The glass-roofed Galerie Vivienne, an 1823 covered passage in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris
75002 · The 2nd arrondissement of Paris

Paris's best-
kept secret

Glass-roofed covered passages, the old Bourse, the royal Place des Victoires and the food-lover's Rue Montorgueil. Central yet uncrowded, the 2nd is the smallest arrondissement — and the most quietly Parisian corner of the Right Bank.

Photo : Galerie Vivienne · Wikimedia Commons
Things to do

Tickets & experiences in the 2nd

The 2nd is made for walking: glass-roofed passages, a market street that has fed Paris for centuries and the city's most atmospheric food tours. A hand-picked selection — most options offer free cancellation.

★ Most booked

Covered Passages Walking Tour

A guided stroll through the hidden glass-roofed arcades — Galerie Vivienne, the Passage des Panoramas and beyond — with the stories of 19th-century Paris along the way.

from €34 Book
Food tour

Rue Montorgueil Food Tour

Taste your way down "the belly of Paris" — pastries from Stohrer (1730), cheese, charcuterie and a glass of wine — with a local guide on the city's great market street.

from €99 Book
Tasting

Paris Cheese & Wine Tasting

Sit down to a guided French cheese-and-wine tasting in the heart of the Right Bank — a relaxed, delicious introduction to the regions on a single board.

from €55 Book
Walking tour

Secret Paris Guided Walk

Leave the crowds behind: courtyards, galleries and the quiet streets around the Bourse and Place des Victoires, told by a guide who knows their history.

from €25 Book
City pass

Paris Museum Pass & Tickets

The 2nd sits minutes from the Louvre and the Opéra. Skip-the-line tickets and multi-day passes for the great sights, all bookable in advance.

from €32 Book
Seine cruise

Seine River Cruise

Ten minutes south of the passages, the river awaits. A sightseeing cruise past Notre-Dame, the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower — the classic Paris panorama.

from €17 Book
Passages & savoir-vivre

Where Paris invented shopping

Long before department stores, Parisians strolled, shopped and dined under the glass roofs of the 2nd. Today its passages, market street and old textile quarter make it one of the city's most rewarding neighbourhoods to wander.

The covered passages

The 2nd holds the densest cluster of Paris's 19th-century arcades — Galerie Vivienne, the Panoramas, the Grand-Cerf — glass-roofed corridors of bookshops, wine cellars and tea rooms.

Rue Montorgueil

The "belly of Paris" — a pedestrian market street of bakers, cheesemongers, oyster bars and cafés, anchored by Stohrer, the oldest pâtisserie in the city (1730).

Le Sentier

Paris's historic garment district, now its start-up quarter ("Silicon Sentier"). Wholesale fabric houses and cutting-edge offices share the same narrow medieval streets.

Place des Victoires

A perfect royal circle around an equestrian Louis XIV, lined with French fashion boutiques — Kenzo was born here. One of the most elegant addresses in central Paris.

Rue Sainte-Anne · Little Tokyo

Paris's Japanese quarter: ramen, udon and katsu counters, izakayas and grocers packed along Rue Sainte-Anne — a beloved lunch pilgrimage for locals.

Galerie Colbert & Vivienne

Side by side behind the Richelieu library: the rotunda of Galerie Colbert (home to art-history institutes) and the mosaic floors of Galerie Vivienne, the most beautiful passage of all.

Where to eat

Iconic tables of the 2nd

From the oldest pâtisserie in Paris to the bistro that relaunched modern French cooking, the 2nd punches far above its tiny size. A few addresses worth planning a day around.

Modern bistro · Sentier

Frenchie

5 Rue du Nil

Grégory Marchand's tiny dining room helped launch the Paris bistronomy movement — inventive seasonal cooking that books out weeks ahead. The wine bar opposite takes walk-ins.

Pâtisserie · Since 1730

Stohrer

51 Rue Montorgueil

The oldest pâtisserie in Paris, founded by Louis XV's pastry chef and birthplace of the baba au rhum. Its painted interior is a listed monument; the pastries are sublime.

Bouchon · Alain Ducasse

Aux Lyonnais

32 Rue Saint-Marc

A jewel-box 1890s bistro reviving the great dishes of Lyon under the Ducasse banner — quenelles, pike, and pralines in a glorious Belle Époque room.

