Bridges in Paris. Bridges of Paris New bridge, Pont Neuf

There are thirty-seven bridges in Paris that overlook the Seine.

Bridges built in different time, were not always preferred by Parisians. Parisians usually used a boat or ferry to get to the other side of the river or to one of the natural islands cities. Some famous bridges deserve a more detailed mention.

This bridge, which was opened for the Universal Exhibition in 1900, is named after Emperor Alexander III, the penultimate emperor of Russia. It has a metal frame and consists of thirty-two brass chandeliers and numerous sculptures, including winged deities, groups of lions led by children and nymphs. The first stones were laid in 1896 by Tsar Nicholas II, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and President of the Republic Felix Faure.

Pont des Arts

Currently, Le Pont Des Arts or the Bridge of Arts is very popular among tourists because they put love locks on the bridge. However, the city of Paris does not support this practice because the weight of the padlocks poses a risk to the building's structure. This bridge was announced historical monument in 1975, but note that the current version was actually reconstructed in 1984. The explosions of two world wars weakened the structure, forcing the closure of the bridge in 1977, which collapsed in 1979.

The Pont de Bir-Hakeim, formerly known as the Pont Passy, ​​is a bridge erected in memory of the Free French. The bridge bears its current name in honor of the Battle of Bir Hakeim, which took place in Libya in 1942.

Charles de Gaulle Bridge

The modern design of the Charles de Gaulle Bridge seems strange in the landscape of the Seine. Its white board shape and airplane wing make it a remarkable element of the neighborhood between Bercy and the François Mitterrand library.

The stones of the Pont de la Concorde were discovered in 1791, and come from the Bastille, destroyed during the uprising of July 14, 1789. In 1810, at the initiative of Napoleon Bonaparte, decorations were added to the structure, which was quite simple at first glance.

The Mirabeau Bridge, famous for the poem by Guillaume Apollinaire and the song by Léo Ferré in 1973, crosses the Seine in the 15th arrondissement French capital.

Contrary to its name, Pont Neuf or New bridge is the oldest bridge in Paris. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991 due to its age and this bridge is a monument that appears in many pictures of Paris. It is also a bridge that is used to measure the flow of the Seine.

Pont Royal was built on the initiative of Louis XII after the wreck of a ferry crossing the Seine. It is the third oldest bridge in Paris and was declared a historical monument in 1939.

Discovering the architecture of the bridges of Paris is a real journey back in time. And the reasons for their construction and decoration are part of the history of the city.

Bridges of Paris

Alexander III Bridge



The Pont Alexandre III is a single-arch bridge spanning the Seine in Paris between Les Invalides and the Champs-Élysées. The length of the bridge is 160 meters. In order not to obscure the panorama of the Champs Elysees, the height of the structure does not exceed six meters, which at the time of its creation was considered an amazing achievement.

The bridge was founded to commemorate the Franco-Russian Union by Emperor Nicholas II in October 1896 and was erected in four years. Named in honor of his father, Emperor Alexander III. It opened on the eve of the World Exhibition of 1900 (the grand prize of which went to the project of a bridge across the Yenisei in Krasnoyarsk) in the presence of the Russian ambassador L.P. Urusov. Since 1975, the bridge has been protected by the state as a historical and architectural monument.

Many guidebooks describe the Pont Alexandre III as the most elegant in Paris. The decorative decoration of the bridge, with figures of pegasi, nymphs and angels, is a striking example of the Beaux Arts style and has much in common with the design of the Grand Palais on the right.

On the sides of the entrance to the bridge there are 17-meter lampposts, above which bronze figures hover, symbolizing Science, Art, Industry and Battle. In the center of the bridge arches are a nymph of the Seine with the coat of arms of France and a nymph of the Neva with the coat of arms of Imperial Russia, both made in copper by Georges Recipo.

La France de Charlemagne by Alfred-Charles Lenoir‎

La France moderne by Gustave Michel‎

The Alexander III Bridge has a “sister” in St. Petersburg - the Trinity Bridge across the Neva, designed by the French. It was built at the same time as the bridge over the Seine, and its construction also emphasized the cultural and political closeness of the two countries: French President Felix Faure was present at the groundbreaking ceremony.

La France de la Renaissance by Jules Coutan


Statue la France de Louis XIV sur le pont Alexandre III

Bridge of Arts

The Pont des Arts is the first iron bridge in Paris across the Seine River, now a pedestrian bridge, connecting in a straight line the Institute of France (of which the famous French Academy is part) and the square courtyard of the Louvre Palace, called the “Palace of Arts” in the era of the First Empire.

