly sells preserves and jams in glass jars and rare alcohols from far-away places, also coffee and tea.

Debauve et Gallais

30 Rue des Saints-Péres. (D5).

The most elated chocolate maker has been at this place in the Saint-Germain area since 1818. The furnishings are almost unchanged since then. They are unusually charming are now protected by the authorities. It is difficult to choose between gazing at the decorations and the gooey chocolates.

Fauchon

24 Place Madeleine. (D3).

The most famous general gourmet shop in the world is beside the Madeleine. Nothing is lacking that could tempt the gourmets who come here for sightseeing as others go into the cathedrals of Paris. Also sold are take-away dishes.
We can buy date-stamped coffee from the four corners of the world; all important varieties of caviar, including white; home made confectionery and chocolates; the finest goose liver in town; perfect patisserie; 42 sorts of tea; rare black truffes; the most expensive vintage champagnes and distilled fruit spirits; and more types of herbs and spices than we thought existed.

Flahec

135 Rue Mouffetard. (F6).

A captivating, tiny fish shop is at the downhill end of this pedestrian market street. It offers some of the best choice in fish and shellfish, including many varieties that are not usually seen elsewhere in Paris.

Fruits de France

72 Rue de Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75001. (F5).

On the quaint island street, at no. 72, shopkeeper Turpin has both fruits and vegetables and also all kinds of game. Among the vegetables the many types of mushrooms are noteworthy and also the various spices and herbs. The game is available according to the season and never comes out of a freezer.

There are wild geese and ducks, sparrows, pheasants, grouses, partridges, hares, deer and also some cultivated fowl.

Gambrinus

13 Rue des Blancs-Manteaux. (F4).

In the Marais, just east of Palais Beaubourg, is the best beer shop in the city. It offers more than 400 types of beer from 34 countries, including mixed cases according to countries or brewing techniques. Also sold are books on beer and brewing. The shop also boasts of many whisky brands and malts.

Haupois

35 Rue des Deux-Ponts, 75001. (F5).

The best bread available in Paris is baked by Haupois in the street that crosses the middle of Ile de Saint-Louis. He also does some patisserie. The methods are traditional, fitting the 17th Century aura of this delightful island.

Hédirard

21 Place Madeleine. (D3).

The second most world famous gourmet shop is also beside the Madeleine. It is an all-round store. Among the most notable items are chocolates, jams, 25 years old vinegar, 80 types of jar preserves, coffee, goose liver.

Not to be forgotten are the 300.000 bottles of wine, priced from FFr. 11 to FFr. 13,000. There are 17 vintages of Château Latour alone. And the almost unobtainable Romanée-Conti is only sold here.

Lecomte

76 Rue de Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75001. (F5).

If we walk eastward along Rue de Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, we find this cheese shop on the northern side, one of the top few ones in Paris. The cheeses develop in the care of the shopkeeper himself.

Each type of cheese has its season, münster in January, roquefort in February, camembert in March, brie in April, goat cheeses in May, non-sterilized cow-cheeses in June, white cheeses in July, reblochon in August, etc.

Maison du Miel

24 Rue Vignon. (D3).

Near the Madeleine a honey shop offers over 30 different types of honey, including mountain honey and Hungarian acacia honey, all displayed at the counter. Other specialized honey shops are in the city, but this is the most important one.

Olivier

77 Rue de Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, 75001. (F5).

The best olives in the city are of course sold in a special olive shop. In addition to many varieties of olives, numerous types of oils are sold, not only cooking oils, but also lubricating oils from sheep legs to name an example. Not to be forgotten are the many types of vinegar, including a champagne vinegar.

Pain de Sucre

12 Rue Jean-du-Bellay, 75001. (F5).

In a small side-street near the western tip of Ile de Saint-Louis there is a tiny, enthralling shop of sweets, jams and sugars. There are a few varieties of rhubarb, jam and coffee chocolates. also fresh truffles of the day, without preservations. And all kinds of sugars, including various candied ones.

Petrossian

18 Boulevard Latour-Maubourg. (C4).

Caviar is the specialty of this gourmet shop, near the Esplanade. It always sells Russian beluga, sevruga and oscietre. Its smoked salmon is also considered the best in town.

Verlet

256 Rue Saint-Honoré. (D4).

The most aristocratic coffee and tea shop is north of the Tuileries gardens. It sells coffee from all known coffee-producing countries and also from countries such as Hawaii and Papua. Customers can test all these varieties, freshly ground, on the premises, or ask Pierre Verlet to make a special mixture for them. We can also test some of the innumerable teas on the spot.

Bastille Opéra

120 Rue de Lyon, 75012. Phone: 4001 1789. Hours: 11-18 Monday-Saturday. (G5).

A controversial opera building from 1989, a massive and circular building of glass, seating 2700 spectators, inferior to the traditional Garnier Opéra.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson

Paris walks

Ferðir

Isles

It all began here. Paris was founded on the islands of Seine and later expanded to the Right and Left banks of the river. The churches Notre-Dame and Sainte-Chapelle will be the high points of our walk around the two islands, Ile de la Cité and Ile Saint-Louis.

For the time being we save the former island, the real Paris of ancient times, and begin our walk on the farther tip of Ile Saint-Louis, at Pont de Sully. If we arrive by the metro, it is best to get off at the Sully-Morland station and walk across Pont de Sully over to the island.

Ile de Saint-Louis

Rue de Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile. (F5).

On the way over the Pont de Sully we scan the Ile Saint-Louis which architecturally is the most consistent and graceful part of Paris. On the whole this island is a pleasant and a relaxed oasis in the midst of the frenzy of the city center, almost aristocratically sleepy.

Two islands were combined in one and built with mansions 1627-1664, in the golden age of France. These houses of more than three centuries are still standing and turn their refined 17th C. Renaissance Mannerist fronts to the river banks. Behind the massive oak doors are hidden the courtyards of the mansions, or hotels as they are called in France.

Originally aristocrats and judges lived here but now there are many well-off artists and retired politicians. The widow of president Pompidou lives here. Emblems in memory of famous inhabitants of former centuries are on many house fronts.

We walk from the bridge to its intersection with Rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile, where our walk really begins.

Rue Saint-Louis-en-l’Ile

(F5).

The street with the long name is the backbone of the island, the only street that goes through it lengthwise. It is full of tiny and enchanting specialty shops, interspersed with restaurants and hotels. The specialization of the shops is so far developed that there are no general butchers, only special beef shops, fowl shops, pork shops and sausage shops.

It is fascinating to observe how the street flows with pedestrians all day long. In the morning it is a world in itself, when the locals go from shop to shop to assemble their lunches and dinners before the tourists take over the scene. Some of the establishments in the street are mentioned elsewhere in this database.

There is also the church which has given its name to the island and the street, Saint-Louis, built 1664-1726, with an interior in decorous Jesuit style by Le Vau, consecrated to Louis IX.

When we arrive at the other end of the street we first observe Notre-Dame which lies open before our eyes on the far side of Pont Saint-Louis. Then we turn right and walk along the river bank around the whole island.

Quai d’Orleans

(F5).

We first stop at the bend of Quai de Bourbon and enjoy the downriver view. Then we continue along Quai d’Anjou where some of the finest mansions are, such as Hôtel de Lauzon at no. 17 and Hôtel Lambert at no. 1. In French hôtel means a town mansion and not necessarily a guest house or hotel. We turn again over Pont de Sully over to Quai de Béthune and then Quai d’Orléans.

Here one can often see sunbathers and anglers on the lower bank below the street level when the weather is fine. On the bend of Quai d’Orléans there is a splendid view through the foliage of the trees to the back of Notre-Dame which many find to be at its most beautiful from this direction.

Next we turn left over Pont Saint-Louis to Ile de la Cité. First we ignore Notre-Dame and turn right along Quai aux Fleurs. Soon we turn left down steps to Rue des Ursins.

Rue des Ursins

(F5).

It runs parallel to the bank. We are down at the original level of the island and in a medieval aura from the 11th and 12th C. Such was the island before city planner Haussmann overthrew everything on behalf of Napoleon III. We walk the narrow street to the end.

Then we turn left into Rue de la Colombe and then again to the left into Rue Chanoinesse. These streets constitute the ancient quarter of monasteries. We cross the garden behind Notre-Dame and at its backboard side. From this side we have the closest view of the cathedral.

Notre-Dame

(F5).

We see clearly the extensive system of flying buttresses supporting the walls. They are one of the main characteristics of Gothic churches. We also see the front of the transept with an enormous rose window, also spires and dragons, all typically Gothic.

When we come to the west front of the church it rises in all its majesty, with magnificent pointed arches over the portals, a row of kings’ statues, a rose window of nine meters in diameter and finally two massive and spireless towers which reach 70 meters in height.

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The biggest bell in the south tower weighs 13 tons and its clapper half a ton. Travelers who want to enjoy the view from the tower can take the stairs, open 10-16:45 and -17:45 in summer.

We enter the church.

Notre Dame interior

(F5).

It can take 9000 worshippers at the same time. It has a crucifix plan with very short transepts. It is 31 meters high on the inside, with long, Gothic windows. It is completely surrounded by chapels nestling between the buttresses. In the transept there is a rose window on each side. An enormous chancel with an altar and an ambulatory is in the far end.

Notre-Dame is an historical landmark of architecture, a showpiece of the early Gothic. It was built in 1163-1345. All the time the original plans were faithfully used. Therefore it has a consistent style and became the model for French cathedrals. Thus it was dominant in spreading the Gothic style all over France and also had influence on similar cathedrals in Britain.

