Le Bourget
Understand
Get in
By train
Gare du BourgetA Réseau Express Régional (RER) train station in Le Bourget. The station is in Zone 3 of the Carte orange. It is on the RER B suburban railway line.
Tangentielle NordAn express tramway that runs to Le Bourget from Épinay-sur-Seine in 15 min, a northern suburb of Paris.
Le Bourget is planned to one of the principal transportation hubs in the Paris North suburb: two train stations are planned in the long term as part of the Grand Paris Express project with the future lines 16 and 17.
By car
The town is served by two major highways (autoroutes): A1 autoroute in the north of the town, and A86 autoroute in the south of the city. Those two highways ensure a direct connection to major Paris Region hubs like La Defense (A86 West), Bobigny (A86 East), Roissy Charles de Gaulle Airport (A1 North), Paris (A1 South).By plane
Paris Le Bourget AirportA 24-hour airport dedicated to private jets and business aviation, as well as military and government flights. 11 km northeast of Paris, Le Bourget has been the busiest executive airport in Europe since 2007. As result, there are three runways to accommodate planes, and seven private terminals for fast and discrete travel. Companies like Air Charter Advisors and Priority Jet offer access to a variety of aircraft rentals based at Le Bourget and around the world, ranging from economical single and twin engine props, to luxury Gulfstreams and business jets.
See
Musée de l’air et de l’espaceLe Bourget is famous as the landing site for Charles Lindbergh's historic solo transatlantic crossing in 1927, and as the departure point two weeks earlier for the French biplane The White Bird (L'Oiseau Blanc), which took off in its own attempt at a trans-Atlantic flight but then mysteriously disappeared (the only known remaining piece — the jettisoned main landing gear — is kept here). Now, besides hosting the biannual Paris Air Show, it's France's main state-owned aviation museum. Its highlights include a Concorde prototype, and remnants of the unarmed P-38 flown by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry on his last mission, recovered from the Mediterranean Sea.
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phone: +33 1 48 16 16 47address: 26 avenue de l’EuropeA contemporary art gallery owned and directed by Larry Gagosian. Part of a group of galleries that exhibit some of the most influential artists of the 20th and 21st centuries.
Gare du BourgetGare du Bourget was the primary point of deportation for French Jews during the Holocaust. Between 27 March 1942 and 23 June 1943, 42 trains carrying 40,450 Jews left Le Bourget for Auschwitz concentration camp and other extermination camps in Poland. Most had been imprisoned in the nearby Drancy internment camp. Drancy was organised, staffed and initially commanded by the civilian French police, who rounded up most of the victims. As Le Bourget station was too visible to the wider public, the next 21 trains left the Bobigny freight station.
Sleep
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phone: +33 14 838 3333address: 104 avenue Jean Mermoz, La CourneuveRestaurant, terrace, bar, and free private parking. 4 disabled-accessible rooms. Pets welcome (€5).
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phone: +33 1 49 34 10 38address: 69 avenue de l EuropeRestaurant, bar, gym, sauna, and free Wi-Fi. Reservations 08 92 23 48 12 (€0.35/min 08:00-22:00).
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AC Hotel by Marriott Paris Le Bourget Airport
phone: +33 1 82 88 60 00address: 2 Rue de la Haye, Dugny