XVE ARRONDISSEMENT


The '15th arrondissement' (''XVe arrondissement''), located on the Left Bank (''Rive Gauche''), is the most populous of the 20 arrondissements of Paris, France. It shares the Montparnasse district with the 6th and 14th arrondissements. The tallest skyscraper in Paris, Tour Montparnasse and the neighbouring Gare Montparnasse are both located in the 15th arrondissement at the border with the 14th.
The 15th arrondissement also contains the exhibition center of Porte de Versailles, and the high-rise district of the Front de Seine (or Beaugrenelle) located near the Eiffel Tower.

Contents
Geography
Demographics
Historical population
Immigration
Places of interest
History
Quarters

Geography


The land area of this arrondissement is 8.502 km² (3.283 sq. miles, or 2,101 acres).

Demographics


The peak of population of Paris's 15th arrondissement occurred in 1962, when it had 250,551 inhabitants. Since then it has lost approximately one-tenth of its population, but it remains the most populous arrondissement of Paris, with 225,362 inhabitants at the last census in 1999. With 144,667 jobs at the same census, the 15th is also very dense in business activities.
Historical population



Year
(of French censuses)
Population
Density
(inh. per km²)
187275,4498,874
1954250,12429,419
1962 (peak of population)250,55129,470
1968244,08028,709
1975231,30127,205
1982225,59626,534
1990223,94026,340
1999225,36226,507
2005 estimate231,50027,229



Immigration

Places of interest



★ Parts of the Montparnasse area.

★ The former workshop (no longer standing) of Constantin Brancusi, where the sculptor worked from 1925 to 1957.

La Ruche

Porte de Versailles exhibition center and Palais des sports, near Porte de Versailles metro station.

Front de Seine high-rise district.

History


The ''loi du 16 juin 1859'' decreed the annexation to Paris of the area between the old ''Wall of the Farmers-General'' and the wall of Thiers. The communes of Grenelle, Vaugirard, and Javel were incorporated into Paris in 1860.

Quarters


As in all the Parisian ''arrondissements'', the fifteenth is made up of four administrative quarters (''quartiers'').

★ To the south, ''quartier Saint-Lambert'' occupies the former site of the village of Vaugirard, built along an ancient Roman road of the same name. The geography of the area was particularly suited to wine-making, as well as quarrying. In fact, many Parisian monuments, such as the ''École Militaire'', were built from Vaugirard stone. The village, not yet being part of Paris, was considered by Parisians to be an agreeable suburb, pleasant for country walks or its cabarets and puppet shows. In 1860 Vaugirard was annexed to Paris, along with adjoining villages. Today, the only notable attractions in this area are the ''Parc des Expositions'' (an exhibition center which hosts the ''Foire de Paris'', agricultural expositions, and car shows), and ''Parc Georges Brassens'', a park built on the former site of a slaughterhouse.

★ To the east, ''quartier Necker'' was originally an uninhabited space between Paris and Vaugirard. The most well-known landmarks in the area are the ''Gare Montparnasse'' train station and the looming ''Tour Montparnasse'' office tower. The area around the train station has been renovated and now contains a number of office and apartment blocks, a park (the ''Jardin Atlantique'', built directly over the train tracks), and shopping centers. Finally, the ''quartier'' contains a number of public buildings: the ''Lycée Buffon'', Necker Children's Hospital, and the ''Institut Pasteur''.

★ To the north, ''quartier Grenelle'' was originally a village of the same name. Grenelle plain extended from the current ''Hôtel des Invalides'' to the suburb of Issy-les-Moulineaux on the other side of the Seine, but remained mostly uninhabited in centuries past due to difficulties farming the land. At the beginning of the 19th century, an entrepreneur by the name of Violet divided off a section of the plain: this became the village of Beaugrenelle, known for its series of straight streets and blocks, which remain today. The whole area broke off from the commune of Vaugirard in 1830, becoming the commune of Grenelle, which was in turn annexed to Paris in 1860. A century later, a number of apartment and office towers were built along the Seine, along with Beaugrenelle shopping mall.

★ To the west, ''quartier Javel'' lies to the south of Grenelle plain. In years past, it was the industrial area of the ''arrondissement'': first with chemical companies (the famous ''Eau de Javel'' [bleach] was invented and produced there), then electrical companies (Thomson), and finally car manufacturers (Citroën), whose factories occupied a large part of the ''quartier'' up until the early 1970s. The industrial areas have since been destroyed, and the neighbourhood now contains ''Parc André Citroën'', Georges Pompidou Hospital, and a number of large office buildings and television studios (Sagem, Snecma, the ''Direction Générale de l'Aviation Civile'', Canal Plus, France Télévisions, etc.). In addition, to the south of the circular highway (''boulevard périphérique''), an extension of the 15th, formerly an aerodrome at the beginning of the 20th century, is now a heliport, a gym and a recreation center.
:The early airfield here has been encroached upon by urban development and a sports centre but the residual area, mainly laid to grass, continues to serve Paris as a heliport. The Sécurité Civile has a detachment here close to maintenance facilities. Customs facilities are available and the facility is especially busy during the Salon d'Aeronautique airshows held at Le Bourget on the other side of the city.

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