Today most of church is original, including the glass in the rose window on the west front. And what has been renovated has been done in the original style. The church itself and the square in front of it have for eight centuries been the focal point of Paris and France.

We leave the church and enter the square in front of it, Place de Parvis.

Ile de la Cité

The center of Paris and of France. All distances in France are measured from Place de Parvis. Here the city was founded 200-250 B.C. by the Parisii, a Celtic tribe of fishermen and sailors. For a long time, during the four first centuries A.D. it was a stronghold of the Romans who built their barracks on the Left bank.

In 508 it became the capital of Klodwig, king of the Franks, and has since then been the capital of France. In the Middle Ages the city itself spread to the mainland banks. Later Charles V moved court over to the Louvre palace. Left behind was the parliament and later the city court.

It is fitting that a museum of the prehistory of the city has been set up under the square after extensive excavations had been made there. In the museum we can see the past in its original place. The remains are from Celtic and Roman times and some from the Middle Ages. This is a delightful museum, open 10-12 and 14:30-18:30, closed Monday.

We cross the square and turn right into Place Louis-Lépine.

Place Louis-Lépine

Place Louis-Lépine, 75001. (E5).

The venue of the main flower market of central Paris, held in Place Louis-Lépine and Quai de la Corse, a stone’s throw from Notre-Dame. On Sunday this market changes into a pet bird market, popular both with local people and travelers.

We can inspect the flowers, or the birds, if we happen on a Sunday. From the square we can descend through one of the famous Art Nouveau gates of wrought iron to the Paris metro.

We take a look at the metro entrance.

Metro Art Nouveau

Many entrances to metro stations are from the lively years around 1900, the Belle Époque, when Art Noveau swept through Europe from Paris. Hector Guimard designed the entrances which are built of wrought iron. One of them is here on the square.

We go past the flower market. Behind massive railings of wrought iron we see the former parliament and present palace of justice.

Palais de Justice

(E5).

The front of the palace dates from the years after the fire of 1776, one of the many attacking the palace. The left wing and the back, facing Place Dauphine, also date from this time. The oldest part, Conciergerie, the remains of the ancient royal palace, is on the right hand side, dating from the beginning of the 14th C.

Here the Merovingian kings lived in the 6th to 9th C. and Capetian kings in the 11th to 13th C. After that the French parliament was housed here up to the Revolution of 1789, when the palace became a prison and a court.

We can follow barristers, defendants, judges, journalists and inquisitive people up the great steps and take in the goings on in the long corridors and in the courtrooms themselves. Those with scant interest can make do with inspecting the Marchande gallery behind the front door. Others can turn right into Salle des Pas Perdus, where the commotion is greatest.

When we return down the front steps we turn to the right into the main courtyard of the palace. There we see the oldest part of the palace complex, Sainte-Chapelle.

Sainte-Chapelle

Hours: Open 10-12 and 13:30-17, -18 in summer. (E5).

Built in 1248, singularly dazzling, probably the most beautiful Gothic church in existence. It is completely in the original state of the late Gothic style. The enormous windows of stained glass are the oldest windows in Paris and the most splendid windows from the 13th C.

We enter at the west front and first arrive at the lower church, originally the church of the royal household. From there we take the stairs to the upper church, which was the church of the king himself.

Sainte-Chapelle interior

The upper church is one big room between windows. The walls between the windows are very narrow and roof rests on slender pilasters. The windows of 15 meters in height let in a mysterious light. This is the most magic place in Paris.

The church seems fragile but has in spite of that stood proud and without fissures for seven centuries and a half. It is strange that this jewel is hidden in a courtyard.

If we want to scrutinize the windows we need a lot of time. The pictures in them show 1134 scenes from the Bible.

We exit by the same way, find the street and turn right and then again right along the river bank, Quai des Orfèvres, along the main police station, Police Judiciare. Then we again turn right into Rue de Harley and from there to the left up to Place Dauphine.

Place Dauphine

(E4).

This restful square, which fans of inspector Maigret should remember, was planned in 1607 by Henri IV. It was mercifully spared when city planner Haussmann rebuilt the island. Some of the houses, for example no. 14, still have the original facade. Here are the wine bars Bar du Caveau and Henri IV, where we can rest our tired limbs.

After our rest we leave the square by the narrow end of its triangle and arrive at Pont Neuf.

Pont Neuf

(E4).

The oldest bridge in Paris in spite of its name, built in 1578-1604, during the reigns of Henri III and Henri IV. It spans 275 meters, has heavy pillars and twelve Romanesque arches, decorated with grim faces of stone.

The former bridges in this places had houses on, as can be seen from paintings.

We go to the square between the wings of the bridge, Square du Vert Galant.

Square du Vert Galant

(E4).

The small park on the western tip of the island is named after Henri IV. There are groves and benches for relaxation. Also here is the pier of one of the shippers who offer tourists a one-hour trip on the Seine. We can accept the offer and have a pleasant voyage with splendid views from the river.

Otherwise we climb back the steps and enjoy the view from the statue of the Vert Galant.

Vert Galant

(E4).

The equestrian statue of Henri IV is called The Vert Galant, which means the Womanizer in Green Clothes. He was a very popular king who did much to calm the religious wars that had dominated France in the years up to his access to power.

Subsequently we walk along Quai de l’Horloge past the northern side of the former royal palace, the oldest part of it, commonly called the Conciergerie.

Conciergerie

(E4).

On this side of the palace there are four 14th C. towers. The central towers originally guarded the entrance to the palace. The square tower farthest to the east has housed the official clock of Paris for more than six centuries. The entrance is between that tower and the central towers.

We enter the palace.

Salle des Gens d’Armes

(E4).

Inside there are three vast Gothic halls from the 14th C. The biggest is Salle des Gens d’Armes of 1800 square meters, the ground floor under the palace.

After the Revolution in 1789 these halls were converted into a prison. 2600 people were brought in 1793-1794 and from here to the guillotine. The massacre did not end until the head of Robespierre himself was cut off in this manner.

This is the end of this walk.

Quais

Most of the great cities in the world do not succeed in making their rivers a central part of city life. Vienna hides the Donau somewhere in the suburbs and so does Berlin with the Spree. The banks of the Thames in London, Tevere in Rome and Arno in Florence are not rendez-vous points for people.

Paris, on the other hand, succeeds in making the banks of the Seine an integral part of city life where people go for a walk, relax in cafés and pursue cultural attractions. Powerful trees give a welcome shade on sunny days and mellow the surroundings. The boxes of antique books appeal to people. Restaurants and cafés jostle for space on the mainland quais.

We can start our circular walk on the river banks at any point. This walk starts at the Pont Neuf metro station at the bridge of the same name. We take in the voluminous Conciergerie and Palais de Justice on the other side of the river. We visited those buildings in our 1st walk. But it is from here that the palace towers look their best. We soon arrive at Place du Châtelet.

Tour Saint-Jacques

(F4).

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We see to our left the imposing tower of Saint-Jacques from 1523, the only remains of a late Gothic 16th C. church, which was destroyed in the aftermath of the Revolution. A statue of Blaise Pascal is in front of the tower.

Well known theaters are on both sides of the square.

We continue along the bank and arrive at the town hall of Paris, Hôtel de Ville.

Hotel de Ville

Hours: Open 8:45-18.30, Saturday 9-18, closed Sunday. (F4).

A town hall has been on this spot since the 14th C. The present palace is from the latter half of the 19th C., an imitation of an earlier Renaissance palace which was burned down in the 1871 revolt. The palace is full of art.

We continue and soon see the Saint-Gervais church on our left.

Saint-Gervais

(F5).

Built 1494-1657 in late Gothic style. Saint-Gervais-Saint-Protais is the full name of the church, named after two Roman martyrs. Is has the oldest Classical facade in the city. The famous organ of the church is used for religious recitals.

From the bank there is a nice little footpath behind the church for a detour to have a quick cup in quaint Ébouillante. Then we return to the bank which here is named Quai de l’Hôtel-de-Ville. We now have Ile Saint-Louis on our right. When we are midway opposite it, we cross the river on Pont Marie, Rue des Deux Ponts, and Pont de la Tournelle to arrive at the Left bank.

Pont de la Tournelle

(F5).

This bridge is a famous Seine viewpoint. In the Middle Ages a chain curtain was stretched here between two castles on opposite banks to prevent attacks on the city. A bridge was first built here in 1370.

On the bridge there is a monument in honor of Sainte Genevieve, the patron saint of Paris, the girl who protected the town against the fury of Attila the Hun in 451.

The ancient and famous restaurant Tour d’Argent is opposite the bridge on the mainland side, tempting travelers with a stunning view and a pressed duck for dinner.

From there our path is downriver along the Left bank. Notre-Dame dominates the view and makes us stop every now and then. We arrive at Square Réne-Viviani to our left.

Square Réne-Viviani

(E5).

The square is opposite the west end of Notre-Dame. We enter the garden in the square. From there we have one of the best views to Notre-Dame. The garden also has a tree said to be the oldest in the city. Behind the garden we see Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre from 1165-1220, described in walk no. 9.

Next we continue along Quai Saint-Michel to Place Saint-Michel.

Place Saint-Michel

(E5).

The formal entrance to the Left bank. It was the center of the revolutionary Paris Commune in 1871 and again the center of the student uprisings in 1968.

