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Database: Les Halles: Difference between revisions

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Yet another city within the city, Les Halles was appropriately known as the "belly of Paris" since this is where Parisians bought their groceries each morning.<br>
[[File:ACUDB - Les Halles.png|250px|right]]
--<br>
Yet another city within the city, [[Les Halles]] was appropriately known as the "belly of [[Paris]]" since this is where Parisians bought their groceries each morning.<br />
<nowiki>*</nowiki> There's a fat French bloke downstairs we call the "belly of Paris" too.<br>
--<br />
--<br>
<nowiki>*</nowiki> There's a fat French bloke downstairs we call the "belly of Paris" too.<br />
--<br />
Before becoming a market, it was an expanse of "little fields", confirmed by the names of two streets, rue des Petits-Champs and rue de la Croix des Petits-Champs.
Before becoming a market, it was an expanse of "little fields", confirmed by the names of two streets, rue des Petits-Champs and rue de la Croix des Petits-Champs.


The market operated up until 1866, when architect Victor Baltard completed his massive glass and iron market pavilions after 12 years' work. It was a model that all of Europe would imitate. Not until the 1970s was it finally pulled down and replaced by the present-day concrete jungle, over which a huge glass canopy was recently installed.
The market operated up until 1866, when architect Victor Baltard completed his massive glass and iron market pavilions after 12 years' work. It was a model that all of Europe would imitate. Not until the 1970s was it finally pulled down and replaced by the present-day concrete jungle, over which a huge glass canopy was recently installed.
[[Category:Database/ACU]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Les Halles}}
[[Category:Database: Locations]]
[[Category:Helix database entries]]

Latest revision as of 01:22, 28 December 2017

Yet another city within the city, Les Halles was appropriately known as the "belly of Paris" since this is where Parisians bought their groceries each morning.
--
* There's a fat French bloke downstairs we call the "belly of Paris" too.
--
Before becoming a market, it was an expanse of "little fields", confirmed by the names of two streets, rue des Petits-Champs and rue de la Croix des Petits-Champs.

The market operated up until 1866, when architect Victor Baltard completed his massive glass and iron market pavilions after 12 years' work. It was a model that all of Europe would imitate. Not until the 1970s was it finally pulled down and replaced by the present-day concrete jungle, over which a huge glass canopy was recently installed.