Paris, France – Walking tour – Rue Cler
Rue Cler is generally oriented north-south, in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, halfway between the Hotel des Invalides and the Champ-de-Mars. It begins in the north at 111, rue Saint-Dominique, opposite the Saint-Pierre-du-Gros-Caillou church, and ends 428 m in the south at 30, avenue de La Motte-Picquet.
Between rue de Grenelle and avenue de La Motte-Piquet, rue Cler is a pedestrian lane. It is mainly dedicated to food stores.
It bears the name of the French brigadier general Jean Joseph Gustave Cler, killed at the battle of Magenta.
The part of the street between rue de Grenelle and rue Saint-Dominique was created in 1738. The part between rue de Grenelle and avenue de La Motte-Picquet was opened in 1826.
It takes its current name by a decree of August 24, 1864.
Rue Cler has the following remarkable buildings:
1: corner house from the end of the 18th century characteristic of the old village of Gros-Caillou;
4 and 6: Jules-Romains college;
5: chapel;
28: building whose ground floor has a former horse butcher’s shop, installed between 1925 and 1930, whose front and interior decor have been preserved.
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