From the square the famous café-boulevard Saint-Michel runs southwards, crossing the other famous boulevard of the Left bank, Saint-Germain. Boulevard Saint-Michel is lined with restaurants and bookstores

We resume our walk along the quais. Next comes Quai des Grands-Augustins.

Quai des Grands Augustins

Quai des Grands Augustins. (E5).

Antique booksellers are with their cases in many places along the river banks. They are most numerous on the oldest bank, Quai des Grands-Augustins, running between Pont Neuf and Pont Saint-Michel, and on Quai de Conti, running between Pont Neuf and pedestrian Pont des Arts.

The books are generally worthless, but in between some interesting magazines can be found. Business is mainly in quickly done drawings and paintings, especially made for tourists. We allow time to study the cases of books on Quai des Grands-Augustins and Quai de Conti.

Opposite the pedestrian Pont des Arts we come to Institut de France.

Institut de France

(E4).

The palace was originally built by Le Vau in French 17th C. style, financed by a bequest from the will of cardinal Mazarin. It has for a long time been the home of the influential Académie de France and a few other semi-official clubs of culture.

We walk to the middle of the pedestrian Pont des Arts.

Pont des Arts

(E4).

From the middle of the bridge there is a delightful view to all directions, upriver, downriver, north to the Louvre and south to the palace of Institut de France.

When we reach the Right bank we save the Louvre for a later walk no. 6 and turn right a short distance to Place de l’École where we started this walk. We should repeat this walk some evening when the banks and monuments of history are floodlit. No city is more floodlit than Paris. A boat trip would though be the best way of enjoying that spectacle.

Marais

A little known part of the city center. The Marais or The Marshes were initially swamps and marshes which the order of the Templars had drained in the 12th and 13th C. Later they became the quarter of Christian societies and monasteries, as can be seen today from some street names. In the 16th C. the nobility began to build mansions here, the so-called hôtels.

The district became fashionable at the beginning of the 17th C. when the palaces around Place des Vosges were built. In those years the French Mannerist style of city mansions was developed here. In the 18th C. the aristocracy moved to the west and Marais slowly dilapidated.

André Malraux, Charles de Gaulle’s minister of culture, was a restoration enthusiast. He had many buildings cleaned and renovated. One of his most important deeds were the Malraux-laws of 1962. In the wake of them 126 hectares of the Marais have been restored to their original splendor. Since then the Marais have been on the upswing and well-off people have moved in.

The main attraction of this walk is the thrilling Pompidou museum in Palais Beaubourg. But first we are making our acquaintance with the Marais. We start our walk at the Pont Marie metro station. From there we walk a few meters along the bank and turn to the left into the first street. There we see the back side of Hôtel de Sens. We pass it to see it from its front side.

Hotel de Sens

(F5).

One of the most important houses of architectural history in Paris, one of two medieval palaces that have been preserved. It was built 1474-1507 for the archbishop of Sens. Its Gothic castle style is obvious in rounded corner-towers, in a pointed arch over the entrance and in tower spires. Access to the palace garden is through the main entrance.

We leave the place in front of the palace by Rue de l’Ave Marie and then turn left on Rue des Jardins Saint-Paul. There we see the remains of Enceinte behind a small soccer field.

Enceinte

(F5).

These are the remains of the city wall that king Philippe Auguste built in 1180-1220. He was one of the greatest kings of the Capetian line which reigned in the 11th to the 13th C. These were times of progress in Paris. Notre-Dame, Sainte-Chapelle, the Louvre and the city wall were built and Sorbonne and other university colleges were founded.

This was the first wall built around the city after it had spread to the banks around the islands. The Louvre started as a river castle, built as a part of this wall. If this wall is counted as wall no. 2 in the history of the city, next after the island wall, the walls in the end attained the number of six, in line with the gradual increase of the city size.

We look at the church in front of us.

Saint-Paul-Saint-Louis

(F5).

The second oldest Paris church in the Jesuit Counter-Reformation style, built in 1627-1641. From here we can see the dome, which was typical of this style in church architecture in the 17th C. The style stood midway between the Mannerist and Baroque styles of those times. The strict design of the church is clear from this direction.

We pass the church and come to the main street, Rue Saint-Antoine. There we turn right and walk a bit until we come to Rue de Birague at our left. We turn into it and go straight to Place des Vosges.

Place des Vosges

(G5).

The oldest and one of the most charming squares of Paris, laid out in 1605-1612 at the instigation of Henri IV. With him the house of Bourbons took over from the Valoisians. The Bourbons reigned in the 17th and 18th C. up to the great Revolution of 1789. The big garden in the square was once a favorite dueling ground but now it is popular with nannies and soccer boys.

The houses around Place des Vosges are in a late version of Renaissance, now usually called the Mannerist style. Out of this style the typical French Château style evolved here. The houses are built of red bricks and yellow, hewn stones. They are all in consistent units. An arcade gives a shaded promenade around the spacious square.

Most of the noble houses still have original facades after four centuries, including their high roofs. We entered the square beneath the King’s palace, Pavilion du Roi. Directly opposite it, at the other end, is the Queen’s palace, Pavilion de la Reine. In the near corner to the right is a house where the author Victor Hugo lived for many years.

We leave the square at its northwest corner and walk Rue des Francs-Bourgeois to Hôtel Carnavalet at our right.

Hotel Carnavalet

Hours: Open 10-17:30, closed Monday and Tuesday. (G4).

Built in 1644 when the Mannerist style was developing into the French Château style. It was given its appearance by the well known architect Mansart. The original part of the mansion was built around a courtyard which is behind the main entrance. Later other wings were added so that the palace became a square and a crucifix around four courtyards.

The palace is now a museum of the history of Paris with exquisite antique furniture.

We retrace our steps to Rue des Francs-Bourgeois, go past the museum and then immediately turn left along Rue Pavée and at once to the right along Rue des Rosiers.

Rue des Rosiers

(F4).

The main Jewish street of Paris. Some synagogues and Middle Eastern shops and Hebrew book shops are in the street and also in the side street to the left, Rue des Ecouffes.

We continue to the end of Rue des Rosiers and turn a few steps to the right where there is a tiny garden behind Notre-Dame-des-Blancs-Manteaux. We cross the garden past the church and turn left into Rue des Francs-Bourgeois to the National Archives in Palais Soubise and Hôtel de Rohan.

Palais Soubise

Hours: Open 14-17, closed Tuesday. (F4).

Archives Nationales are housed in many adjoining buildings. The best known are Hôtel de Rohan, facing Rue Vielle du Temple, and Palais Soubise, facing us. That palace was built in 1705 in the style of Louis XV. It has a horseshoe shaped garden in front.

The museum houses 280 kilometers of shelves carrying six billions of state documents. Historic exhibitions are also held in Palais Soubise.

From the museum we go to the next corner and there turn left Rue des Archives until we arrive at Rue Sainte-Croix-Bretonnerie, where we turn right. Just before we come to Palais Beaubourg we turn right into a crooked alley, Rue Pierre au Lard.

Rue Pierre au Lard

(F4).

The ancient and dilapidated walls of the alley contrast with the avant-garde landmark of Palais Beaubourg in front of us.

We retrace our steps out of the alley, turn right and continue to Place Pompidou.

Place Pompidou

(F4).

The square in front of Palais Beaubourg is a a lively place. Musical performers and circus artists show their talents for big and small crowds. After the performances the artists walk around with their hats.

Last time that we walked through on a sunny morning a fire swallower and a music band of eight took care of the happenings. This is a good diversion for those who want to spend the day in the culture of the amazingly good museum of Beaubourg.

We turn our attention to Palais Beaubourg.

Palais Beaubourg

(F4).

This was once the most controversial building in the world and has for a long time been one of the most popular museums in the world, opened in 1977.

The palace itself has the appearance of a colorful oil refinery, all covered with ducts, big and small. Each color represents a purpose, yellow for electricity, red for people and goods, green for water and blue for air-conditioning. The ducts are in a steel frame which is not covered on the outside. The palace was designed by Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano.

We enter Centre Pompidou.

Centre Pompidou

Hours: Open 12-22, closed Tuesday. (F4).

Inside there are a few museums. The most famous is the museum of modern art, one of the biggest museums of 20th C. art, a revelation for enthusiasts. The importance stems partly from French painters having been in the vanguard of modern art. This museum is on the 3rd and 4th floors. In a part of the 4th floor are shown the works of contemporary artists, partly avantgardists.

The museum covers mainly the history of 20th C isms, starting where impressionism left off. Exhibited are cubism and fauvism, abstract geometrism and expressionism, dada and surrealism, pop and conceptualism, etc. This history is clearly set forth in the museum and is in itself an excuse enough for a Paris visit.

Beaubourg also houses a branch of the famous film museum in Palais Chaillot, having a continuous run of vintage films. Also there are concerts, lectures and plays. The action is always on in the museum and it has proved to be one of the most successful museums of art in the world, a real pan-artistic museum. About 10 million people visit each year. Not to be forgotten is the view.

If we can break away, we go out and continue westwards along Rue Aubry Boucher and Rue Berger to the new shopping center Forum des Halles.

Forum des Halles

(E4).

The Forum has been built on four floors, mainly underground, replacing the former famous food market for wholesalers, Halles, which has been transferred out to the Rungis at the Orly airport. This has been a marketplace since 1100. Forum now houses a lot of shops, including outlets of fashion houses, and cafés, in a rectangle around a sunken, open square.

