Passage Puteaux: Paris’s Shortest and Best-Kept Secret
The Passage Puteaux is one of Paris’s hidden gems. Just steps away from Boulevard de la Madeleine in the 8th arrondissement, it’s a short covered passage, only 29 meters long, but it’s packed with charm.
It’s not as famous as some of the city’s other covered walkways, but it has a quiet elegance. With just six sections marked by pilasters, the passage has glass-paneled fronts and a partially covered glass roof. The pilasters are topped with delicately crafted capitals featuring elegant decorative motifs.
The gallery is home to the terraces of the wine bistro-bar "La Boutique des Vins" and the bar of a boutique hotel, Le Royal Madeleine.
The passage opened in 1839 and was the creation of Louis Puteaux, a Parisian real estate developer active in the Batignolles area with on housing projects and luxury developments.
Around this time, the neighborhood near the Madeleine was growing quickly, fueled by rumors of a major train station being built nearby. The railway from Paris to Saint-Germain was transforming the city’s infrastructure, and developers were eager to invest.
Puteaux saw the potential and built this passage as part of a larger real estate project on land once occupied by a Benedictine priory.
However, plans for the station didn’t go as expected. Local residents opposed the railway terminal in their upscale neighborhood, and the project shifted elsewhere. While the Gare Saint-Lazare eventually became one of Paris’s key transportation hubs, it was constructed further away, starting with a temporary wooden station in 1837 before finding its final location by the 1850s.
As a result, instead of being near the busy station, the Passage Puteaux was left without the foot traffic it had been designed to attract.
Even without the train station, however, the Passage Puteaux survived the test of time. It was briefly renamed Passage Pasquier in 1873, but its original name was restored soon after.
Today, the passage remains a peaceful place, home to small offices, quaint terraces, and attractive bistros. It may not draw large crowds, but its quiet atmosphere and historical significance make it a unique piece of Paris’s history.