Bridge length: 155 m; width: 11 m.

Construction: the bridge consists of seven arched spans approx. 22 m, standing on 6 supports made of reinforced concrete with stone cladding.Location: Pont des Arts connects the 1st (right bank) and 6th arrondissement (left bank).Metro: line 1, Louvre - Rivoli station or line 7, station Pont Neuf.

Alma Bridge

The Pont Alma is a 150-meter arched bridge over the Seine in Paris, named after the French victory over the Russians at the Battle of Alma in the Crimean War. It was opened near Place Alma by Emperor Napoleon III on April 2, 1856, and for the World Exhibition of 1900 its length was doubled by adding a pedestrian bridge.

Each of the four abutments of the bridge was once decorated with statues of soldiers - a zouave, a grenadier, an artilleryman and an infantryman. These statues were convenient for determining the level of the Seine: when the water covered the soles of the Zouave’s feet, the public’s access to the river was blocked by the police, and when the water reached hip level, river navigation was closed.

"Grenadier"

In 1970-1974, the ancient bridge was replaced with a modern one in order to expand it for the needs of road traffic. Currently, of the four statues on the bridge, only the figure of the Zouave has been preserved. The rest were taken outside of Paris: for example, the “Infantryman” stands in the Vincennes Fort Gravel.

"Infantryman"

Having been refused permission to exhibit his paintings at the official Salon, the artist Edouard Manet built a barracks near the Pont Alma to display them. The action of Remarque's novel “The Arc de Triomphe” begins on this bridge.

At the entrance to the bridge in 1999, a copy of the flame of the torch of the Statue of Liberty, known as the “Flame of Liberty,” was installed. After the English Princess Diana died in the tunnel near the Alma Bridge, this sculptural composition was reinterpreted as a monument in her honor.


Arcolsky Bridge

- a bridge in the center of Paris, connects the island of Cité with the right, northern bank of the Seine and the square in front of the capital's city hall, the former Grevsky.

The current bridge was installed in 1856; This is the second bridge on this site; the original one was a suspension and pedestrian bridge (1828) and was simply called Grevsky. The current name was given by Napoleon III in honor of his uncle's victory in the Battle of Arcole.

The Arcole Bridge is the very first metal bridge in Paris; made of cast iron; bridge width 20 meters; It is a metal structure in the form of an arch with a span of 80 m, supported by stone supports. Installed in 1856 under the direction of engineer Alphonse Oudry (1819-1869); the work was completed in a short time, in just 3 months.


Archdiocese Bridge The Archdiocese Bridge is a bridge in the center of Paris that connects the Ile de la Cité with the left south coast The Seine and, administratively, the 4th arrondissement of the capital with the 5th arrondissement. Stone bridge 68 m long and 11 m wide; a three-arch bridge with openings of 15, 17 and 15 m. Low arches have always prevented the passage of high river traffic, but, despite the decision made in 1910, the bridge has never been replaced.


Since 2010, the Archdiocese Bridge has been a symbolic place for loving people, attaching metal locks to it as a sign of their love.

Named after the archdiocese located nearby, standing on the southeastern side of Notre Dame, between cathedral and Senoy. The archdiocese building was demolished after anti-clerical riots on February 14 and 15, 1831, when it was looted and destroyed.

The Archdiocese Bridge is hung with metal locks. Built in 1828 by the engineer Plouard for the Invalides Bridge Society after the demolition of the suspension bridge at the Invalides. The existing toll station for crossing the bridge was purchased by the city authorities in 1850.

Debilly Bridge

View from the Jena Bridge to the Debilly Bridge
Pont Debilly is a bridge in Paris over the Seine, connecting the embankment New York on the right bank from the Quai Brenly near the Eiffel Tower on the left bank of the Seine.

The bridge was conceived as a temporary structure in the alignment of Avenue Albert de Mun only for the 1900 World Exhibition in Paris. It was intended to provide quick pedestrian access from the Army and Navy pavilions to an exhibition recreating old Paris. Initially it was called the Military Exhibition Bridge or the Magdeburg Bridge, and only in 1908 it was named after the French general Jean Louis Debilly, who died in 1808. In 1906, the bridge was moved to a new permanent location opposite Rue Monutuncion.