On the other side of Forum des Halles is a big building site. It is planned to have there both under ground and above ground similar futuristic buildings in the style of Forum. We also see the same style in new apartment buildings around. This style could be called a waterfallism of glass and steel.

Forum itself is a lively place. Its central square attracts many people. Still the French preserve the old when they build into the future. Where Rue Berger meets Forum, the area around the Innocents fountain has been conserved.

Behind the steel and glass we glimpse Saint-Eustache, which is our next stop on this walk.

Saint-Eustache

(E4).

The second biggest church of Paris and also one of the finest, built in 1532-1640 in Gothic style with Renaissance decorations. The west front was built much later, in 17th C. style, the south tower still missing. The noble transept facade, which we see from Forum, is Renaissance, extensively decorated and flanked by two slender staircase towers.

The interior is solemnly and extensively decorated among Gothic columns and buttresses. The gems are the organ and the acoustics. Many a concert has been held here, including first performances of music by Liszt and Berlioz. Te Deum was introduced here.

Almost beside the church, on the other side of the building site, there is the circular Bourse de Commerce.

Bourse du Commerce

(E4).

The circular building with a dome is the commodities exchange with a lively trading in flour, sugar, wine, coffee and cocoa.

Here we end this walk. The Forum des Halles metro station is nearby.

Passages

This time we are going to look at rather unknown parts of central Paris.

On the one hand we shall visit some of the old glass-covered passages and arcades of shopping, which are more typical of Paris than of other cities, especially of the 1st and 2nd districts. Early in the last century about 140 such passages existed in the city, of whom about 30 are still in use today.

On the other hand we are to visit the almost secret garden of Palais Royal, which is only a stone’s throw from the Louvre.

We start at the Arts et Métiers metro station. First we walk a short distance to the east along Rue Réaumur and turn right into Rue Volta. There on the right hand side we look at house no. 3.

Rue Volta 3

(F3).

This half-timbered house of four storeys was until recently thought to be the oldest dwelling-house in Paris, built in the 13th or 14th C. In fact it is a 17th C. imitation. In spite of that it is typical of homes from the Medieval times.

We turn again to the right and walk Rue au Maire to Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs.

Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs

(F3).

A Romanesque church built in the 12th C. in honor of the saint who is now better known as Santa Claus. It is mainly Gothic, with Renaissance parts, the remains of a disappeared Benedictine monastery.

Almost alongside it is Saint-Martin-des-Champs, a Romanesque church from 1130, also a part of the same monastery complex. The back of the chancel is the only remains of the original style.

We walk past the west fronts of the two churches and turn left to cross Square Émile Chautemps to enter the first passage, Passage du Ponceau. From the other end of the passage we turn a few steps to the left into the prostitution street Rue Saint-Denis and then turn right into Passage du Caire.

Passage de Caire

Rue Saint-Denis. (F3).

This long shopping passage from 1800 has become dilapidated but still keeps some of its initial charm. In a small widening near the far end of it rascals once congregated and caroused at nights, but during daytime they worked the city feigning blindness and other disabilities. Here the decorations are Egyptian.

After leaving the passage at the other end we take Rue du Nil or Rue d’Aboukir to Rue Réaumur where we turn right and walk westwards. Here live many Arabs who have probably been attracted to the street names in this area which have been here since Napoleon came from his Egyptian campaign. After 400 meters we arrive at the Bourse.

Bourse

Hours: Open 10:45-13:45 Monday-Friday. (E3).

The Neoclassic stock exchange was built 1801-1826 with Corinthian columns on all sides. From a balcony we can perceive the lively business on the exchange floor. It sometimes resembles a riot rather than bourgeois law and order.

We continue north along Rue Notre-Dame-des-Victories and turn left into the glass-covered Galerie Montmartre.

Passage des Panoramas

Rue Notre-Dame-des-Victories. (E3).

This is a labyrinth of passages, known from the most important of them, which runs southward from Boulevard Montmartre to Rue Saint-Marc. These glass-roofed passages were opened in 1799 and preserve their time-honored dignity.

These passages or galleries were the forerunners of modern malls. People can shop there without the noise and danger and pollution from car traffic.

After inspecting the galleries we return to the Bourse and at its southern end turn to the right into Rue du Quatre Septembre. When we reach Rue de Choiseul, we turn left, walk to the end of that street and continue into one more of the long passages, Passage Choiseul.

Passage Choiseul

Rue de Choiseul. (E3).

This glass-covered shopping passage has some elegant shops and lots of customers.

At the other end we arrive into Rue des Petits Champs where we turn left and go past Biblioteque Nationale on our left. Having passed it we have a look into the beautiful Galerie Vivienne on our left before we cross Rue des Petits Champs, go a few meters along Rue Vivienne, cross Rue Beaujolais and continue through a colonnade into the peaceful Jardin du Palais Royal.

Jardin du Palais Royal

(E3).

All around Jardin du Palais Royal the traffic noise abounds, particularly at the southwest, in Place André-Malraux. But here in the garden we hear no din from the outside world. Any many are unaware of this peaceful garden as it is only entered through a few modest passages.

From the colonnade we can enter Grand Véfour, one of the most famous and most bewitching restaurants in the world, if we have succeeded in booking a table. If we cannot afford to lunch there we only need a few steps to go to Rue Richelieu, where we find the unbelievably cheap restaurant Incroyable.

We look at the building at the southern end of the garden, Palais Royal.

Palais Royal

(E4).

Built in 1632 for cardinal Richelieu. Shortly after his death the palace became the royal residence for a while. It has retained its name since then. It now houses the council of State. The palace is best known from Louis-Philippe d’Orléans who came into possession of it in 1780 and had the three other wings built around the garden.

In those years this was the center of high living in Paris. Elegant shops lined the ground floor behind the arcades. The next floors housed the aristocracy and the rich. General Blücher is said to have lost here a million francs and a half in a gambling den when he arrived from Waterloo.

The high life has disappeared. At noon some clerks come here to lunch out of their bags. A few dogs are walked around. Every now and then a child is seen. A few stroll around the arcades and peep into the windows of specialty shops in medals, coins, books or pipes. The place is good for rest after shopping or running traffic or after becoming tired of the nearby Louvre.

If we leave at the southwestern corner we come out at Place André Malraux, where Comédie Française rises on the garden side of the square.

Comédie Française

2 Rue de Richelieu, 75001. Phone: 296 1020. (E4).

It has been operated as a national theater at this location since just before the turn of the century. But its ensemble is much older, from 1680.

It now stresses traditional plays of authors like Molière. When we were last time in Paris, two out of four plays in the repertory were by Molière, one by de Becque and one by Tschekov.

From the square there is an excellent view up Rue de l’Opéra.

We can at once start on walk no. 5, as it starts right here. Or we can go to the Louvre which is here behind the Louvre hotel.

Fashion

The fashion shops are one of the main attributes of the city. They are concentrated in the area on both sides of Rue de Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Most of the best known fashion houses in the world have their main outlets in this area.

On our way through this district we will have a look at the Opéra, the Madeleine and Place Vendôme.

We start our walk at Place André Malraux where we finished the last walk. If we arrive by the metro the station is Palais Royal.

Avenue de l’Opéra

(D3).

We have a gorgeous view from the square and its fountains up Avenue de l’Opéra. This view we can continue to enjoy all the way to the Opéra. On our way we pass banks, expensive shops and sidewalk cafés.

Haussmann, the city planner of Napoleon III, had many slums razed in the 3rd quarter of the 19th C. to make place for splendid boulevards across the city center.

This is one of the parade streets made at that time. It was finished in 1878. It was considered so important that an hill was removed to level the road.

When we come to Place de l’Opéra we cross another of Haussmann’s boulevards, Boulevard des Capucines, go past the famous Café de la Paix to reach the Opéra, which we have had in view the whole way.

Opéra de Paris Garnier

Place de l’Opéra, 75009. (D3).

The palace was built in 1862-1875 by the architect Charles Garnier after he won the first price in a competition sponsored by Napoleon III. The Opéra has always been criticized as an architectural mixture of styles. Opponents profess to have found in it aspects of all styles in history. Nevertheless it is accepted that Garnier was better at such mixtures than most others.

The best-known part of this impractical building is the staircase in the lobby, especially designed to make the ornately dressed guests look splendid on them. They are in itself worth a visit. Also famous is the stage which can take 450 artists at the same time. And the ceiling painted by the 20th C. Russian painter Marc Chagall, contrasting sharply with everything else.

The center of opera and ballet has until recently been here. Now the opera has moved to a new building at Place de la Bastille, also considered horrible by critics.

From Place de l’Opéra we turn back over Boulevard des Capucines and turn right into Rue de la Paix.

Rue de la Paix

(D3).

Famous for its jewelers. Many will recall names such as Christofle at no. 24, Cartier at no. 13, Mellers at no. 9, Poiray at no. 8, Jean Dinh Van at no. 7,; and at the square in front of us, Place Vendôme, Verney at no. 8, Chaumet at no. 12, Mauboussin at no. 20, Cleef et Arpels at no. 22 and Boucheron at no. 26.

We turn our attention to Place Vendôme.

Place Vendôme

(D3).

All the way to Place Vendôme we recognized Napoleon’s column of victory, standing in its middle, made of bronze from 1200 captured cannons in the battle of Austerlitz in 1805. There is a statue of Napoleon himself on the top.