Landmark · Since 1832

L'Escargot Montorgueil

38 Rue Montorgueil

The historic snail house at the foot of the market street, with a gilded ceiling and a near-two-century pedigree — Paris's most theatrical plate of escargots.

Bistro · In the passage

Bistrot Vivienne

4 Rue des Petits-Champs

Straddling the entrance to Galerie Vivienne, a classic all-day bistro and tea salon — the quintessential spot for coffee or lunch under the glass roof.

Japanese · Little Tokyo

Rue Sainte-Anne

Rue Sainte-Anne & around

The best ramen, udon and Japanese curry in Paris line this single street — Kunitoraya, Sapporo and a dozen counters where the lunchtime queue is part of the ritual.

Tourist guide

Must-see places in the 2nd arrondissement

Few headline monuments, but a wealth of hidden gems. These are the landmarks worth building your stroll around.

Covered passage · 1823

Galerie Vivienne

The most beautiful arcade in Paris — Pompeian mosaics by Facchina, a soaring glass roof and the historic Jousseaume bookshop. A listed monument, free to wander.

Covered passage · 1800

Passage des Panoramas

The oldest covered passage in Paris and an early home of gas lighting — today a warren of stamp dealers, bistros and wine bars between Bd Montmartre and Rue Saint-Marc.

Covered passage

Passage du Grand-Cerf

One of the tallest arcades in the city, its glass roof rising nearly 12 metres over jewellers, design studios and the famous hanging shop signs.

Monument · Place de la Bourse

Palais Brongniart

The neoclassical temple of the old Paris stock exchange (1826), ringed by Corinthian columns — the architectural heart of the Bourse quarter.

Royal square

Place des Victoires

A circular square designed for Louis XIV, whose gilded equestrian statue stands at its centre — now framed by elegant French fashion houses.

Culture · Rue de Richelieu

Bibliothèque Richelieu (BnF)

The historic home of the national library, with the breathtaking Labrouste and Oval reading rooms and a museum of treasures — newly restored and open to all.

Before you go

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Get your bearings

The 75002 (2nd arrondissement) on the map

Every passage, landmark and table of the 2nd on one interactive map. Filter by category, or click a place to locate it and open its links.

Map © Leaflet · © OpenStreetMap contributors · © CARTO
Orientation

Understanding Paris & its transport

Paris is divided into 20 arrondissements that spiral outward clockwise from the centre, like a snail. The lower the number, the more central the district — the 2nd sits just north of the very centre, on the Right Bank, wedged between the Louvre (1st) and the Grands Boulevards (9th).

At under one square kilometre it is the smallest arrondissement, and entirely walkable in an afternoon. The Métro is still the quickest way in and out: lines 3, 4, 8 and 9 cross it, and the giant Châtelet–Les Halles RER hub is minutes to the south.

Since 2025 the system has been simplified: paper tickets are gone, replaced by the contactless Navigo Easy card or your phone. A single Métro/RER ticket now costs a flat fare regardless of distance, and a day pass quickly pays for itself if you ride often.

For door-to-door directions, the Bonjour RATP and Citymapper apps are the most reliable companions.

Métro / RER single€2.55
Bus / tram single€2.05
Day pass (unlimited)€12.30
Navigo Week pass~€31
Airport ticket (CDG/Orly)€14
Navigo Easy card€2 (reusable)
Getting around

How to reach the 2nd arrondissement

Dead-centre and superbly connected, the 75002 is easy to reach by metro or from either airport. Here are the essentials.

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By metro

  • 3 Bourse · Sentier Quatre-Septembre
  • 4 Eastern edge Étienne Marcel · Réaumur
  • 89 North Grands Boulevards
  • 714 West edge Pyramides
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By RER & train

  • ABD Hub Châtelet–Les Halles
  • Walk to the RER ~5 min south
  • Gare du Nord / Est ~10 min by metro
  • Eurostar (Gare du Nord) ~10 min
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From the airports

  • Orly (metro line 14 direct) 35–45 min
  • Roissy–Charles de Gaulle 45–60 min
  • Le Bourget 30–40 min
  • Beauvais 1h15–1h30