Pedestrian bridge built on a metal frame supported by two stone piers on the banks of the river, and decorated with dark green ceramic tiles in such a way as to create the impression of waves. Along with Eiffel Tower, this is the second metal structure that characterizes the engineering achievements of its era. However, in 1941 the Debilly pedestrian bridge was in danger of disappearing when the president of the architectural society described it as a forgotten accessory of a bygone event. Fortunately, like its contemporaries Pont Alexandre III and the Austerlitz Viaduct, the Debilly Bridge was included in the supplementary register of historical monuments in 1966.

Bridge of Invalides The Pont des Invalides is an arched bridge in Paris over the Seine, located between the Alma and Alexandre III bridges near the Invalides.

The history of the bridge begins in the 1820s. French engineer Claude Louis Marie Henri Navier proposed a suspension bridge project in 1821. In 1824-1826 the bridge was under construction, but was not completed. In 1829, a new bridge with two pillars and three porticoes was opened. But due to wear and tear in 1850, access to the bridge was limited. In 1854, the structure was destroyed and construction began on a more modern bridge, completed a year later in time for the 1855 World Exhibition in Paris.

The constructed bridge is a four-arch bridge (two arches of 34 m each and two of 36 m each). The length of the bridge is 152 m, the height above the water is 18 m (the lowest bridge over the Seine within Paris). The width of the roadway is 14 m, two sidewalks are 2 m each. Since its commissioning, the bridge has been reconstructed several times. In the winter of 1880, two arches were destroyed, but were restored within a year. The last major reconstruction took place in 1956, when the sidewalks were widened.

The figure on the central pillar of the bridge symbolizes Napoleon's victories on land and sea, while the sculpted heads on the other pillars represent war trophies.

Carrousel Bridge

- bridge over the Seine in Paris from the Tuileries embankment to the Voltaire embankment.

The first bridge on this site was called Saint-Pierre since 1831. In 1834, King Louis Philippe I named it the Pont Carrousel because it was opposite the Place Carrousel, which took its name from the military riding demonstration held at this site under Louis XIV from 5 to 7 June 1662 on the occasion of the birthday of his son.


Statue of the "Seine" by sculptor Louis Petitot on the Carrousel Bridge, with the Louvre in the background.

The architect Antoine Remy Polonceau managed to create a design that was innovative in several aspects. On the one hand, it was an arch bridge design instead of the suspension bridges common at that time. A relatively new material was used: cast iron with wood. At each corner of the bridge, stone allegorical sculptures in the classical style by Louis Petitot (1846) were erected, symbolizing industry, abundance, the city of Paris and the Seine. The bridge had a length of 169.5 m and a width between railings of 11.85 m. It consisted of three arches of 47.67 m each.

In 1906, after seven decades of use, a major restoration was required: the wooden elements were replaced with iron ones. However, the bridge was too narrow for traffic in the twentieth century. In 1930, its height above the river was considered insufficient for river transport, and it was decided to abandon it in favor of a completely new structure several tens of meters downstream.

Architects Gaspard, Turri, Gustav Umbendstock and engineer Lang tried to preserve the silhouette of the bridge familiar to Parisians. The new three-arch reinforced concrete bridge, 33 m wide, built in 1935-1939, reaches the right bank opposite the Louvre in a direct line with the Arc de Triomphe Carrousel

Leopold Sédar Senghor Bridge (until 2006 - Solferino Bridge)

- a pedestrian bridge over the Seine in Paris between the Orsay Museum on the left bank and the Tuileries Garden on the right bank of the Seine.

For 100 years, the cast-iron Solferino Bridge, designed for the passage of carriages, connected the Quai Anatole France and the Tuileries Quai. It was created by the authors of the Pont des Invalides, Paul Martin Gallocher de Lagalicerie and Julius Savarin, and opened in 1861 by Napoleon III. The bridge was named after the French victory at the Battle of Solferino. Having lost its strength over time (especially due to collisions with barges), the bridge was demolished and replaced in 1961 by a steel pedestrian bridge, which was in turn destroyed in 1992.

A new pedestrian bridge was built in 1997-1999. under the direction of engineer and architect Mark Mimram. This metal bridge is unique in architecture and is covered with wood from exotic Brazilian Tabebuia trees, which gives it a light and warm look. The strength of the bridge, however, is beyond doubt - the foundations on both sides are concrete columns, buried 15 m into the ground, and the structure itself consists of six 150-ton parts, built by the Eiffel Engineering Company

Small Bridge

- a stone bridge over the Seine in the center of Paris, leading from the left bank to the Ile de la Cité. The bridge is located between the Pont Saint-Michel and the Double Bridge and connects the Quai de Montebello in the 4th arrondissement with the Quai Saint-Michel in the 5th arrondissement.