The square itself and the surrounding buildings are older, from 1702-1720. They were all designed by the architect Hardouin-Mansart in the years after 1685. He also designed Dome des Invalides and was responsible for the final appearance of Versailles. His Place Vendôme is the apex of 17th C. architecture in France.

On the ground floor arcades cover the sidewalks. Above there are pilasters reaching up two storeys. In the roofs there is a continuous row of dormer windows. The houses in the corners and the in middle of the wings have pediments. The best know building is the Ritz hotel.

We continue along the wide and arcaded Rue Castiglione and turn right into the fashion street Rue Saint-Honoré, which we continue all the way to Rue Royale, where we see the Madeleine on our right. We turn that way and approach the church.

Madeleine

(D3).

Sainte-Marie-Madeleine rises majestically as a Greek temple above crossroads where Haussmann’s boulevards congregate on the church from all directions.

Building started in 1764 and was not finished until 1842. It was initially meant to become a church, but in the meantime there were plans to convert it into an army temple or a railway station. It was in the end built as a church. It was designed by architect Vigneron at a time when the Neoclassic style was emerging and examples were sought in ancient Greece.

There is an excellent view from the church steps along the length of Rue Royale, over Place de la Concorde towards Palais Bourbon on the other side of the Seine. One of the flower markets of the city nestles under the eastern side of the church. Famous gourmet shops are around the square, Fauchon and Hédirard. Also Senderens’ culinary temple, Lucas-Carton.

We retrace our steps along Rue Royale, past an alley leading from the street to Cité Berryer with Caves Madeleine, the wine shop of Steven Spurrier. We continue on Rue Royale and turn right into Faubourg Saint-Honoré.

Faubourg Saint-Honoré

(C3).

The part of Faubourg Saint-Honoré from Rue Royale to Avenue Matignon is a continuous spectacle of world-famous fashion houses. We see here Courreges, Féraud, Givenchy, Hermes, Jourdan, Lancôme, Lanvin, Lapidus, Laroche, Saint-Laurent, Scherrer, Torrente and Ungaro.

Fashionable ladies sail between destinations and we are sorry that the pavements are to narrow for their show to develop to the fullest.

500 meters along the street we arrive on the left side at the main entrance to Palais Élysée.

Palais Elysée

(C3).

The President of the Republic of France lives in this well guarded palace and receives guests of honor. The palace was built in 1718 and has since 1873 been the presidential palace. the presidents are said to envy the prime ministers who live in Hôtel Matignon on the Left bank.

We continue along Faubourg Saint-Honoré and are soon passing the Bristol hotel on our right. Soon after that we turn left into the wide Avenue Matignon. We cross Avenue Gabriel with its Élysées Matignon club and the stamp market. After crossing the enormous Champs-Élysées at the flowery Rond Point we continue directly into Avenue Montaigne.

Avenue Montaigne

(B3).

The main offices of some of the best known fashion houses line this street. They include Dior and Ricci in palatial buildings. Also the best hotel in town, Plaza-Athénée, on our right.

This walk ends at the river bank at Place de l’Alma at the Alma Marceau metro. We have gotten a glimpse of the fashionable Paris. In our next walk we will cross the same district, but by a different route.

Promenade

Few if any world cities have such an enormous and successful axis as Paris has in Avenue des Champs-Élysées, a broad and a straight line, not only reaching from Place de la Concorde to Arc de Triomphe, but all the way from the Louvre to the ultramodern suburb of Défense.

This is the main traffic artery in the center, both automotive and pedestrian. It is full of life from morning to night, as cinemas take over when shops close. On national days this axis is perfect for parades.

We start at Arc de Triomphe.

Arc de Triomphe

Hours: Open 10-17, -18 in summer. (B2).

The arch of victory is one of the main landmarks of Paris, along with Tour Eiffel and Notre-Dame. It is the biggest victory arch in the world, 50 meters in height and 45 meters wide. It was built for Napoleon 1806-1836 and offers a unique view over the city.

Its exterior is decorated with pictures and names in memory of French military victories. And under the arch there burns the flame on the grave of the unknown soldier.

We turn our attention to the surroundings, the Étoile.

Étoile

(B2).

The enormous plaza around the arch carries the name of Place Charles-de-Gaulle. It is always called Étoile, quite like the Pompidou museum being called Beaubourg and Charles-de-Gaulle airport called Roissy. The French seem not to accept that names of famous people should evict traditional place-names.

Étoile is one of city planner Haussmann’s main works, laid out in 1854. Twelve of his boulevards run as sunrays from this circular place. As most of them are busy traffic arteries the plaza itself is the main traffic congestion point in the whole city.

According to French traffic rules the cars entering a circular plaza have the right of way and not those which are already there. Therefore it is an art in itself to choose a right lane to get out again and to the right boulevard. Étoile is the right place for us to admire the wits of driving Frenchmen. Plans have been around for a while to change the rule for this place.

We now walk along Champs-Élysées downhill from Étoile in the direction of Place de la Concorde.

Champs-Élysées

(B3).

On the stretch from Étoile to Rond Point airlines and car makers line the avenue, also cinemas and other places of entertainment. Many shopping arcades lead off into labyrinths of shops, cinemas and restaurants. On this stretch there are more tourists than in any other place in Paris. Many sit in sidewalk cafés and observe the pedestrian traffic.

We arrive at Rond Point.

Rond Point

(C3).

A big circle of 140 meters in diameter, where Champs-Élysées meets the fashion streets Avenue Montaigne and Avenue Matignon. The appearance of Champs-Élysées also changes. From Rond Point to Place de la Concorde it is lined with mighty trees and gardens on both sides, including the Palais Élysée garden.

We continue along the Champs-Élysées. To our right we see the Grand Palais.

Grand Palais

(C3).

Grand Palais and Petit Palais were built to house the World Fair of 1900. Their structure is of steel and glass, but the exteriors are in the heaviest of the Historical style of architecture, popular at the end of the last century. The fronts of Grand Palais are for example completely lined with Ionic columns.

The part of Grand Palais facing west, to Avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt, houses the French museum of inventions, Palais de la Découverte. It is an ode to French achievements in technology and science, open 10-18, closed Monday.

The other part, facing east, to Avenue Winston Churchill, is the venue of yearly fairs, such as automobile fairs, and also of specialized exhibitions of art, open 10-18, closed Tuesday.

Opposite Grand Palais there is the Petit Palais.

Petit Palais

Hours: Open 10-17:30, closed Monday. (C3).

It houses one of the biggest museums of art in the city. It covers most epochs in history, ancient and recent. There are also monumental exhibitions, some of them so difficult to assemble that it will not be tried again.

From Avenue Winston Churchill we can see directly over Pont Alexander III all the way to Invalides. The bridge was built in 1900 in the ornamental style of that period.

Champs-Élysées ends as an avenue at Place de la Concorde.

Place de la Concorde

(C3).

A giant sea of asphalt with 84000 square meters of automotive traffic, laid out in 1755-1775. In its northeastern corner Louis XVI was guillotined. 1343 other victims of the Revolution were beheaded at the present entrance to the Tuileries garden.

The obelisk in the middle of the square is a gift from the viceroy of Egypt. It is 3300 years old and comes from Luxor in the Nile valley. It was reerected here in 1836, weighs 220 tons and has an height of 23 meters, all of one single stone, three meters higher than Cleopatra’s needle on the Thames banks in London.

From the island in the middle of the square there are views to all directions. To the west along the axis of Champs-Élysées to Arc de Triomphe. To the south over Pont de la Concorde to French parliament in Palais Bourbon. To the north along Rue Royale to the Madeleine, with the Crillon hotel on the left side at the square. To the east through Tuileries to Palais du Louvre.

Before we enter Tuileries we should take note of two palaces which are on both sides of the garden at the end facing Place de la Concorde. They are Jeu de Paume to the north and left and Orangerie to the south and right.

Jeu de Paume

Hours: Open 9:45-17:15. (D3).

The French museum of Impressionism, a style of painting that appeared in France about 1874 and developed into an artistic revolution that spread around the world. The French had until then been in the forefront of painting, but at that time took the absolute leadership.

This is the best Impressionist museum in the world, hung with paintings by Monet and Manet, Cézanne and Degas, Renoir and others, such as the later Gauguin and Rousseau, Seurat and Signac, van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec.

Jeu de Paume is on the divide of styles and times. Older art is in the Louvre and newer art in Beaubourg.

We turn our attention to the museum opposite, the Orangerie.

Orangerie

(D4).

The mirror image of Jeu de Paume on the other side of the Tuileries garden. It houses amongst other works of art a series of murals by Monet and works by Cézanne and Renoir. It also has temporary exhibitions.

We turn into the Jardin des Tuileries.

Tuileries

(D4).

A typical formal French garden, in opposition to the English style which is free and relaxed. On both sides of Tuileries there are terraces with views, over the Seine from the southern one. The path along the middle of the garden is straight in line with Champs-‘Elysées, only broken by two ponds.

This was once a dumping ground which the renowned landscape architect Le Nôtre designed into a park in 1664, initially as the king’s private park.

A street divides the Tuileries from the garden of the Louvre. Formerly the Tuileries palace was here, built by Catherine dei Medici in the years after 1563. It burnt down in the Communards revolt in 1871.

We cross that street, go into the Louvre garden and come to the Arc de Triomphe de Carrousel.

Arc de Triomphe de Carrousel

(D4).

This small arch of victory was built 1806-1809 in memory of the victories of Napoleon. Formerly it was decorated with four horses of bronze which Napoleon stole from the San Marco in Venice, but the Italians have recovered them.

