The Temple de la Sibylle above the lake of the Parc des Buttes-Chaumont in the 19th arrondissement of Paris
75019 · The 19th arrondissement of Paris

Parks, canals
& big culture

A romantic temple on a cliff above a lake, a science city and a great concert hall, canal quays for walking and summer swimming, and a hidden hilltop village — the 19th is the green, cultural, easygoing north-east of Paris.

Photo: the Temple de la Sibylle, Parc des Buttes-Chaumont · Wikimedia Commons
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Things to do

Tickets & experiences in the 19th

Two huge parks, a world-class concert hall, a science city and miles of canal — the 19th is made for slow days outdoors and big culture indoors. A hand-picked selection, most with free cancellation.

★ Park walk

Buttes-Chaumont & the temple

Climb to the Temple de la Sibylle on its island cliff, cross the suspension bridge and wander the lake and grotto of Paris's most romantic park.

★ Museum

Cité des Sciences

Europe's largest science museum at La Villette — hands-on exhibits, a planetarium, a submarine and the mirrored Géode dome cinema. Great for families.

from €12Official site
Concerts

Philharmonie de Paris

Jean Nouvel's spectacular concert hall — world-class orchestras, the Musée de la musique, and rooftop views over the park. Check the season's programme.

Outdoors

Canal cruise & quays

Stroll or cruise the Bassin de la Villette and Canal de l'Ourcq — café terraces, an open-air cinema in summer, and boat trips down to the Canal Saint-Martin.

from €19Book now
Museum

Musée de la musique

A collection of over a thousand instruments and art objects at the Philharmonie — from Baroque lutes to a Stradivarius and Frank Zappa's guitar.

from €10Official site
★ Village walk

The Mouzaïa village

Wander the cobbled lanes and flower-filled "villas" of the Mouzaïa, a hidden quarter of tiny low houses — one of the most surprising corners of Paris.

Discover

Two great parks & a city of culture

The 19th is built around two of the city's biggest green spaces — the romantic Buttes-Chaumont and the cultural Parc de la Villette — laced together by the Bassin de la Villette and the Canal de l'Ourcq. Add hilltop villages and a buzzing food and music scene and you have one of Paris's most easygoing arrondissements.

Parc des Buttes-Chaumont

Cliffs, a lake, a grotto with a waterfall and the Temple de la Sibylle on its island — Paris's most dramatic and romantic park, built on a former quarry in 1867.

Parc de la Villette

The largest park in Paris — themed gardens and red follies, a science city, a concert hall and an open-air cinema in summer. Culture and lawns side by side.

Philharmonie de Paris

Jean Nouvel's silvery concert hall, home to world-class orchestras and the Musée de la musique, with a rooftop terrace overlooking the park.

The canals

The Bassin de la Villette — the largest lake in Paris — and the Canal de l'Ourcq: quays for walking and cycling, café terraces, boat trips and summer swimming.

The Mouzaïa

A surprising hidden village of cobbled lanes and flower-filled "villas" of tiny low houses, on the heights between the Buttes-Chaumont and Place des Fêtes.

La Villette science city

The Cité des Sciences — Europe's largest science museum — with the mirrored Géode dome, a planetarium, a real submarine and the children's Cité des Enfants.

Where to eat & drink

Tables of the 19th

From a guinguette in the park to a canalside brewery and a historic meat-market brasserie, the 19th eats like a relaxed, local Paris — terraces, world flavours and waterside drinks, well off the tourist trail.

Guinguette · Tapas

Rosa Bonheur

2 Avenue de la Cascade (Buttes-Chaumont)

A beloved open-air guinguette inside the park — Mediterranean tapas, pizza and drinks, with concerts, DJs and dancing. A true Parisian institution.

Brasserie · Grill

Au Bœuf Couronné

188 Avenue Jean-Jaurès

A historic grill-brasserie of the old La Villette cattle market — superb steaks, a côte de bœuf carved at the table and a timeless Parisian dining room.

Bistro · French-Italian

Botza

86 Rue Botzaris

A warm neighbourhood bistro by the Buttes-Chaumont, blending Parisian brasserie classics with refined French-style pizza. A reliable local favourite.

Brewpub · Canal

Paname Brewing Company

41 bis Quai de la Loire

A craft micro-brewery on the Bassin de la Villette, with a floating terrace right on the water — house beers, sharing plates and one of the best canal sunsets.