Bridge Changed The Bridge of Changers (French: Pont au Change) is a bridge in the center of Paris, spanning the Seine River. The Pont de Change is located on the border of the 1st and 4th arrondissements and connects the Ile de la Cité at the level of the Palais de Justice and the Conciergerie with the right bank near the Chatelet theater. The bridge got its name because of the many money changers’ shops that were previously located in the houses that built up the bridge until 1788.

Bridge length: 103 m
Width: 30 m, including two sidewalks 6 m wide each
Type of construction: arch bridge with 3 arched spans 31 m long Architects: Paul-Martin Gallocher de Lagalisserie and Paul Vaudry Construction took place from 1658 to 1660 Metro: lines 1, 4, 7, 11, 14, Châtelet station

The Change Bridge, lined with buildings. 1756 The first wooden bridge, located on the site of the current one, was presumably built under King Charles the Bald in the 9th century after the cessation of attacks on Paris by the Normans.

The bridge was a continuation of the Rue Saint-Denis, leading from Flanders, and led directly to the royal palace on the Ile de la Cité, for which it was named Royal (Pont du Roy). To protect the Cité, the Grand Châtelet fortress was built on the right bank in 1130, but after the construction of the city wall under Philip II Augustus, the fortress lost its defensive function and served as a prison until 1802. Now this place is the Chatelet Square.


As was customary in the Middle Ages, the bridge was so densely packed with buildings that it was impossible to see the river. 140 houses and 112 shops and workshops of artisans, as well as a mill, made the bridge an important financial point in Paris. Money and goods were exchanged on the bridge, hence the name of the bridge. Over the next centuries, the bridge changed its name several more times: Grand Pont (1273), pont à Coulons, pont aux Colombes, pont aux Meuniers, pont de la Marchandise, pont aux Marchands and pont aux Oiseaux. The Money Changer Bridge often collapsed and had to be repaired frequently. On this occasion, the 17th century poet Claude Le Petit wrote:

Even if they make you look bad and they’re always fixing you, it doesn’t matter! You are rightly called the Bridge of Changers: After all, you are always changing.

After the royal court moved to the Louvre, the road from the palace to Notre Dame, where the royal retinue went to services, passed along the Changes Bridge, so it was decided to decorate the bridge with sculptures of French kings, including the young Louis XIV. Today these sculptures are exhibited in the Louvre.

Demolition of houses on the bridge changed in 1788 (painting by Hubert Robert)
At the end of the 18th century, all buildings from the bridge were demolished. The bridge acquired its modern appearance during the Second Empire under Baron Osman. In 1860, engineers Romani and Vaudreuil erected a modern bridge during the reconstruction of the entire city. The axis of the bridge is perpendicular to the river, the structure is a continuation of the perspective of Palace Boulevard, the new Chatelet Square and then the Sevastopol and Strasbourg boulevards.

Mirabeau Bridge
The Mirabeau Bridge is a bridge over the Seine in Paris, built in 1895-1897. Since April 29, 1975 it has the status of a historical monument.

The bridge connects the XV (Left Bank) and XVI (Right Bank) municipal districts of Paris. It also connects Rue de la Convention on the Left Bank with Rue Remusat on the Right Bank. On the left bank there is a RER station, line “C” “Gare Javel”, nearby is the metro station “Javel-André Citroën”

The decision to build the bridge was made by the President of the Republic, Sadi Carnot, on January 12, 1893. The bridge was designed by engineer Paul Rabel with the participation of engineers Jean Rezal and Amadeus Albi. The bridge is named after the French politician Honore Gabriel Mirabeau.

The bridge is 173 m long and 20 m wide (12 m for the roadway and 4 m for the sidewalks). The main arch of the bridge is 93 m long, the two side arches are 32.4 m long. The two pylons of the bridge are built in the form of ships, decorated with allegorical statues by the sculptor Jean-Antoine Enjalbert

As you know, Paris was born on a small island on the Seine River and it was from here that the history of the great city began. Therefore, the first crossings in Paris connected the island of Cite with the right and left banks of the Seine. At first they were built of wood, but later they were converted into stone, and many were even built with buildings. The history of inhabited bridges in Paris is not simple. The first shops of artisans and merchants appeared already in the 12th century, and by the 15th century the first residential buildings and shops could be seen on the Notre-Dame Bridge (Pont Notre-Dame). Thanks to them, he quickly became shopping mall cities. However, by order of the king in 1786, all buildings were demolished from the bridge.