Once the arch was the entrance to the disappeared Tuileries palace. The garden is full of sculptures by Maillol.

In the western end of the northern wing of Palais de Louvre an independent museum of applied art is located, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, open 14-17, closed Tuesday.

We enter the inner courtyard of the Louvre where a pyramid of glass dominates the scene.

Pyramide

(E4).

The glass pyramid by Chinese architect Pei is the new entrance to the Louvre, which has been enlarged underground and into the northern wing of the Palais de Louvre. Being of glass the pyramid allows us to see the surrounding palace and brings light into the museum entrance below.

This building was very controversial as many avant-garde buildings have been in Paris, but the commotion has settled down. Most people seem to like it, just as they like the Beaubourg, which also was controversial in the beginning. The French have a knack for adventure in modern architecture.

Before we enter the Louvre museum we have a look at the Palais de Louvre.

Palais de Louvre

(E4).

The building history of the Louvre is long and complicated. In the beginning there was Philippe Auguste’s castle from around 1200. In the latter half of the 14th C. the castle was temporarily the residence and royal palace of Charles V. The oldest existing part was built in the 16th C., the southwestern corner of the part which surrounds Cour Carrée.

In the reign of Henri IV the southwestern wing, Flore, was erected. In the reigns of Louis XIII and XIV the square around Cour Carrée was completed. Louis XIV lived for a while in Louvre while he waited to move to Versailles. In the reign of Napoleon the southern wing was finally completed and the northern wing in the reign of Napoleon III.

The enormous colonnade at the front of the palace, facing east, was designed by Perrault, Le Vau and Le Brun in the time of Louis XIV in the 17th C. French style. Behind it is Cour Carrée where we can on the left see the Renaissance style of the oldest part and to the right its later French evolution into the Mannerist style.

We enter the museum itself.

Museum de Louvre

(E4).

This is with the National Gallery in London one of the two greatest museums of art in the world. The second row is reserved for the Uffizi in Florence, Prado in Madrid and the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan. It is estimated that there are now about 500,000 objects owned by the museum. It will take three months to inspect the exhibits by spending 30 seconds on each item.

Most French kings collected works of art, all the way back to Francis I who owned works by Titian, Rafaelo and Leonardo da Vinci, including the Mona Lisa. Formally the palace was converted into a museum in 1793, shortly after the great Revolution.

From the underground entrance corridors lead to different wings of the museum. Some of the most interesting works are on the ground and first floors of the southern Denon wing.

We go into the Denon wing.

Mona Lisa

If we go directly into Salle Daru and then turn left we should find Mona Lisa by Leonardo behind security glass. This southern wing has many exhibition halls. We can se works by the Italians Angelico, Mantegna, Tintoretto, Titian and Veronese; the French Rigaud, Delacroix, David and Géricault; the Benelux van Eyck, Breugel and Rembrandt; and the English Gainsborough and Constable.

We go down the stairs past the Hellenistic 3rd C. B.C. Goddess of Victory from Samothrace. On the left is the Caryatides hall. In its middle stands the famous sculpture from the 2nd C. B.C, Venus from Milo. In this western corner of the floor there are Greek and Roman antiques. Egyptian antiques are in the southern corner and Middle Eastern ones in the other half.

Among famous items in the Louvre is the Egyptian Scribe and the bust of Amenofis IV, the statue of King Gudea and the Laws of Hammurabi. The museum is divided into three sections of antiques, according to geographic areas, and sections of painting, sculpture and applied arts. It is wise to buy a special guide-book for the museum, but the position of works can be changed.

We leave the museum, have a look at its colonnaded eastern front and turn our attention to the church on the other side of Place de Louvre, Saint-Germain-l’Auxerrois.

Saint-Germain-l‘Auxerrois

(E4).

The church tower stands between the church and the city hall of the 1st district of Paris. The oldest parts of the church are from the 12th C. and the youngest from the 17th C. The front is in late Gothic flamboyant style from 1435.

This walk is over and here we have the Louvre metro station.

Esplanades

There are some esplanades or green spaces on the Left bank of central Paris in addition to Champs-Élysées and Jardin des Tuileries on the Right bank. There is the Jardin du Luxembourg, the Esplanade and Champs-de-Mars. The last two are the subject of this walk, including such landmarks as Palais Chaillot, Tour Eiffel and the Invalides.

We start at the Trocadero metro station, in front of Palais Chaillot.

Palais Chaillot

(A4).

The Neoclassic palace was built in 1936-1937 in a Hitler-Stalin version of the style. As it is French it is lighter and milder than other buildings of that megalomaniac period. From the terrace between the two identical parts we see over the garden of Trocadero and the Seine to Tour Eiffel, the fields of Champs-de-Mars and École Militaire. This is the most stunning view in Paris.

From the entrance to the northern half of Chaillot we walk down to one of the largest theaters in France, Théâtre National de Chaillot. The same entrance also leads to the French monument museum, open 9:45-12:30 and 14-17:15; and the film museum, Musée du Cinéma Henri Langlois, open 14:30-17:30.

From the entrance to the southern half we get to the maritime Musée de la Marine, open 10-18, closed Tuesday; and the ethnological Musée de l’Homme, open 9:45-17:15, also closed Tuesday. At the eastern end of the palace we enter Cinémathèque Française where old films are constantly shown to the public, as is done in Palais Beaubourg.

We walk down to the Trocadero gardens.

Jardins du Trocadero

(A4).

The gardens cover 10 hecatares, sloping down to the river Seine, centering on a pool with statues and fountains, which are illuminated in a spectacular way at night. An aquarium is in the left side of the garden, open 10-17:30, -18:30 in summer. The gardens were laid out in 1937.

We cross the river by the Iéna bridge and walk under the most famous Paris landmark, Tour Eiffel.

Tour Eiffel

(B4).

The engineer Eiffel built the featherweight Tour Eiffel as an emblem of the World Fair of 1889. At that time it was the highest construction in the world, 300 meters. Now it is 320.75 meters, including an aerial. It weighs only 7000 tons, or four kilograms per square centimeter, or the weight of a chair and a man.

The height can vary about 15 centimeters due to changes in temperature and the swing at the top can reach 12 centimeters in storms. The tower has three floors, the lowest one in the height of 57 meters, the second in the height of 115 meters and the highest in the height of 274 meters. Elevators run between storeys and we can also take to the stairs up to the second floor.

The two lower platforms are open 10:30-23. the top one is open 10-18 in summer, closed in winter. French intellectuals hated the tower when it was being built. It was to have been razed after the fair. By that time it had become necessary for telegraphic purposes. And now many consider Tour Eiffel to be one of the major and most beautiful works of art in the world.

After a lunch in the tower restaurant Jules Verne we walk through Champs-de-Mars.

Champs-de-Mars

(B5).

The formal French garden in very big an so formal that policemen blow whistles every time someone steps outside the paths. This was initially the training and parade ground of the military school. It has repeatedly been the location of world fairs. The present appearance dates from 1908-1928.

At the far end of the garden we reach École Militaire.

École Militaire

(B5).

Built in 1769-1772 with Neoclassic elements blending into the French style, as is evident from the Corinthian columns at the entrance. The school is best known for cadet Bonaparte who later became Napoleon.

We turn left along the front of École Militaire and then right around its corner into Avenue de Tourville, leading us to Église du Dôme des Invalides.

Église du Dôme

Hours: Open 10-17, -18 in summer. (C5).

The domed church is a perfect work of art by Hardouin-Mansart, designed in the Jesuit style of the 17th C. Napoleons lies in six coffins in the middle of the church which really is his mortuary. His brothers and some generals also have their tombs in the chapels of the church. The atmosphere is very solemn.

The architectural style has the dome as its most distinctive feature and was a mixture of the French Mannerism and the Catholic Baroque which the Jesuits were at that time trying to introduce in France. The same style is evident in the colonnades with Romanesque arches, Doric columns on the ground level and Corinthian ones above. The dome is of lead, covered with gold leaf.

In a house on the left side of the church tickets are sold for the church and the army museum behind. There is another church behind the altar of this church. It is Saint-Louis-des-Invalides. In fact the two churches share the same altar.

Along the side of the latter church we reach an entrance to the military museums in the Invalides complex.

Invalides

(C4).

The Musée de l’Armée and other military museums are in the former quarters of veterans centered on a courtyard on the north side of Église du Dôme. The Musée de l’Armée is one of the biggest military museums in the world. There are also special museums of military maps, of World War II, of the French resistance and a small museum with private belongings of Napoleon.

This was first a home for old and disabled veterans, built 1671-1676. At one time it housed 6000 veterans, but none are now left. It was also a weapons depot which was emptied out by revolutionaries in the morning of July 17th, 1789, when they carried away 28,000 rifles.

We leave by the northern entrance to the museums.

Esplanade des Invalides

(C4).

This is the real front of the Invalides complex. In front of us is the field, Esplanade des Invalides, reaching from Invalides to the Seine. We can observe the game of pétoncle, in which the locals try to throw their ball either as near to the mark as possible or at the more successful balls of the competitors.

We cross the Esplanade and the Quai d’Orsay and arrive at Pont Alexander III:

Pont Alexander III

(C4).

The most exuberant Seine bridge, built in 1896-1900 for the World Fair in 1900. It is a single-span steel bridge, heavily decorated with Art Noveau lamps and statues.

This is the end of walk no. 7. The Invalides metro station is nearby.

