Pont de Pierre
Pont de Pierre spans the Garonne with 17 elegant arches, each one representing a letter in Napoleon Bonaparte's name.
About Pont de Pierre
Pont de Pierre spans the Garonne with 17 elegant arches, each one representing a letter in Napoleon Bonaparte's name. You'll walk across 486 meters of honey-colored stone while spotting white medallions bearing Napoleon's profile on every pier. The bridge took 12 years to build because workers used primitive diving bells to lay foundations in the shifting riverbed, and it remained Bordeaux's only river crossing until 1965.
Walking across feels like stepping through Bordeaux's timeline: the stone arches frame perfect views of the 18th-century facades along the Garonne's banks. Traffic runs alongside a pedestrian walkway, so you'll share space with cyclists and locals using it as their daily commute. The medallions are surprisingly detailed up close, and the bridge's gentle curve follows the river's natural bend, creating different perspectives of the city as you cross.
Most tourists rush across without noticing the craftsmanship, but the real reward is in the details. The third arch from the left bank has the clearest Napoleon medallion, and the stone changes color dramatically between morning and evening light. Skip the crowded sunset timing that every guide recommends: early morning gives you the bridge almost to yourself, and the light on the water is just as spectacular.
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