New bridge

New bridge

The new bridge (pont Neuf) is in fact the oldest surviving bridge. Its construction began at the end of the 16th century, when Paris already had 4 river crossings, but they could not cope with the ever-increasing traffic. He was needed in order to defuse the situation on Memenalny and the Notre Dame Bridge. The peculiarity of this viaduct at that time was that there were no buildings on it.

This, in turn, caused indignation among merchants, who were accustomed to seeing bridges in Paris lined with shops and residential buildings. Undoubtedly, this building is one of the symbols of the city, for which it was repeatedly mentioned in the works of artists and writers.

The Bridge of Changes (Pont de Change), on its site, like on the site of most crossings in the center of Paris, was originally a wooden structure in the 9th century. Subsequently, around 1638, a stone bridge was built, on which extensive construction of houses began - over the entire period there were about 140 houses and more than 100 money changers’ shops, for which it was named so.

The royal development agreement stated that all buildings must correspond and fit together, all structures must be made of the same material and be on the same level. As a result, all the buildings on the bridge looked like two rows of identical houses with shops and shops on the ground floor, which overlooked the narrow street between them.

Pont des Arts

Pont des Arts

By the time the first iron bridge of the Arts (Pont des Arts) appeared in Paris, inhabited bridges already had a reputation as unsanitary, dangerous and anti-aesthetic structures. This viaduct, built in 1801-1804 by order of Emperor Napoleon, is now pedestrian.

Therefore, many passersby stop here just to have a snack or sit on a bench, because the view from the building and the place itself are of extraordinary beauty. This crossing connects the Louvre Museum and the French Academy, and since the Louvre was previously called the Palace of Arts, the bridge began to be called accordingly.

The Alexander III Bridge (Pont Alexandre III) is directly related to Russia. It was built in 1896-1900 in honor of the conclusion of a military alliance between France and Russia. And it was named after the father of Emperor Nicholas II, Alexander III, who, during construction, himself laid one of the stones at the foundation of the structure.

Many consider this bridge to be the most luxurious in Paris. And indeed, even from afar, the structure sparkles with gilded figures located on four 17-meter columns and at the same time amazes with its lightness, because the bridge is single-span.


One of the most beautiful and romantic European cities, Paris, can safely be called the city of bridges. After all, here there are no more or less of them, but as many as 37. And if not for them, the Seine River, dividing Paris into 2 parts, would become a serious obstacle not only for tourists, but also for the Parisians themselves. The bridges were built in different eras, which accordingly affected their appearance. It is difficult to find a bridge in Paris that is similar to another. And each bridge certainly has its own story, amazing and unique... I’ll tell you about some of them:


1. The famous Parisian bridge - the New Bridge." Oddly enough, (Pont Neuf) is one of the oldest bridges in Paris. The New Bridge crosses the Spit of the Ile de la Cité and consists of two parts, where one axis is not an exact continuation of the other. The southern part the bridge has 5 spans, the northern one - 7. Its construction began under Henry III in 1578, and ended under Henry IV in 1606. In its middle part, the New Bridge rests on two islands, European and Patriarchal, where a little later there was a square with an equestrian monument to Henry IV was built.Unlike other bridges of the time, the Pont Neuf was not built up with houses and had sidewalks for pedestrians. For many decades, the Pont Neuf was one of the busiest places in Paris: on both sides there were temporary shops and booths that disappeared only in the 19th century, but Pont Neuf is still favorite place meetings and walks of Parisians and guests of the capital. This is the most romantic bridge in Paris, connecting the right and left banks of the Seine with the western part of the Ile de la Cité.

2. The Pont au Change Bridge, built in the 9th century under King Charles the Bald, connects the right bank of the Seine with the Ile de la Cité. In medieval times, this bridge was chosen by numerous shopkeepers and money changers. It was the main financial artery of the French capital. The bridge was so densely lined with rows of shops that it looked more like a flea market, and the Parisians walking along it simply did not see the river. At the end of the 18th century, when shops and houses were demolished, the bridge became “poor and bare.” The bridge acquired its current appearance during the Second Empire and has not changed since then.

3. Bridge Saint-Michel (Pont St.Michael), built under Napoleon III. It is decorated with the emperor's monogram. From the bridge begins Boulevard Saint-Michel, leading to the Latin Quarter.