La Vie

The liveliest part of Paris is the area around the boulevards Saint-Germain and Saint-Michel on the Left bank. On our way we will also pass landmarks like the Panthéon, Palais du Luxembourg, Saint-Sulpice and Saint-Germain-des-Prés. This is our longest walk as there are many things to see.

We start at the lower end of Rue Mouffetard, in front of the 15th C. Saint-Médard. If we arrive by the metro, we depart at the Censier-Daubenton station and walk along Rue Monge for a few meters to the church. We walk up Rue Mouffetard.
v
Rue Mouffetard

Rue Mouffetard. Hours: Closed Monday. (F6).

The most charming shopping street in central Paris is this pedestrian street which meanders down Montagne Saint-Geneviève from Place Contrescarpe to Saint-Medard. The liveliest part is the downhill one near the church, especially in the morning. We note Flahec, a nice little seafood shop, at no. 135. From no. 104 and 101 pedestrian passages lead off the street.

The houses are old and village-like. Many shop-signs are from olden times. The street itself is narrow, filled with stalls and humanity. Everything is for sale in La Mouffe, as the local people call the street, but food is the most obvious thing.

We arrive at the top of the street to Place de la Contrescarpe.

Place de la Contrescarpe

(F6).

Resembling a small-town square, it was laid out in 1852 in a place that had been used for festivals for a long time. It is now livelier than ever, lined with restaurants and cafés that cater to university students.

From the place we walk west into Rue Blainville and then straight on through Rue de l’Estrapade until we reach Rue Clotilde, which we follow to the right. We almost at once to the back of the Panthéon on the summit of Montagne Sainte-Geneviève.

Panthéon

(E6).

Built as a church 1758-1789, designed by Soufflot in Neoclassic style. Its plan is like a Greek crucifix and it has a giant dome which can be seen from many places in the city and is thus similar to the dome of Saint Paul’s in the City of London.

Soufflot gave the church a light design with very high and slender columns. The building was later made heavier and uglier by bricking up the windows. It was done when the revolutionary government changed the Panthéon into a mortuary of great Frenchmen. Voltaire, Rousseau and Victor Hugo are interred there. The interior is now cold and forbidding.

From the front of the Panthéon we walk down Rue Soufflot, cross the famous street of sidewalk-cafés and book shops, Boulevard Saint-Michel, and enter the Jardin du Luxembourg.

Jardin du Luxembourg

(E5).

The most extensive green space on the Left bank, mainly laid out in a formal French style. The western and southern sides though are done in a relaxed English style. The center of the garden is an octagonal pond in front of the palace. Children often play there with their boats. The garden abounds with statues and sculptures.

We turn our attention to Palais du Luxembourg.

Palais Luxembourg

Hours: Open Sunday 9:30-11 and 14-16. (E5).

Built 1615-1625 for Queen Maria dei Medici in Florentine Renaissance style. It now houses the French senate. Its president lives in the small palace, Petit Luxembourg, which adjoins the bigger one to the west. Many works of art are in the palace, including paintings by Delacroix in the library.

We leave the garden at the northwestern corner, cross Rue Vaugirard and walk either Rue Séminaire or Rue Férou to Saint-Sulpice.

Saint-Sulpice

(D5).

Roma introduction

Ferðir

History

Rome has seen everything during her history of 2700 years. She has endured attacks and pillage by foreign barbarians, nch kings and native popes. Some of her proudest monuments are in ruins. Powerful locals have been the greatesmad emperors, French kings and native popes. Some of her proudest monuments are in ruins. Powerful locals have been the greatest spoilers.

Visitors come to see the ancient ruins in Forum, Capitolum and Palatinum. They also come to see the St Peter’s (San Pietro) cathedral an baroque churches. And finally the come to relax in cafés and restaurants of the narrow alleys in the Martian Fields (Campo di Marzo) center of the city. According to the law of contrasts, young people are attracted to this medieval part of Rome.

One million people lived here in the golden age of classical Rome. Later the number of inhabitants fell to thirty thousand in the Middle Ages. Now it is up to three million people. Rome is not as big as Paris, London or New York, but she has more memories of the past than the other cities.

Life

Rome is a city of contrasts, of youth and old age. She has for twenty centuries claimed to be the center of the world, first as the seat of emperors and then as the seat of popes. She carries her age well, brimming with life from morning into the night.

The night life of La Dolce Vita never existed though, but all classes of society are dropping into cafés all the time. Rome is not awake in the night but takes days and evenings with gusto.

Car traffic in the city is chaos incarnate. Drivers throng through every alley and fill every square, avoiding collisions with people. They argue loudly as other Romans. In spite of that, tolerance is one of the main traits of the Romans. The city is the Catholic capital of the world but its citizens are mediocre believers. They are primarily seasoned and wise in the ways of the world.

Seven Hills

The seven hills of ancient Rome are: Capitolum, Palatinum, Aventinum, Celium, Esquilinium, Viminal and Quirinal.

Canada

Via G.B. De Rossi 27. Phone: 841 5341.

United Kingdom

Via XX Settembre 80. Phone: 482 5441.

United States

Via Veneto 119-121. Phone: 467 41.

Accident

Phone: 113.

Ambulance

Phone: 113.

Complaints

It is generally useless and a waste of time to complain in Italy. Instead try to look at the bright side.

Dentist

An emergency dentist is available at Ospedale G. Eastman, tel. 490 042.

Fire

Phone: 115.

Hospital

English speaking staff are at Salvator Mundi International Hospital, tel. 586 041.

Medical care

Phone: 475 6741.

This number answers day and night and gives information on the services of medical doctors.

Pharmacy

Hours: 8:30-13, 16-20.

Closed pharmacies have signs on their doors to point out where there is night duty. Internazionale at Piazza Barberini 49, phone 482 5456, is open day and night.

Police

Phone: 113.

The city police, Vigili urbani, wear blue uniforms in winter and white in summer. The state police, La Polizia, wear blue uniforms with white belts and berets. The military police, Carabineri, wear red-striped trousers. You can ask all three types for help.

Precautions

Don’t use a handbag. Keep money in inside pockets. Use cards as much as possible. Don’t keep passports in the same place as money. Don’t leave valuables in a locked car. Beware of gypsy children, especially in groups. Petty crime abounds, but there is very little violent crime in Rome.

Banks

Hours: Weekdays 8:30-13:30, 14:45-15:45.

Change foreign money in banks or at “cambio”-offices, not in hotels. Some banks only change foreign money during the morning hours. A bank is open 24 hours a day at the central railway station but often there is a long queue.

Credit cards

Credit cards are widely accepted in hotels, restaurants and shops. Visa and Eurocard (Access, MasterCard) have the largest circulation.

Electricity

Italian voltage is 220V, same as in Europe. Plugs are continental.

Hotels

Roman hotels are generally clean and well maintained, including plumbing, if they have three or more official stars. But two-starred hotels can also be very good, even if they do not have TV sets in guest rooms. A bathroom is taken for granted nowadays.

We only include such hotels, and in most cases we also demand a direct telephone line, working air-condition, and peace and silence during the night. Only hotels in the city center are included as we want to avoid long journeys between sightseeing and our Mediterranean afternoon naps. The price ranges from L. 80.000 to L. 590.000, excluding breakfast.

We try to avoid breakfast at hotels as in Italian hotels it is as insubstantial as in French hotels. More tasty and economical is the espresso coffee with cornettos on the corner café patronised by the locals. Breakfast is in most cases included in the stated price, as that is the normal price quoted.

We checked all the hotels in this database during the winter of 1995-1996 as everything is fickle in this world. We have also tested some other hotels that are not included as they were not on par with the best in each price category. Some four-star hotels in Rome are in fact worse than our selection of two-star hotels.

Money

The currency in Italy is the lire (L.). Paper money is dominant, 1000, 2000, 5000, 10000, 50000 and 100000 lire (L.), increasing in size with their value. Coins are for 50, 100, 200 and 500 lire.

Prices

Prices have gone up on par with Western Europe.

Shopping

Shops are open 9-13, 15:30-19:30 in summer, 16-20 in winter. Sometimes they close earlier on Saturdays.

Tipping

A service charge is generally included in restaurant bills. Some guests leave a few thousand lire extra. Taxi drivers expect at least 10% from foreigners. Porters expect L. 1000 per bag.

Toilets

There are few public toilets. The toilets in cafés are sometimes not up to standard, but generally they are acceptable in restaurants. Bring the paper if you are not visiting a restaurant.

Tourist office

The National Tourist Board, Ente Provinicale per il Turismo, has its head office at Via Parigi 11, tel. 461 851 and branches at the airport and the central railway station.

Water

Tap water is usually clean and tasty. In restaurants most people drink bottled water.

Accommodation

The tourist office at the central railway station finds hotel rooms for travelers. Ask for a room with “twin bed” as such beds and rooms are often larger that those with “double bed”. Rooms on the outside are often more bright and airy but also more noisy that those on the inside.

Airport

The Leonardo da Vinci airport at Fiumicino is 30 km (18 miles) south-west of Rome, tel. 60 121. A bus takes 60-80 minutes from the airport to the central railway station. The train takes 30 minutes from the airport to the Porta San Paolo station where you connect to the Metro subway system. Taxis take 40-60 minutes to the city center and are expensive, cost L. 50.000 from the airport and L. 60.000 to the airport.

News

International Herald Tribune and other important foreign newspapers are available at many kiosks in central Rome. The main Roman newspapers are La Republica and Il Messagero. There are three TV channels, Uno, Due and Tre, and additionally cable channels in many hotel rooms, including CNN.

