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Le Chat Qui Pêche – jazz club and restaurant founded in the mid-1950s, located in a cellar in rue de la Huchette in the Latin Quarter, on the left bank of the Seine. Ledoyen – one of the oldest restaurants in Paris; Ma Bourgogne – bistro; Maison dorée – former famous restaurant located at 20 Boulevard des Italiens, Paris
Le Plateau (also known as Plateau, or Du Plateau) is a neighborhood and an urban village in Gatineau, located west of downtown Hull. The neighborhood is limited to Gatineau Park to the north, chemin Vanier to the west, Boulevard Saint-Raymond to the east and Boulevard des Allumettières to the south. It is mostly comprised of houses, but many ...
Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen: Yannick Alléno: 2015 [28] [29] Paris 8 e: Épicure: Éric Fréchon: 2009 [16] Paris 8 e: Le Cinq: Christian Le Squer: 2016 [30] Paris 8 e: Le Gabriel - La Réserve Paris: Jérôme Banctel: 2024 [20] Paris 8 e: Pierre Gagnaire: Pierre Gagnaire: 1998 [16] Paris 16 e: Le Pré Catelan: Frédéric Anton: 2007 [16 ...
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When the restaurant was relocated in 1784 it was to a two-story pavilion with terraced gardens, [2] [5] designed in the Neoclassical style. The 1886 oil-on-canvas, Scandinavian Artists' Lunch at Cafe Ledoyen, Paris, on Varnishing Day by the Swedish painter Hugo Birger suggests something of the appearance of the restaurant in the late 19th ...
L'Entrecôte is the popular nickname of the restaurant Le Relais de Venise – L'Entrecôte, founded by Paul Gineste de Saurs in Paris's 17th arrondissement near Porte Maillot. Now run by one of his daughters, the restaurant is widely known as L'Entrecôte Porte-Maillot. It has eight additional locations operating under licence, three in London ...
In 2002, the Parti Québécois, leading the provincial government, merged the cities of Hull, Gatineau, Aylmer, Buckingham and Masson-Angers into one city. Although Hull was the oldest and most central of the merged cities, the name Gatineau was the only original city name among the five final names offered as choices for the amalgamated city.