4. Notre-Dame Bridge
In 52 BC. The Romans came to these lands. Local residents, defending themselves from the enemy, destroyed access routes to the island - they burned bridges. However, this measure had a short-term effect, and the city was soon conquered. Active construction began on the Cite, during which the Petit Bridge was reborn from wood, and Notre Dame from stone. The next important stage in the life of the bridges came in 886, after the siege of the city by the Normans. Petit Pont was demolished by the waters of the overflowing Seine, and it was rebuilt, and Notre Dame, damaged during the hostilities, was replaced with a new Pont au Change, built downstream. The last time it was reconstructed was in the 19th century. Nowadays, rollerbladers love it. And the numerous tourists rushing to famous cathedral An army of caricaturists, cartoonists and simply artists are waiting for Notre Dame on the bridge.

5.Pedestrian bridge Pont au Double)

6. Pont des Arts was the first railway bridge over the Seine, built in 1802. It connects the buildings of the French Academy with the Louvre, and is very popular among tourists. Pont des Arts was captured by many famous French artists, including Auguste Renoir and Nicolas de Staël. Pont des Arts is for pedestrians only. No one bothers tourists there. Therefore, many, having spread a newspaper, simply settle down to have a snack right on the bridge.

7. The two-level bridge Bir-Hakeim (Pont de Bir-Hakeim) is quite unusual. There is a metro along it (the upper level is reserved for trains), and cars pass through, and people pass by. It was built in 1949 according to the design of G. Eiffel, and the Bir Akeim Bridge was named after the place in Libya where a battle took place between French and German troops in 1942. On the eastern side of the bridge is Wederkinch's sculptural work "Rising France". From the Bir Akeim bridge, Swan (or Swan) Island begins, stretching in a narrow strip along the Seine. The bridge offers a beautiful view of Swan Alley.

8. The Tournelle Bridge (Pont de la Tournelle) connects the island of Saint-Louis with the left bank of the Seine. It was built in 1651 on the site of the wooden King's Bridge, which had stood here since 1370. The bridge is crowned with a statue of Saint Genevieve, who saved Paris from the Huns.

9. Austerlitz Bridge (Pont d'Austerlitz) The length of the bridge, located between Place Maza and the Austerlitz and Saint-Bernard embankments, is 200 m, width - 32 m. It was opened on March 5, 1807 and named in honor of the victory won by the army of Napoleon I over Russian and Austrian troops on December 2, 1805, near the village of Austerlitz. The names of the French military leaders killed in the Battle of Austerlitz are engraved on the ornaments decorating the bridge. In 1815, at the request of the allies who occupied Paris, the bridge was renamed the Royal (Jardin du Roi) ), but this name was not accepted by the Parisians.In 1830, the bridge officially received its original name again.

10. The remarkable Sully Bridge. In the Russian tradition of abbreviating doubled consonants, it is sometimes called the Suli bridge. In the original language the name sounds like Le pont de Sully. The Sully Bridge in Paris connects the Ile Saint-Louis or the Ile Saint-Louis with both banks of the Seine River. The design received its name in honor of Duke Sully, who was the head of the French government under Henry IV. If you walk from the Boulevard Saint-Germain over the bridge and then follow the Boulevard Henri IV, you end up at the Place de la Bastille. The photo shows one of the parts of the bridge.

11. I couldn’t find the name of the metro bridge.

12. Bercy Bridge. It was built between 1831 and 1832, during the reign of Louis Philippe. Since its existence, this bridge, 175 m long and 40 m wide, has undergone many reconstructions and changes. As planned, the bridge was supposed to become a kind of entrance and exit from the city itself. But due to the fact that Paris was constantly growing, as a result it became a connecting link between the left and right banks of the city. In 1992, thanks to the architectural mastery of Christian Langlois, the Bercy Bridge was extended by three additional lanes and now carries the 6th metro line.

13. Tolbiac Bridge (Pont de Tolbiac).

14. Pont Alexandre III, perhaps the most impressive and elegant in Paris, leads from the Champs-Elysees on the Right Bank to the Invalides on the left. The decoration of this structure, containing figures of pegasuses, angels and nymphs, is made in a playful and at the same time noble eclectic Beaux-Arts style, combining the best traditions of the French Baroque and Italian Renaissance. The luxurious Pont Alexandre III, named after the Russian Emperor, was founded by Nicholas II in 1896 in honor of the Franco-Russian alliance and opened on the eve of the 1900 World Exhibition.

15.