The Paris Métro at a glance

One of the world's densest networks — 16 lines, over 300 stations, a train every 2–4 minutes. You're never far from a station.
1 2 3 3b 4 5 6 7 7b 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
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Colour & number coded. Each line has a unique number and colour. Follow the line colour and the name of the terminus in your direction — that's how platforms are signposted.
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Frequent. Trains run roughly every 2 minutes at peak and 4–8 minutes off-peak, from ~5:30 am to ~1:15 am (2:15 am Fri–Sat).
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Free transfers. Change lines as often as you like within the métro/RER on a single ticket, valid up to 2 hours, as long as you don't exit the gates.
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Line 14 is automatic. Fully driverless and the fastest line — from Pyramides on the 2nd's edge it now reaches Orly airport directly.
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For the 2nd: lines 3, 4, 8 and 9 cross the arrondissement — Bourse, Sentier, Réaumur-Sébastopol, Grands Boulevards and Richelieu-Drouot — with the Châtelet RER hub just south.
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Apps. Bonjour RATP and Citymapper give live routes, platform exits and disruptions — far easier than paper maps.
Tickets: the paper ticket is gone — load journeys onto a contactless Navigo Easy card (€2) or your phone.
Watch your belongings at peak hours and on tourist-heavy lines (3, 4); keep bags in front of you.
Good to know

Frequently asked questions

What is there to see in the 2nd arrondissement (75002)?
The 2nd holds Paris's richest collection of 19th-century covered passages — Galerie Vivienne, the Passage des Panoramas (the oldest, 1800) and the Passage du Grand-Cerf — plus the former stock exchange (Palais Brongniart), the royal Place des Victoires, the Richelieu site of the national library and the food-lover's Rue Montorgueil.
How do I get to the 2nd arrondissement?
It is served by metro lines 3 (Bourse, Sentier), 4 (Étienne Marcel, Réaumur-Sébastopol), 8 and 9 (Grands Boulevards, Richelieu-Drouot), and lines 7 and 14 at Pyramides on its western edge. The Châtelet–Les Halles RER hub (A, B, D) is about five minutes south. From CDG allow 45–60 minutes; Orly is 35–45 minutes via metro line 14.
Where should I stay in the 75002?
The 2nd is one of the best-value central bases in Paris — quieter than the 1st yet walking distance from the Louvre, the Marais and the Opéra. Boutique hotels cluster around Rue Montorgueil, the Sentier and the Grands Boulevards. Use the booking engine above to compare options for your dates.
Is the 2nd arrondissement good for food?
Exceptionally. Rue Montorgueil is one of Paris's great market streets and home to Stohrer, the oldest pâtisserie in the city (1730). The Sentier holds celebrated modern bistros such as Frenchie, while Rue Sainte-Anne is Paris's Japanese quarter for ramen and udon.
Are the covered passages free to visit?
Yes. The passages are free public walkways, generally open from around 8:30 am to 8:30 pm (some close on Sundays). Galerie Vivienne, the Passage des Panoramas and the Passage du Grand-Cerf can all be explored on your own or on a guided covered-passages walking tour.
Before you go

Plan your stay

A few practical essentials to make your visit to the 2nd arrondissement smooth and stress-free.

🗓️

Best time to visit

Spring and early autumn bring the mildest weather and the prettiest light in the passages. Mornings are best for photos — the arcades and Rue Montorgueil are quietest before 11 am.

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Book ahead

Reserve top tables (Frenchie books out weeks in advance) and any guided passage or food tour online. Nearby Louvre and Opéra tickets are best bought timed and in advance.

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Money & tipping

Cards are accepted almost everywhere. Service is included by law (service compris); rounding up or leaving a few euros for great service is appreciated but never expected.

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Eat like a local

Do Rue Montorgueil as a morning crawl — a pain au chocolat here, oysters and a glass of white there. Save Rue Sainte-Anne for a Japanese lunch, and book bistros for dinner.

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Opening hours

Passages open roughly 8:30 am–8:30 pm; some shops close Sundays. Lunch is served 12–2:30 pm and dinner from 7:30 pm. The BnF Richelieu reading rooms and museum keep their own hours.

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Useful to know

Tap water is safe and free in restaurants (une carafe d'eau). Emergency number is 112. A simple "Bonjour" on entering shops and cafés is the key to warm service.

Plan your trip

Book with trusted partners

Compare stays, tours and experiences across the platforms travellers know best.

The Visit75 network

Explore the 20 arrondissements of Paris

Each Paris arrondissement has its own guide. Hover the map to reveal a district's name, then click to open its dedicated site — you are currently in the 2nd.

🌍
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