Place Dauphine

Place Dauphine
The Place Dauphine in 2018
Shown within Paris
Length102 m (335 ft)
Width12 to 67 m (39 to 220 ft)
Arrondissement1st
QuarterSaint-Germain-l'Auxerrois, Île de la Cité
Coordinates48°51′23.54″N 2°20′32.74″E / 48.8565389°N 2.3424278°E / 48.8565389; 2.3424278
FromRue de Harlay
ToRue Henri Robert
Construction
Completion1607-1616
Denomination1607-1792, then 1814

The Place Dauphine (French pronunciation: [plas dofin]) is a public square located near the western end of the Île de la Cité in the first arrondissement of Paris. It was initiated by Henry IV in 1607, the second of his projects for public squares in Paris, the first being the Place Royale (now the Place des Vosges). He named it for his son, the Dauphin of France and future Louis XIII, who had been born in 1601. From the "square", actually triangular in shape, one can access the middle of the Pont Neuf, a bridge which connects the left and right banks of the Seine by passing over the Île de la Cité. A street called, since 1948, Rue Henri-Robert, forty metres long, connects the Place Dauphine and the bridge. Where they meet, there are two other named places, the Place du Pont-Neuf and the Square du Vert-Galant.