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Paris · Les Halles / Châtelet

The Centre Pompidou

Museum

The Centre Pompidou, Paris · Les Halles / Châtelet
Category
Museum
Duration
2h 30m
Best Time
Morning
Entry
EUR 15
Rating
4.4 (57,259)
The place

About The Centre Pompidou

The Centre Pompidou houses Europe's most comprehensive modern art collection in a deliberately industrial building where escalators snake up the outside and colored pipes expose the guts of the structure. The permanent collection on floors 4 and 5 traces art from 1905 to today-you'll find Picasso's Blue Period works, Kandinsky's geometric abstractions, and entire rooms dedicated to Matisse's paper cutouts. The sixth floor terrace provides unobstructed views over the Marais rooftops to Sacré-Cœur.

The experience starts with the external escalator ride, which builds anticipation as Paris unfolds below. Inside, the galleries are spacious and well-lit, though the layout can feel maze-like on busy days. The contemporary sections (floor 4) showcase video installations and conceptual pieces that younger visitors gravitate toward, while floor 5's early modern works draw the art history crowd. The building itself competes for attention-those colorful pipes aren't just decorative, they're functional.

Skip the temporary exhibitions unless you're genuinely interested-they're overpriced and often underwhelming compared to the permanent collection. Start on floor 5 with the historical pieces, then work your way down. The museum shop is excellent but expensive. Avoid weekends entirely if possible; the narrow galleries become uncomfortably crowded, and you'll spend more time navigating people than looking at art.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Place Georges-Pompidou, 75004 Paris, France
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter through the rue Saint-Martin side entrance rather than the main plaza entrance-it's less crowded and leads directly to the ticket machines

The external escalator stops running 30 minutes before closing, so if you want the terrace views, don't wait until the end of your visit

Room 23 on floor 5 contains the best Picasso works but gets packed by 11am-visit first thing at opening or after 4pm when tour groups leave

Plan for about 2h 30m. Morning visits are typically less crowded.

The Centre Pompidou is in the Les Halles / Châtelet neighborhood of Paris. The address is Place Georges-Pompidou, 75004 Paris, France. The area is well-served by metro.

Morning visits, especially early, mean fewer crowds and better light for photos. Weekdays are significantly quieter than weekends.

Around the corner

Nearby in Les Halles / Châtelet

Rue Montorgueil
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Rue Montorgueil

Rue Montorgueil stretches five blocks through the 2nd arrondissement as a cobblestone pedestrian street lined with original storefronts from the 1700s. The fishmongers display whole sea bass on ice beds, cheese shops age wheels of Comté in their windows, and produce vendors arrange perfect pyramids of seasonal fruit. This isn't tourist theater - it's where locals from the surrounding apartments do their daily shopping. Walking from south to north, you'll pass Stohrer's ornate pastry displays, smell roasting coffee from Café Lomi, and dodge shopping baskets as residents debate fish freshness with vendors. The golden snail above L'Escargot Montorgueil catches everyone's attention, while the fromagerie at number 62 always has a line of people waiting for perfectly ripe camembert. Street cafes spill onto the cobbles with regulars nursing morning coffees and afternoon wines. The northern end near Rue Réaumur feels more residential and authentic, while the southern portion near Les Halles attracts more tourists. Skip the overpriced restaurants with English menus - instead, grab supplies from the food shops and picnic in nearby Square des Innocents. Tuesday through Thursday mornings offer the best selection before weekend crowds arrive.

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Saint-Eustache Church
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Saint-Eustache Church

Saint-Eustache dominates Les Halles with its peculiar architectural hybrid-Gothic bones clothed in Renaissance decoration that creates a surprisingly harmonious whole. The interior genuinely competes with Notre-Dame for drama, with those 33-meter vaults creating cathedral-like proportions that make you crane your neck. The Gonzalez organ installation and Keith Haring's bronze triptych add unexpected contemporary touches to this 16th-century space. Entering through the main western portal, you're immediately struck by the sheer scale-the nave stretches 100 meters and feels almost endless. The light filtering through the stained glass creates different moods throughout the day, and the acoustic properties are remarkable even when empty. Colbert's tomb sits in a side chapel, though most visitors walk past it without noticing. Most guides oversell the concerts-yes, they're free and the acoustics are incredible, but arrive 20 minutes early or you'll stand in the back. The church can feel tourist-heavy during midday, but early morning visits around 9 AM offer genuine solitude. Skip the exterior circuit-the real magic is entirely inside, and 30 minutes covers everything unless you're here for music.

