The Avenue Victor-Hugo is an avenue in the 16th arrondissement of Paris. It begins at the Place Charles de Gaulle (also known as the Place de l'Étoile) and ends at the Place Tattegrain (becoming the Avenue Henri-Martin). It is one of the twelve avenues beginning at the Étoile, and the second longest of the twelve, after the Avenue des Champs-Élysées.
Description
editThe avenue junction with the Étoile in between those of the Avenue Foch and the Avenue Kléber. It runs along the Chaillot Hill. Halfway along it is the Place Victor-Hugo and the Line 2 Metro station Victor Hugo. Originally named the Avenue de Saint-Cloud, the avenue was renamed after Hugo on 28 February 1881 (the day after his 79th birthday).[1]
Crossing the whole northern part of the 16th arrondissement, over 1.825 km from the Étoile to the Muette, it is an average of 36 m wide (its first part, between the Étoile and the Place Victor-Hugo, is wider than the second part, between the Place Victor Hugo and the Place Tattegrain). Planted with trees and decorated with a statue of its namesake at the junction with the Avenue Henri-Martin, it is one of the most prestigious avenues in Paris.
Notable buildings
editThe avenue includes several buildings by Pierre Humbert, such as numbers 122 and 167 (the latter built in 1911 for Humbert's family). Humbert also built number 124, on the site of the hôtel particulier where Victor Hugo spent his last days (having as his address "Mr Victor Hugo, In his avenue, in Paris").[2][3] The 1907 building's magnificent façade won several prizes and includes a sculpture of Hugo's face by Fonquergne. The Haitian president Lysius Salomon died at number 3 on 19 October 1888.
References
edit- ^ ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 avenue Victor Hugo, sur Paris.fr, Mairie de Paris, 9 juin 2008 (consulté le 5 juin 2011)↑ Acte de décès de Victor Hugo↑ Le Mateur de Nouilles, « 111, avenue Victor Hugo », sur Paris 1900, l'art nouveau à Paris, 23 juin 2007 (consulté le 26 avril 2011)
- ^ "canadp-archivesenligne.paris.fr/images/vignettes/hugo.jpg". canadp-archivesenligne.paris.fr. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-04-23.
- ^ Assouline, Pierre (2011-01-06). "M. Victor Hugo, en son avenue, Paris". Le Monde.fr (in French). ISSN 1950-6244. Retrieved 2015-04-23.