Place du Parlement
Place du Parlement is Bordeaux's most perfectly preserved 18th-century square, where André Portier's 1760s design created a textbook example of Louis XV symmetry.
About Place du Parlement
Place du Parlement is Bordeaux's most perfectly preserved 18th-century square, where André Portier's 1760s design created a textbook example of Louis XV symmetry. You'll find yourself surrounded by matching cream limestone facades with delicate wrought-iron balconies, all wrapped around ancient cobblestones with a Victorian fountain centerpiece from 1865. The arcades shelter cafés, wine bars, and boutiques in what feels like an open-air salon from the age of enlightenment.
The square works as both architectural showcase and living neighborhood center. Morning light hits the eastern facades beautifully, casting geometric shadows through the arcade columns onto the cobblestones. You'll hear the gentle splash of the central fountain mixing with café conversations echoing under the stone arches. The scale feels intimate rather than grand, more like a nobleman's courtyard than a public plaza.
Most visitors snap photos and move on, missing the real charm in the details. The southwest corner preserves original 18th-century shopfronts with carved wooden doors that most people walk past without noticing. Skip the overpriced tourist cafés on the north side and grab coffee from Café Parliament on the west arcade for €2.50. The square looks identical in every Instagram shot, so focus on the architectural details rather than wide-angle photos.
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