All the subjects covered by the website over the past twelve months have once again been a delight to compile and research. But here ar...
The time has come to finish off the calendar year with a couple of items that look back on some of the features that ran on Invisible Bor...
The latest issue of Voyage , the official Liverpool John Lennon airport magazine, features a double-page feature about Bordeaux. The que...
'Blogging the World' item in Voyage, the Liverpool John Lennon airport magazine
- The full piece is available online here (scroll through to pages 16-17): http://issuu.com/archetypeissuu/docs/voyage_issue_5
This bronze statue, which can be found on Place Montaud in the heart of the Bastide quarter, depicts one Joseph Marie Edouard Chabrely (1...
Dr Chabrely: La Bastide's unforgettable “médecin des pauvres”
To celebrate the blog’s third anniversary, Invisible Bordeaux teamed up with Mollat, the city’s most famous independent bookstore… enabl...
Invisible Bordeaux 3rd anniversary competition result
And of course, massive thanks to bookstore Mollat for partnering with Invisible Bordeaux for this competition! You can of course visit them on the internet (www.mollat.com) and hook up with them via various social networks… I particularly recommend their fantastic Instagram account!
A few months ago Invisible Bordeaux ran a set of pictures merging old postcards with modern-day shots, the end montages produced with th...
More pictures merging past and present views of Bordeaux
Here then is another selection of pictures that combine past and present, juxtaposing buildings and landmarks that have changed – or no longer exist – with the environment as it looks today.
After recently visiting the 45th parallel north marker in Saint-André-de-Cubzac , it suddenly dawned on me that a remarkably unique latit...
Puynormand’s point 45°N 0°: where the Greenwich meridian and the 45th parallel north intersect
By doing a little bit of research, I realized that visiting confluences of the like had become a pastime for enthusiasts around the world who then posted their stories and photos on the www.confluence.org website. I was therefore able to read about other visits to the 45°N 0° confluence and saw that, well, there wasn’t much to be seen there at all.
To celebrate the blog’s third anniversary, Invisible Bordeaux has teamed up with Mollat, the city’s most famous independent bookstore… e...
Celebrate Invisible Bordeaux’s 3rd anniversary and win a copy of “Le Nouveau Viographe de Bordeaux”!
To celebrate the blog’s third anniversary, Invisible Bordeaux has teamed up with Mollat, the city’s most famous independent bookstore… enabling one lucky reader to win a copy of the marvellous “Nouveau Viographe de Bordeaux”!
To have a chance of winning the coveted prize, simply answer the following question, submitting your response before Sunday November 30th:
A draw will take place on Monday December 1st and the name of the winner will be announced shortly afterwards on the blog!
About the prize: Kindly donated by the good people of Mollat, Robert Coustet’s “Nouveau Viographe de Bordeaux” is an authoritative 560-page encyclopedic guide to the stories behind every one of the city’s streets and squares. Packed with fascinating historical insight and often surprising architectural information, the book is an invaluable resource for anyone seeking to get under the city’s skin. Click here for further information.
And of course, massive thanks to bookstore Mollat for partnering with Invisible Bordeaux for this competition! You can of course visit them on the internet (www.mollat.com) and hook up with them via various social networks… I particularly recommend their fantastic Instagram account!
The suburb of Le Bouscat has long been renowned for its racecourse, its residential quarters, its high street shops and, a-hem, its coun...
Le Bois du Bouscat: a cultural walk in the woods
The suburb of Le Bouscat has long been renowned for its racecourse, its residential quarters, its high street shops and, a-hem, its countless car dealers. But this sign greets visitors to one of the latest additions to the town’s portfolio of potential outings: le Bois du Bouscat.
The Bois du Bouscat provides a landscaped walk in the woods which was two years in the making and was officially opened in June 2013 by local mayor Patrick Bobet. The project was the result of the acquisition of woodland which stretches along one flank of the racecourse (indeed, it was previously best-known as Bois de l’Hippodrome) and next to the high-rise blocks of the Lyautey estate.
We are in Saint-André-de-Cubzac, some 23 kilometres to the north of Bordeaux, on the right bank of the Dordogne… and coincidentally on th...
Saint-André-de-Cubzac’s Montalon windmills and 45th parallel marker
When shooting the footage that formed the basis of the Invisible Bordeaux “View from Pont d’Aquitaine” video clip , I was reminded of a s...
The mysterious rig with no name on the river Garonne
The rig in question can be seen near to the left-bank Bacalan district of Bordeaux, more or less mid-way between the Chaban-Delmas lift bridge and Pont d’Aquitaine suspension bridge. When the subject was initially raised by Sud Ouest, journalist Jean-Paul Vigneaud asked more questions than he provided answers about what he called the “phantom of the Garonne”, a structure “where nobody goes and which nobody is interested in” and which now resembles a “mid-river heap of scrap iron” (un tas de ferraille au beau milieu de l’eau).
Every day, thousands of vehicles cross Pont d'Aquitaine, the impressive suspension bridge over the Garonne river that connects Bordea...
Video: the view from Pont d'Aquitaine
Finally, if you would like a longer, closer look at the two panoramic shots which featured in the video, here they are:
The view looking south towards Bordeaux. |
The view looking north towards Bassens and the Médoc. |
What is 30 metres high, 12 metres wide, made of stone and dates way back to the 14th century? The answer, if you happen to be 65 kilometr...
In honour of Lesparre-Médoc's Tour d'Honneur
Over the years, my views of Bordeaux have been gained either riding a bike, as a pedestrian, behind the wheel of a car, or from the seat ...
From Blanquefort to Gare Saint-Jean: the view from a suburban train
The time had therefore come to report to Blanquefort railway station and buy a €4.30 ticket for the 35-minute journey into Bordeaux’s Gare Saint-Jean. The big question before the train arrived was would I spot anything new from this rear-window vantage point? The answer was not exactly a resounding “yes” or a definite “no” but somewhere in-between: it would simply provide a sample of the city’s suburban living quarters and landscapes, some of which we’ve almost stopped noticing.
Faded hand-painted adverts and signs, so-called ghost signs, have often featured on the blog . And among the interesting subsets which re...
Signs through the times: spotting the traders of the past
Towards the top end of Rue des Remparts, the charming, gently sloping pedestrianised street which connects Rue Porte Dijeaux and Place Pe...
Charles Lamoureux: the Bordeaux-born conductor whose orchestra lives on
The words are virtually illegible, given that they have been written in white on a white background. But that shouldn’t be enough to put us off deciphering the text: the plaque celebrates the birthplace of Charles Lamoureux, the illustrious violinist and conductor who did much to popularise the music of Berlioz, Wagner and Handel in France.
A few months ago I published an item about the little-known Parc Rivière , a fascinating expanse of greenery which lies between the town...
Video: Parc Rivière, Bordeaux's park with a difference
A few months ago I published an item about the little-known Parc Rivière, a fascinating expanse of greenery which lies between the townhouses of the Tivoli quarter and the high-rise apartment blocks of the Grand-Parc district.
The annual European heritage days take place on September 20th and 21st. As ever the event will provide a unique opportunity to get behin...
Journées du Patrimoine 2014: the Invisible Bordeaux selection!
Once again there are hundreds of options available, making it difficult to know where to start. So to make things easier, Invisible Bordeaux has been through everything on offer and here is a small selection of some of the more unusual and eye-catching visits... while the full list of venues and visits - in Bordeaux and beyond - can be found on the official event website.
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