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Quai de la Mégisserie
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Quai de la Mégisserie

Quai de la Mégisserie is Paris's living pet market, a 600-meter riverside stretch where bird sellers, plant shops, and aquarium suppliers have operated since the 1700s. You'll find everything from exotic parrots squawking in cages to rare orchids, goldfish bowls, and specialty garden tools. The wide sidewalk transforms into a proper promenade with unobstructed views across the Seine to the Conciergerie's medieval towers, while green bouquiniste book stalls line the water's edge. The experience feels like wandering through an outdoor menagerie mixed with a garden center. Canaries chirp from hanging cages outside storefronts, shop owners water elaborate plant displays on the sidewalk, and the air carries a mix of birdseed and river breeze. The promenade section near Pont Neuf offers the best Seine views, especially looking toward Île de la Cité. Weekend mornings bring the most activity, with locals selecting weekend plants and tourists snapping photos of the colorful bird displays. Most guides oversell this as a major attraction, but it's really a pleasant 20-minute stroll, not a destination. The pet shops are genuine businesses serving Parisians, not tourist traps, so prices for plants run €15-50 for decent specimens. Skip the stretch closest to Pont au Change where foot traffic gets heavy from nearby Châtelet. Focus on the Pont Neuf end where the plant selection is better and you'll have the riverside promenade mostly to yourself between tour groups.

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Westfield Forum des Halles
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Westfield Forum des Halles

Westfield Forum des Halles is Paris's largest underground shopping center, built beneath the old food market site and crowned by La Canopée's distinctive curved glass roof that filters natural light down to the underground levels. The complex spans four underground floors plus ground level, housing everything from H&M and Zara to a massive UGC cinema and Fnac electronics store, all connected to Châtelet-Les Halles station. Descending from street level feels like entering a modern mall dropped into medieval Paris. The upper floors get decent natural light from the glass canopy, but the deeper you go, the more typical shopping center it becomes. Level -1 has most of the mainstream fashion, Level -2 connects to the cinema and has better dining options, while Level -3 houses the sports stores and connects directly to multiple metro platforms. It's genuinely useful for practical shopping and transit connections, but don't come expecting Parisian charm. The crowds can be overwhelming, especially weekday evenings when commuters mix with shoppers. Stick to Levels -1 and -2 for the best shops, and use the Rue Rambuteau entrance to avoid the main street-level chaos. The rooftop garden is pleasant but small – more of a brief respite than a destination.

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BHV Marais
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BHV Marais

BHV Marais is a century-old department store that's become an unlikely tourist attraction thanks to its legendary basement hardware section. Four subterranean levels house everything from specialty screws sorted by millimeter to vintage-style door handles, plus a surprising selection of kitchen gadgets that puts most cooking stores to shame. The upper floors sell standard fashion and cosmetics, but locals skip those entirely for the hardware wonderland below. The basement feels like a French hardware fever dream-narrow aisles packed floor-to-ceiling with meticulously organized supplies you didn't know existed. You'll find elderly Parisians debating drill bits next to confused tourists photographing the walls of tiny drawers. The top-floor restaurant offers decent food with views of Hôtel de Ville's facade, though it's overpriced and feels like an afterthought. Honestly, come for the basement spectacle and skip everything else. The hardware section is genuinely fascinating for about 45 minutes-longer if you're actually renovating something. The fashion floors are unremarkable, and the restaurant markup isn't worth the view. Best visited on weekday afternoons when it's less crowded and you can properly navigate the basement's maze-like layout without fighting through weekend crowds.

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Comptoir de la Gastronomie
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Comptoir de la Gastronomie

This 130-year-old charcuterie operates exactly as it did when Les Halles was Paris's central food market-the front counter displays dozens of terrines, pâtés, and prepared dishes behind glass, while the cramped back dining room seats maybe 30 people at marble-topped tables. The foie gras selection runs from affordable mousse to premium whole lobes, and their cassoulet comes in proper earthenware pots. You'll squeeze past other customers browsing the narrow shop front, where staff in white coats slice charcuterie to order and wrap purchases in brown paper. The restaurant feels like eating in someone's storage room-wine bottles line the walls, servers navigate tight spaces between tables, and the kitchen is basically visible from most seats. Lunch service moves efficiently despite the cramped quarters. The shop prices beat most gourmet stores, but the restaurant markup is steep-a simple terrine costs three times more plated than purchased from the counter. Skip the touristy restaurant unless you're determined to eat where Hemingway allegedly dined. Focus on the retail side: their rillettes and duck confit travel well, and the staff actually knows their products unlike most Paris gourmet shops.

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