Brasserie

Café de la Musique

213 Avenue Jean-Jaurès (La Villette)

A stylish brasserie on the Villette plaza, facing the Philharmonie — a handy, buzzing spot for a meal or a drink before a concert or a film.

Terrace · Drinks

Pavillon Puebla

Parc des Buttes-Chaumont (Avenue Darcel)

A leafy terrace tucked among the trees of the Buttes-Chaumont — tapas, cocktails and a festive après-park atmosphere in warm weather.

Tourist guide

Must-see places in the 19th arrondissement

A romantic park temple, a science city, a great concert hall and a canal basin — the places that give the green, cultural 19th its character.

Park · Free

Parc des Buttes-Chaumont

One of Paris's largest and most dramatic parks — cliffs, a lake, a grotto with a waterfall and the Temple de la Sibylle perched on an island. Open daily.

Museum · Paid

Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie

Europe's largest science museum at La Villette, with hands-on galleries, a planetarium, a submarine and the mirrored Géode dome cinema.

Concert hall · Paid

Philharmonie de Paris

Jean Nouvel's landmark concert hall, home to the Orchestre de Paris and the Musée de la musique, with a rooftop walk above the park.

Park · Free

Parc de la Villette

The biggest park in Paris — red follies, themed gardens, the Zénith, the Grande Halle and an open-air film festival on the great lawn each summer.

Waterside · Free

Bassin de la Villette

The largest artificial lake in Paris, lined with cinemas, café terraces and boat trips, and a supervised swimming spot in summer during Paris Plages.

Museum · Paid

Musée de la musique

Over a thousand instruments and art objects at the Philharmonie, from a Stradivarius to electric guitars, with daily mini-concerts among the displays.

Before you go

Weather in the 19th arrondissement

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Wind
Humidity
Live data for the Buttes-Chaumont · Open-Meteo
Map

Explore the 19th on the map

The parks, cultural venues, canals and tables of the north-east. Click a marker — or a list item — to see what's there.

Map © Leaflet · © OpenStreetMap contributors · © CARTO
Orientation

Understanding Paris & its transport

Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements that spiral outward clockwise from the centre, like a snail. The 19th is in the north-east, on the Right Bank, wrapping from the Buttes-Chaumont up to La Villette and the ring road at Porte de Pantin, Porte de la Villette and Porte des Lilas.

It is a large, green, working-class and cosmopolitan arrondissement, beloved by Parisian families and famously free of tourist crowds — all parks, canals and culture, with a lively food and nightlife scene around Jourdain and the Ourcq.

Since 2025 the system has been simplified: paper tickets are gone, replaced by the contactless Navigo Easy card or your phone. A single Métro/RER ticket is now a flat fare, and a day pass quickly pays for itself if you ride often.

For door-to-door directions, the Bonjour RATP and Citymapper apps are the most reliable companions.

Métro / RER single€2.55
Bus / tram single€2.05
Day pass (unlimited)€12.30
Navigo Week pass~€31
Airport ticket (CDG/Orly)€14
Navigo Easy card€2 (reusable)
Getting around

How to reach the 19th arrondissement

Metro lines 5 and 7 frame the arrondissement, line 7bis loops around the Buttes-Chaumont, and the tram T3b runs along the outer boulevards. Here are the essentials.

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By metro

  • 7b Buttes-Chaumont · Botzaris The park
  • 5 Porte de Pantin Philharmonie & Villette
  • 7 Porte de la Villette · Corentin Cariou Cité des Sciences
  • 7 Stalingrad · Riquet Bassin de la Villette
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Tram & hubs

  • Tram T3b Outer boulevards
  • Porte de Pantin 5 · T3b
  • Place des Fêtes 7b11
  • Stalingrad 275
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From the airports

  • Roissy–Charles de Gaulle RER B to Gare du Nord + 7, ~45 min
  • Orly line 14 to Châtelet + 7, ~55 min
  • Le Bourget ~30 min
  • Beauvais shuttle to Porte Maillot, ~1h20

