The 15th arrondissement of Paris (XVe arrondissement) is one of the 20 arrondissements of the capital city of France. In spoken French, it is referred to as le quinzième ("the fifteenth").
The 15th arrondissement, called Vaugirard, is situated on the left bank of the River Seine. Sharing the Montparnasse district with the 6th and 14th arrondissements, it is the city's most populous arrondissement, with a population of 229,472 as of 2020. Tour Montparnasse – the tallest skyscraper in Paris – and the neighbouring Gare Montparnasse are both located in the 15th arrondissement, at its border with the 14th.
It is also home to the high-rise Beaugrenelle district and the Front de Seine riverside development, as well as the Paris Expo Porte de Versailles convention centre, where the 180-metre Tour Triangle is set to house a 120-room hotel and 70,000 square metres of office space in 2026. Close is the Héliport de Paris, the city heliport, just nearby the border with Issy-les-Moulineaux.
History
The loi du 16 juin 1859 decreed the annexation to Paris of the area between the old Wall of the Ferme générale and the Wall of Thiers. The communes of Grenelle, Vaugirard and Javel were incorporated into Paris in 1860.
Politician Charles Michels (born 1903) was elected a deputy for the 15th arrondissement under the Popular Front; he was taken hostage and shot by the Nazis in 1941. A Métro station and street now bear his name.
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. 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, notable attractions in this area include the Parc des Expositions (an exhibition centre which hosts the Foire de Paris, agricultural expositions, in addition to car shows) and Parc Georges-Brassens, a park built on the former site of a slaughterhouse where every year wine by the name of Clos des Morillons is produced and auctioned at the civic centre.
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 a shopping centre. Finally, the quartier contains a number of public buildings: the Lycée Buffon, the Necker Children's Hospital, as well as the private foundation Pasteur Institute.
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, the Front de Seine along with the 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 rehabilitated; the neighbourhood now contains Parc André-Citroën, Georges Pompidou European Hospital, and a number of large office buildings and television studios (Sagem, Snecma, the Direction Générale de l'Aviation Civile, StudioCanal, 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 centre.
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 there close to maintenance facilities. Customs facilities are available and especially busy during the Salon d'Aeronautique airshows held at Le Bourget on the other side of the city.
Geography
The 15th arrondissement is located in the southwestern part of Paris, on the left bank of the Seine. It includes one of the three islands in Paris, the Île aux Cygnes (Isle of the Swans), on the border with the 16th arrondissement. It also borders the 6th, 7th and 14th arrondissements.
At 8.5 km2 (3.28 sq. miles, or 2,100 acres), it is the third-largest arrondissement in Paris; it would be the largest if the large parks Bois de Boulogne and Bois de Vincennes were not counted as part of the 16th and 12th arrondissements, respectively.
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. This arrondissement is home to many families and is known in Paris as one of the quietest sections in Paris. The majority of the arrondissement is relatively unfrequented by tourists, a rarity for one of the world's most visited cities.
Historical population
Immigration
Places of interest
Saint-Christophe-de-Javel, Paris
Grand Pavois de Paris (1971), one of the largest real estate complexes in Paris
Musée Pasteur
Musée du Service des Objets Trouvés
Musée Bourdelle
Musée Mendjisky, specialising in School of Paris artists, housed in a Robert Mallet-Stevens building.
Musée Jean Moulin, French Resistance – (musées Leclerc-Moulin)
Church of Notre-Dame de la Salette in Paris
Beaugrenelle Shopping Centre
Parts of the Montparnasse area.
The former workshop (no longer standing) of Constantin Brâncuși, where the sculptor worked from 1925 to 1957 has now been relocated in front of the Centre Georges Pompidou
Villa Santos Dumont where Ossip Zadkine and Fernand Léger had their workshop, also featured in Gail Albert Halaban book Out of my Window, Paris.
La Ruche
Square Béla Bartók where the sculpture-fountain Cristaux by Jean-Yves Lechevallier can be seen.
Square de l'Oiseau-Lunaire, featuring a sculpture by Juan Miro (the L'Oiseau Lunaire) with a plaque commemorating the many artists, poets and painters or sculptors who lived there, including André Masson, Jean Dubuffet, Antonin Artaud and Robert Desnos.
