Rue Cremieux Khod
Rue Crémieux stretches just 144 meters between Avenue Ledru-Rollin and Rue de Lyon, but it's arguably Paris's most photogenic residential street.
About Rue Cremieux Khod
Rue Crémieux stretches just 144 meters between Avenue Ledru-Rollin and Rue de Lyon, but it's arguably Paris's most photogenic residential street. You'll find 35 terraced houses painted in soft pastels: mint green, powder blue, coral pink, and butter yellow. Built in 1865 as affordable workers' housing, these two-story homes now showcase wrought-iron balconies, wooden shutters, and flower boxes that residents maintain with obvious pride.
Walking the cobblestones feels like stepping into a storybook, especially when morning light hits the facades. The street stays pedestrian-only, so you can wander freely and admire details like climbing ivy, vintage street lamps, and hand-painted house numbers. It's dead quiet except for the occasional resident heading to work or tending their plants. You'll spend most of your time here taking photos, trying to capture that perfect Instagram shot of the curved cobblestone perspective.
Honestly, fifteen minutes is enough unless you're a serious photographer. The street gets absolutely mobbed between 10am and 6pm, turning this peaceful residential area into a tourist circus. Residents have posted multiple signs asking for quiet and respect, which many visitors ignore. Come early morning or evening when the light is better anyway, and you'll have the place mostly to yourself.
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