The Paris Métro at a glance

One of the world's densest networks — 16 lines, over 300 stations, a train every 2–4 minutes. You're never far from a station.
1 2 3 3b 4 5 6 7 7b 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
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Colour & number coded. Each line has a unique number and colour. Follow the line colour and the name of the terminus in your direction — that's how platforms are signposted.
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Frequent. Trains run roughly every 2 minutes at peak and 4–8 minutes off-peak, from ~5:30 am to ~1:15 am (2:15 am Fri–Sat).
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Free transfers. Change lines as often as you like within the métro/RER on a single ticket, valid up to 2 hours, as long as you don't exit the gates.
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Line 7bis. The little 7bis shuttle loops around the Buttes-Chaumont — Buttes-Chaumont and Botzaris stations drop you right at the park gates.
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For the 19th: Buttes-Chaumont (7bis) for the park; Porte de Pantin (5) for the Philharmonie; Porte de la Villette (7) for the Cité des Sciences.
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Apps. Bonjour RATP and Citymapper give live routes, platform exits and disruptions — far easier than paper maps.
Tickets: the paper ticket is gone — load journeys onto a contactless Navigo Easy card (€2) or your phone.
Local tip: on a sunny day, walk the canal from Stalingrad up to La Villette, then loop back through the Buttes-Chaumont — the perfect 19th-arrondissement afternoon.
Good to know

Frequently asked questions

What is there to see in the 19th arrondissement (75019)?
The 19th is the green and cultural north-east of Paris: the romantic Parc des Buttes-Chaumont with its Temple de la Sibylle, lake and cliffs, the vast Parc de la Villette with the Philharmonie de Paris, the Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie and the Grande Halle, the Bassin de la Villette and Canal de l'Ourcq for waterside walks and summer swimming, and the picturesque hilltop village of the Mouzaïa.
What is the Parc des Buttes-Chaumont?
Opened in 1867 for Napoleon III, it is one of Paris's largest and most dramatic parks — a romantic English-style garden built on a former gypsum quarry, with steep cliffs, a lake, a grotto with a waterfall, suspension bridges and, at its summit on an island, the Temple de la Sibylle modelled on the Temple of Vesta at Tivoli.
What can you do at the Parc de la Villette?
The Parc de la Villette is the largest park in Paris and a great cultural hub: home to the Philharmonie de Paris (concert hall and music museum), the Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie (Europe's largest science museum, with the Géode dome cinema), the Grande Halle for exhibitions and concerts, the Zénith arena, themed gardens and an open-air cinema festival in summer.
Can you walk or swim along the canals in the 19th?
Yes — the Bassin de la Villette is the largest artificial lake in Paris, lined with cafés, cinemas and boat trips, and linked to the Canal de l'Ourcq and Canal Saint-Martin. The quays are popular for walking, cycling and picnics, and in summer part of the basin becomes a supervised open-air swimming area as part of Paris Plages.
How do I get to the 19th arrondissement?
The 19th is served by metro line 5 (Laumière, Ourcq, Porte de Pantin), line 7 (Stalingrad, Riquet, Crimée, Porte de la Villette, Corentin Cariou), line 7bis (Buttes-Chaumont, Botzaris, Place des Fêtes) and line 11 (Place des Fêtes, Télégraphe). Buttes-Chaumont and Botzaris (7bis) serve the park; Porte de Pantin (5) the Philharmonie; Porte de la Villette (7) the Cité des Sciences.
Before you go

Plan your stay

A few practical essentials to make your visit to the 19th arrondissement smooth and stress-free.

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Best time to visit

The parks and canals are loveliest spring to early autumn, with open-air cinema, swimming and guinguettes in summer. The Cité des Sciences and Philharmonie are great year-round, and quietest on weekday afternoons.

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Stay like a local

The 19th is residential, well-priced and well-connected — a relaxed, authentic base by the parks and canals, a short metro ride from the centre and Gare du Nord.

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Book ahead

Philharmonie concerts and the Cité des Sciences (especially the Géode and Cité des Enfants) sell timed tickets — reserve online. The parks and canal quays are free.

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Money & tipping

Cards are accepted almost everywhere; small kiosks may prefer cash. Service is included by law; rounding up for great service is appreciated, never expected.

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With the family

The Buttes-Chaumont and La Villette are made for kids — lawns, playgrounds, puppet shows, the Cité des Enfants and the Géode. Bring a picnic and make a day of it.

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Opening hours

Parks open daily from morning to dusk; most museums close on Mondays. Guinguettes and canal bars are often weekend- or season-dependent — check before you go.

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Explore the 20 arrondissements of Paris

Each Paris arrondissement has its own guide. Hover the map to reveal a district's name, then click to open its dedicated site — you are currently in the 19th.