A replica of the statue of Liberty on the île aux Cygnes where Bartholdi worked.
The Pont de Bir-Hakeim
The Pont Mirabeau
The Parc André-Citroën with the Ballon de Paris
The Parc Georges-Brassens
The Polypores Fountain by Jean-Yves Lechevallier featured in the movie by Alain Resnais Same Old Song.
The Paris Expo Porte de Versailles exhibition centre (with the Tour Triangle project) and Palais des Sports, near Porte de Versailles Métro station
The Front de Seine high-rise district
The Cheminée du Front de Seine, a 130 m (430 ft) chimney, the 4th tallest structure in Paris
Government and infrastructure
At one time the head office of the Bureau Enquêtes-Accidents was in the 15th arrondissement.
Since November 2015 the French Ministère des Armées ("Ministry of the Armed Forces") has been located in purpose-built building near the Balard Métro station.
Australian Embassy
Japanese Cultural Centre in Paris
Institut Français
Economy
The headquarters of Orange S.A. and Eutelsat are located in the 15th arrondissement.
La Poste, the French mail service, has its head office in the arrondissement.
The publisher Hachette Livre also has its headquarters in the arrondissement.
Prior to the completion of the current Air France headquarters in Tremblay-en-France in December 1995, Air France was headquartered in a tower located next to the Gare Montparnasse rail station in Montparnasse and in the 15th arrondissement; Air France had its headquarters in the tower for about 30 years.
Previously Tour Maine-Montparnasse housed the executive management of Accor.
Journal officiel de la République française
French Football Federation
Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel
Safran
Institut français des relations internationales
European Space Agency
International Energy Agency
Eutelsat
France Télévisions
International Council of Museums
Hôpital Européen Georges-Pompidou
Education and research
Schiller International University has a campus in the arrondissement. It is in proximity to Place de la Convention.
The arrondissement is also host to the École Active Bilingue Jeannine Manuel international school and the international bilingual school, Victor Hugo, (école internationale bilingue)
International Culinary school Le Cordon Bleu, established in 1895, has a campus in the 15th (rue Léon Delhomme)
Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital affiliated to the University of Paris Descartes, (pediatrics)
Pantheon-Sorbonne University, Saint Charles Campus - Visual arts and aesthetics.
Panthéon-Assas University, Campus Vaugirard, Law school
PariSanté Campus
Pasteur Institute
Laboratoire de Phonétique et Phonologie
Notable people
Édouard Balladur, politician, Prime Minister of France (1993–1995)
Brigitte Bardot, actress
Samuel Beckett, writer, who lived in the 15th arrondissement for most of his adult life
Walter Benjamin, philosopher
Luc Besson, filmmaker
Antoine Bourdelle, artist
Alexander Calder, artist
Marc Chagall, artist
Barbara Chase-Riboud, artist
Dietrich von Choltitz, military governor of Paris, 1944–1945
André Citroën, industrialist
Robert Desnos, poet and member of the French Resistance
Michel Foucault, philosopher
Tsuguharu Foujita, artist
Rebecca Hampton, actress and television presenter
François Hollande, President of France (2012–2017), lived in the 15th arrondissement.
René Magritte, artist
Sophie Marceau, actress
André Masson, artist
Henry Miller, writer, lived in the 15th where he worked on Tropic of Cancer.
Joan Miró, artist
Jacques Monod and Francois Jacob discovered the mechanism of genes' transcription regulation, a work honored by the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Luc Montagnier, Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and colleagues discovered the two HIV viruses that cause AIDS, in 1983 and 1985, were honored by the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Nekfeu, hip-hop artist
Louis Pasteur, microbiologist
Marie-Claire Pauwels, journalist
Ossip Zadkine, artist
See also
Front de Seine
References
Bibliography
Vallois, Thirza (1999). Around and About Paris: Vol.3: New Horizons: Haussmann's Annexation (Arrondissements 13–20). Iliad Books. pp. 80–104. ISBN 978-0-9525378-2-3. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
Pringle-Harris, Ann (2 November 1997). "The 15th, a World of Its Own". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 April 2015.