La voie Léonie-Kastner est un passage du quartier de Plaisance du 14e arrondissement de Paris.
Location
1 explorer visited this place
288 m
Musée Adzak, also known as Adzak–Espace d'Art International, is an art museum located at 3, rue Jonquoy, Paris, France. It is located in the Plaisance District, in the southern part of 14th arrondissement. The nearest Paris Métro stop is Plaisance on Line 13.
The museum is in the former atelier built by British photographer and sculptor Roy Adzak, who was born Royston Wright. The studio exhibits paintings, sculpture, and photography by a wide range of artists, and encourages international meetings and dialogue in its space.
364 m
The lycée Raspail is a public lycée located in the 14th arrondissement of Paris. It is a general technological and professional lycée which is known as a trade Lycée "of energy and the environment". It offers courses from second year and licences to pass the general bac, the professional bac, preparatory classes and BTS FED, MS, ET, TC; it also offers around 150 apprenticeships with 5 CFA and more than a hundred adults studying the GRETA GPI2D to prepare for different professional bacs, BTS and licences.
431 m
Plaisance is a station on line Line 13 of the Paris Métro in the 14th arrondissement.
It is named after the Château du Maine which was built in the 17th century and possessed a large park. The word "plaisance" is equivalent to the English word "pleasance", that is a pleasure garden. It was purchased in 1842 by a surveyor called Couesnon whose son subdivided it, creating the district of Plaisance between 1858 and 1860, which became one of the largest slums in Paris. The Compagnie générale des omnibus razed the castle to build garages.
495 m
Notre-Dame-du-Rosaire is a Roman Catholic church located at 194 Rue Raimond-Losserand in the Plaisance Quarter of the 14th arrondissement of Paris, France. It was built between 1910 and 1912 by architect Pierre Sardou in a combnation of the styles of neo-classical architecture and neo-Byzantine architecture, a blend very popular in that period. In 1919 the architect received the Bally Prize from the Academy of Fine Arts for his design of the church.
617 m
Porte de Vanves is a station on Line 13 of the Paris Métro and a stop on tramway Line 3a in the 14th arrondissement.
It is named after the Porte de Vanves, a gate in the 19th century Thiers wall of Paris. Contrary to what its name suggests, it gave access to the commune of Malakoff – the commune of Vanves is instead accessible by Porte Brancion located 250 metres west.
Situation et accès
La voie fait le lien piéton entre la rue Didot et l'allée Henry-Dunant.
Origine du nom
Elle porte le nom de Léonie Kastner-Boursault (1820-1888), en raison de la présence de l'allée Henry-Dunant et du siège de la Croix-Rouge française.
Historique
Cette voie porte officiellement son nom depuis 2007.
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