Phone

The Italian country code is 39 and the local code for Rome is 06. The foreign code from Italy is 00.

Post

The postal service is inefficient. Either use express post or use the Papal post at the Piazza San Petro in front of the Vatican. Italian post boxes are red and the Vatican ones are blue. A post office is open day and night at the central railway station.

Post

The postal service is inefficient in Italy. The main post office in Venice is beside the Rialto bridge, in Palazzo dei Tedeschi, tel. 529 911

Railways

The Italian railway system is inexpensive and effective.

Taxis

Registered taxis are yellow with an illuminated sign on top and use fare meters. They park at marked stands and can also be hailed on the street even if not strictly allowed. They charge supplements for baggage, night and Sunday journeys, and for journeys to the airport. The meter runs when the taxi is bogged down in traffic. Foreigners are expected to tip 10% or more.

Traffic

Rush hours are 8-9:30 and 17-20. It is often quicker to walk than to take a taxi. Beware of cars crossing at red lights. Don’t drive yourself. The Metro is convenient for getting around in the city.

Coffee

Italians are the first-class nation of coffee culture. They drink all their coffee freshly ground in espresso machines. Most often they drink espresso or caffè = very strong; doppio = double the size of an espresso; cappucino = espresso mixed with air-whipped milk. Bad coffee for tourists is called americano. Italians usually have their coffee standing at the bar.

Cuisine

Foreigners often think that Italian cooking consists mainly of pastas after pastas. In fact this is more complicated. Italians do not talk of Italian cooking, but of Venetian, Tuscanian, Ligurian, Latin and so on. In this database we concentrate on Roman cooking, even if we include restaurants representing other types of Italian cooking.

Descriptions

Carciofi alla giudia: The artichokes are opened and flattened, cut in pieces and deep fried in an oil mixture of secret ingredients. After cooking they are golden and look like flowers. This is the speciality of the Jewish ghetto.

Pesto: A famous, strong sauce from Liguria, generally greenish, made of basil, nuts, garlic and lots of grana cheese. Liguria is the name of the coastal area around Genua.

Polenta: Corn porridge made by boiling maize in water until it becomes thick and chunky. Then it is cooled and cut in slices which are usually fried, baked or grilled. The porridge form in the Vecchia Roma restaurant is rather unusual.

Prosciutto Smoked ham. The best internationally known smoked ham comes from Parma. In Italy the one from San Danieli is considered at least equal to the one from Parma. The ham is always cut in very thin slices. Out of Italy it is most often accompanied with melon, but Italians like figs better.

Ricotta: Soft, unsalted cheese, reminiscent of Greek feta cheese, eaten fresh. Usually it is put into pasta envelopes and in sweet bakery, but it is also served in wet and soft dumplings.

Risotto: A rice dish from the Po valley, generally connected with Milan and Venice. The rice is first fried in oil or butter, often with onions, and then cooked in a small amount of liquid, wine or the juice of the food which then is mixed into the rice when it is served. Often butter and grana cheese are added.

Tartufi: Truffle. The Italian type of tuber, the underground mushrooms dug up with the help of trained dogs and pigs. This type is white and almost as expensive as the French black ones. They have a pungent aroma and are always used uncooked, usually in small amounts with some other food. Tartufi is one of the things essentially Italian.

Trippa: Tripe. Can be soft and tasty when it is correctly cooked. It is a national dish all the way from Rome to Florence.

Pecorino: A hard ewe cheese reminiscent of grana or parmesan.

Tuscany cuisine: Generally considered the top of Italian cooking. The Queens of France were often brought from Florence, bringing with them their chefs, starting what is now called classical French cuisine. The best pasta in Italy comes from Tuscany: ravioli and gnochi. And Tuscany is one of the best wine regions in Italy.

Zuppa di cozze: Mussel soup. Oil, onion and tomatoes are heated in a pan, water is added and finally the mussels are added, opening on the way to the table.

Eating habits

Italians do not eat much in the morning. They may have an espresso and cornetto at the corner café or bakery. Lunch often starts at 13:30 and dinner at 20:30. Both lunch and dinner are hot meals and are equally important. Italians like food and consume it with abandon.

They are on the other hand careful with the wine and some only drink water. Tap water is very good and clean in Rome, coming in ducts from the mountains. In restaurants most people have bottled water though, aqua minerale, often with gas, gassata.

Ingredients

Alla Romana:

• Abbachio alla romana = lamb cooked in egg, lemon and white wine sauce.

• Gnochi alla romana = mashed potato dumplings with tomato sauce and cheese.

• Pizza alla romana = pizza with mozzarella cheese, parmesan cheese and basil.

• Piselli alla romana = beans fried with onion, ham and butter.

• Pollo alla romana = chicken pieces fried in oil and butter with onion, ham, pepper and tomato.

• Saltimbocca alla romana = thin veal covered in ham.

• Trippa alla romana = tripe in tomato mint sauce, accompanied with pecorino-cheese.

• Zuppa alla romana = shellfish soup.

Cheese:

• Bel paese = mild and soft cheese.

• Gorgonzola = rather soft and strong blue cheese.

• Grana = very hard cooking cheese.

• Mozzarella = rubbery young cheese.

• Parmiggiano = parmesan cheese, a type of grana.

• Pecorino = hard and strong Roman ewe cheese.

• Provolone = strong cheese.

• Ricotta = fresh ewe cheese.

• Taleggio = mild & creamy cheese.

Fish:

• Bonito = tuna.

• Merlano = whiting.

• Merluzzo = cod.

• Rombo = turbot and brill.

• Rospo = monkfish.

• Sogliola = sole.

• Spada = swordfish.

• Spigola = sea bass.

Game:

• Allodole = lark.

• Beccaccia = woodcock.

• Capretto = kid.

• Capriolo = roebuck.

• Cervo = venison.

• Chinghiale = wild boar.

• Lepre = hare.

• Quaglie = quail.

• Starna = partridge.

• Uccelletti = small birds, such as sparrows.

Innards:

• Animelle = sweetbreads.

• Cervella = brains.

• Coratella = lamb lungs.

• Fegato = liver.

• Pagliata = kidneys.

• Rognoni = kidneys.

• Trippa = tripe.

Roman seafood:

• Antipasto di mare = cold seafood platter.

• Fritto misto di mare = deep fried seafood with lemon.

• Insalata di mare = seafood salad.

• Risotto di frutti di mare = fried rice with seafood.

• Zuppa di pesce alla romana = shellfish soup.

Roman specialities:

• Abbacchio = baby lamb.

• Alla romana = (usually) with tomato and sometimes red wine.

• Asparagus.

• Mint.

• Pecorino cheese.

• Ricotta cheese.

• Stracciatella = egg and cheese soup.

• Trippa = veal tripe.

Shellfish:

• Arselle and vongole = small shells.

• Cappe and cappesante = scallops.

• Cozze and muscoli = mussels.

Shrimp:

• Gamberi.

• Scampi.

• Gamberoni (big).

• Mazzancolle (very big).

Soups:

• Brodo = clear soups.

• Minestrone = clear soups with pasta.

• Minestre = thick soups with rice or pasta.

• Egg soups such as zuppa pavese and stracciatella.

Menus

An Italian menu typically has five sections: Antipasti = starters; pasti or asciutti or primi platti = pasta courses; secundi piatti = fish or meat; contorni or verdure = vegetables and salads; dolci and frutti and formaggi = sweets, fruit and cheeses.

There are no rules on the number of courses in a menu. Some have a starter and then two pastas, one after the other. The usual thing is to have three courses. It could be a starter, a pasta and a meat course. Or it could be a pasta, a meat, a side course. Or a pasta, a meat and a dessert.

The price of a starter, pasta or a bottle of the house wine is usually two times the price of a side course or a dessert; and the price of a main course is usually three times the price. The prices in this database are usually calculated on the basis of a starter, a second course and either a side course or a dessert. All prices are for two persons.

Restaurants

Lunch hour is 13:30-15, dinner 20:30-23. In most places the owner or some waiters understand English. Roman restaurants are generally small and clean, sometimes accidentally decorated. They usually have linen tablecloths and linen napkins, most often white.

Nowhere in the world is the service in restaurants better than in Italy. The waiters are generally quick and effective. They hurry with the courses until you arrive at the last course. Then everything slows down. It seems that Italians like to eat in a hurry and then to linger on over the wine glass or coffee. Quick service does not mean that the waiter wants to get rid of you.

Wine

The house wine is usually well chosen and economical, either bianco or rosso, white or red. Connoisseurs can have a look at the list to find something unusual, as no country in the world has as many different labels. Italian wine is generally good, sound and simple, but lacking in great growths. Italians do not take their wine as seriously as the French do. Red wines are generally better than white.

Roman wine is simple and agreeable: Frascati, colli albani, cori, montecompatri, velletri, zagarolo, all with the official quality denomination D.O.C. (denominazione di origine controllata). They are mainly white wines.

Better wines come from the north, mainly Piemonte and Tuscany. The best known Tuscany wine is chianti, especially chianti classico. Even better are brunello di montalcino, vernaccia di san gimignano, tignanello and sassicaia. From Piemonte there are barolo, barbaresco, barbera, dolcetto and grignolino.

The ancient Greeks loved Italian wine and gave Italy the name of Oenotria or the country of wine.

1996

© Jónas Kristjánsson