Home > List of stations of the Paris Métro
- [Cleanup instructions: If any station page linked here is just a few lines long, redirect to List of stations of the Paris Métro and remove the link from this page.]
The following is a list of all stations of the Paris Métro, sorted by lines.
(They are often named after a square, street, etc. which in turn is named after something else. The former is not always separately mentioned.)
1 Line 1
- La Défense - Grande Arche (near Grande Arche in La Défense)
- Esplanade de la Défense (in La Défense)
- Pont de Neuilly
- Les Sablons
- Porte Maillot
- Argentine (named after Argentina)
- Charles de Gaulle - Étoile (named after Charles de Gaulle and Place de l'Étoile)
- George V (named after George V of the United Kingdom)
- Franklin D. Roosevelt (named after Franklin D. Roosevelt)
- Champs-Elysées - Clémenceau (named after the Champs Elysées and Georges Clemenceau)
- Concorde (near the Place de la Concorde)
- Tuileries (named after the Tuileries Gardens)
- Palais Royal - Musée du Louvre (near the Palais RoyalThe Palais Royal is a palace and garden north of the Louvre in Paris. The Palais Royal was originally built as a theater (then known as Palais Cardinal for Cardinal Richelieu in 1629. After Richelieu's death, possession of the palace passed to the French and the LouvreThe Louvre Museum Musee du Louvre , located in Paris, is one of the largest and most famous museums in the world. The building, a former royal palace (see below), lies in the centre of Paris, between the Seine river and the Rue de Rivoli. Its central cour)
- Until the 1990s its name was Palais Royal; it was renamed when a new access was built from the station to the underground portions of the redeveloped Louvre museum.
- Louvre Rivoli (near the LouvreThe Louvre Museum Musee du Louvre , located in Paris, is one of the largest and most famous museums in the world. The building, a former royal palace (see below), lies in the centre of Paris, between the Seine river and the Rue de Rivoli. Its central cour and the Rue de RivoliRue de Rivoli is one of the most famous and storied streets of Paris, France. The Louvre and the Tuileries Gardens occupy the south side of the Rue de Rivoli. On the opposite side, an arcade extends for more than a mile. Originally, Napoleon Bonaparte ope, itself named after the Battle of RivoliThe Battle of Rivoli was fought on January 14 January 16 1797 near Rivoli in Italy and resulted in the victory of French under General Bonaparte against Austrians under General Alvincy. The Rue de Rivoli, a street in central Paris, is named after the batt)
- Châtelet
- Hôtel de Ville
- Saint-Paul
- Bastille (near the former location of the BastilleBastille is a French word meaning castle' or 'stronghold'. Used as a single word ("la Bastille" in French, "the Bastille" in English) it invariably refers to the former Bastille Saint-Antoine Number 232, Rue Saint-Antoine in Paris. The storming of the Bas)
- Gare de LyonThe Gare de Lyon is a major railway station in Paris, France. It is named after the city of Lyon, in the broad direction of which the long-distance trains departing from this station go. The station was built for the World Exposition of 1900. Built on mul (a train station for trains going in the general direction of the city of LyonThis article is about the French city. For other usages (as Lyons , see Lyons (disambiguation). Lyon Region Rhone-Alpes Departement Rhone Arrondissement Lyon Cantonschief town of 14 cantons Population (1999)453,187 Population of the metropolitan area aire)
- Reuilly - Diderot (named after Denis Diderot)
- Nation
- Porte de Vincennes (at the border between Paris and Vincennes)
- Saint-Mandé Tourelle
- Bérault
- Château de Vincennes (near the castle of the same name)