Editor’s note: This week we
celebrate the City of Light. All week we
deleve into all this Parisian in honor of the 100th anniversary of
the founding of Sylvia Beach’s Shakespeare & Company Book Store. See PillartoPost.org coverage of Ms. Beach
triumph on November 19, 1919. But for
now let’s visit the City of Light from outer space.
Here’s
NASA’s account of the images.
Around local midnight, astronauts aboard the
International Space Station took this photograph of Paris, often referred to as
the “City of Light.” The pattern of the street grid dominates at night,
providing a completely different set of visual features from those visible
during the day. For instance, the winding Seine River is a main visual cue by
day, but here the thin black line of the river is hard to detect until you
focus on the strong meanders and the street lights on both banks.
The
brightest boulevard in the dense network of streets is the Avenue des
Champs-Élysées, the historical axis of the city, as designed in the 17th
century. Every year on Bastille Day (July 14), the largest military parade in
Europe processes down the Champs Élysées, reviewed by the President of the
Republic. This grand avenue joins the royal Palace of the Tuileries—whose
gardens appear as a dark rectangle on the river—to the star-like meeting place
of eleven major boulevards at the Arc de Triomphe.
This famous
plaza is also referred to as the Étoile, or “star.”
The many
forested parks of Paris stand out as black polygons—such as the Bois de
Boulogne and Vincennes. Even the lit paths through the Bois de Boulogne can be
seen clearly in the closeup image.
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