1,300.00 €
ONE BEDROOM APART Metro Dupleix
ONE BEDROOM APART Metro Dupleix
Détails de l'annonce
One bedroom apartment to rent in Paris: Métro Dupleix (15th arr).
Furnished 42 square meters apartment to rent, ideally located at 200 meters from Dupleix metro station and a 3 minutes walking distance from the Eiffel Tower, in the 15th arr., composed of one living room and one bedroom on ground floor, view on a courtyard. Wooden floors, two antique fireplaces, equipped kitchen and bathroom, living room, separate toilets.
Secured door, double glaze, cave.
Very calm building with digicode.
Haussmanian style building, built in 1909.
Calm and central area, near to all facilities as well as to public transports.
Rent: 1300 euros per month, all charges included except electricity bill. Available as of the 18th May 2024.
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Rio Soley Design
Rio Soley Design
Rio Soley is the designer behind the hand drawn Paris map that helps people see that Bill & Rosa's Book Room is not far at all from Paris center. We love her work which is both elegant and whimsical at the same time. Her journey in lettering started at the age of 5 when her parents enrolled her in a calligraphy class. Since then, she's been captivated by the intricacies of letterforms and the artistry involved in evoking diverse emotions through them. She tells us a bit more about herself and her art, including her beautifully thought out and crafted IRO print collection.
Can you tell us a bit about yourself?
Hello! I’m Rio Soley, a digital artist & designer specialised in lettering. I create and sell art prints that evoke optimism, simplicity, and tranquility. I’m from Japan, but I’ve lived in Canada, the UK, Germany, and now in France. When I’m not creating art prints, I’m painting letters on store signs and vitrines to help shop owners in Paris stand out …
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Reflections from an old timer in Paris: La Sécu
Reflections from an old timer in Paris: La Sécu
Reflections from an old timer in Paris: La Sécu
The first time I took my toddler to a see a doctor in Paris many, many years ago, I received a prescription a mile long. Back in the 1980s antibiotics were given for every ailment (common sense has since prevailed) but there were other, strange sounding names such as sérum physiologique, a saline solution for squirting up the nasal passage, unpleasant but efficient for blocked-up noses, and le suppositoire for a different passage, which actually proved useful for small children, but neither of which were in common use in Britain at the time.
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We had just arrived from Hong Kong and hadn’t a bean. Not even the La Sécu, since to obtain a social security number one had to be working, if not born in France. But someone had told me about the PMI, Protection Maternelle et Infantile, which, at the time anyway, provided free medical care for mothers and babies. Perhaps the doctors there were just being kind by a…
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