Further information on Eiffel-Tower to Palais de Chaillot walk via Place d’Iéna
Walk from Eiffel-Tower to Palais-de-Chaillot: a short walk particularly rich in Points of interest
First, the Eiffel Tower, often considered the emblem of France, but in fact much more than that (See our post “Eiffel tower, technical and commercial achievement, symbol of France“).
Six museums on the walk itinerary
What’s more, this walk is particularly “endowed” with museums: no fewer than 6, which will appear in the order below during the walk. Each of them has its own entry in our database. To access them, click on the corresponding link.
- Quai Branly museum – Jacques Chirac museum of Arts Premiers
- Sewers of Paris and its museum: the sewers in action
- Guimet Asian-Arts Museum, world-renowned and its Buddhist Pantheon
- City-of-architecture Museum, 15 centuries of models, paintings and moldings
- Navy Museum with a new look – Collections since Louis XV
- Museum of Man and research center on past and future
Do you have to visit them all? Why not, but it would take more than a day, as they are so rich in curiosities and documentation.
A remembrance and a pilgrimage
What’s more, this walk passes close to the place where Princess Diana accidentally lost her life. It has become a place of pilgrimage. A poignant tribute 25 years later, to be read by clicking on “A tragic night’: Princess Diana’s fatal Paris crash, 25 years on”.
A spotlight for photographers
Finally, the view from the Trocadero esplanade of the Eiffel Tower, Paris, the Trocadero Gardens and its fountain is majestic enough to be a meeting point for amateur and professional photographers from all over the world.
So there’s a lot more to this walk than just walking from the Eiffel Tower to the Palais-de-Chaillot!
Relaxation breaks in addition to the Points of Interest on the Walk from Eiffel-Tower to Palais-de-Chaillot
The icing on the cake are the “Relaxation Breaks” along the way – whenever possible, of course. It could be a coffee break, a restaurant break, a garden break, an art gallery break, a patisserie, a wine bar, etc… We’ve added this “encore” itinerary that follows the route of our “basic” walks. So you can shop, dine and drink, and not just anywhere: all the recommended shops have been rated from 0 to 5.0 by dozens of Tourists who have preceded you on the same walk. What’s more, we’ve eliminated from our lists all those with scores below 4.0. So you should avoid prohibitive prices, poor service and touristy scams. And, of course, you can rate the shops you’ve visited yourself, thanks to a quick and easy evaluation form you can leave us on the site.
The next walks you could follow …
It’s worth knowing that another equally interesting walk, less than 2 km long, starts at the Palais de Chaillot, where this walk ends, on the Esplanade de Chaillot. This new promenade leads to the Arc de Triomphe, passing through places of remembrance and the luxury and haute couture addresses of the “Golden Triangle“. This other walk is called Walk Palais de Chaillot to Arc-de-Triomphe via George V avenue.
You can continue your tour of Paris along the Champs-Elysées to Place de la Concorde (Walk Arc-de-Triomphe to Place-de-la-Concorde via the Champs-Elysées Avenue). From there, you have two options: a stroll to the Louvre (Walk from Louvre to Concord-Square via Tuileries and Place-Vendôme), followed by a walk to Notre Dame and Ile de la Cité (Stroll in the Ile-de-la-Cité of Paris, 800 year history). Or, alternatively, “go back up” along the promenade Opera-Garnier to Grand-Magasin Lafayette and Concorde-Square to the Madeleine, the Opéra Garnier and the department stores (Galerie Lafayette and Printemps).