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- Louvre-Lens
- Lens’ 14-18 Centre D’Histoire Guerre et Paix
- Les Terrils Jumeaux, 11/19
- Église Saint-Léger
- Gare de Lens
- RC Lens
- Nécropole Nationale de Notre-Dame-de-Lorette
- Canadian National Vimy Memorial
- Lille Sights
- Lille Culture
Where a pithead used to be is an ethereal minimalist construction that stands as the first satellite attraction for the fabled Louvre Museum in Paris. The museum opened in 2012 and so far attendances have exceeded expectations. There’s a large space for temporary exhibitions lasting three months, and the likes of Rubens and Leonardo da Vinci have b...
Employing the latest museum techniques and calling on an impressive array of archive footage (more than 60 hours), 5,000 photographs and contemporary maps, this museum offers context about the First World War. The modern building is structured around cubes of black concrete described as “chapels”, and informs visitors about all of the main points, ...
Close to the Louvre-Lens are two gigantic black pyramids, the largest slag heaps in Europe, and a constant reminder of Lens’ coalmining history. If you’re wondering what the numbers mean: 11 denotes the amount of mine shafts below the metal headframe (dating to 1894), while 19 was the number beneath the concrete concentrating tower, which was insta...
A church has stood at this location since the 900s, but every one of them has suffered from war damage, whether it was the Thirty Years’ War in the 17th century, the First World War or the Second World War. As we see it now Saint-Léger is an 18th-century neoclassical design rebuilt brick by brick in the 1920s after being razed by shelling in the Fi...
If you enter or leave Lens by train maybe you could allow a couple of minutes to get an eyeful of the station, which opened in 1927 and encapsulates the art deco fashion of the time. The architect was Urbain Cassan, and he had a bit of a job on his hands to counter the dangers of subsidence caused by mining. His answer was to make the building modu...
The local football team has won the French league title in the last 20 years and has a very rich heritage. But in recent years Lens have flitted between the Ligue 1 and Ligue 2, the top two tiers of French football, and currently find themselves in the latter. And yet, the future does look exciting for the “Sang et Or” (blood and gold), partly beca...
On the road from Arras to Béthune, and little more than ten minutes from Lens ,is the largest military cemetery in France. There are 20,000 individual marked graves, as well as eight communal graves where some 22,000 unknown soldiers have been interred. The cemetery is on the site of a swathe of land that was occupied by the Germans for most of the...
The Battle of Vimy Ridge in 1917 has great significance in Canada as this was when the four divisions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force took part in the same offensive for the first time. So later the site was chosen for the Canadian war memorial , commemorating their soldiers who have no known grave. The memorial, with its twin white pylons risi...
France’s fourth city is less than half an hour by road and has an old centre calling out to be explored. It’s another chance to take in the unusual architecture in this part of France, with its gabled houses and mannerist flamboyance. The Vieille Bourse (Old Stock Exchange) needs to be your first port of call. It is from the mid-17th century and ha...
It’s no exaggeration to declare Lille’s Palais des Beaux-Arts one of the best French museums outside Paris. The influence of the Low Countries is unmistakable here too, with contributions from van Dyck and Jacob Jordaens, but also earlier Dutch and Flemish painters like Dirk Bouts and Jehan Bellegambe. Donatello, Goya, Delacroix and Courbet are all...
Lens is in the north of France at 16 kilometres from Arras, the department capital (general information: Lens is 178 kilometres from Paris). Geographical Information Commune: Lens
Lens is a city in the Hauts-de-France region of northern France. Home to the Louvre-Lens Museum, an extension of the iconic Parisian museum. The city’s industrial heritage and cultural offerings make it a unique destination. Map showing where is Lens located in France.
Lens (French pronunciation: ⓘ; Picard: Linse) is a city in the Pas-de-Calais department in northern France. [3] It is one of the main towns of Hauts-de-France along with Lille, Valenciennes, Amiens, Roubaix, Tourcoing, Arras and Douai. The inhabitants are called Lensois (pronounced).
Lens is a city in Hauts-de-France, France. A former industrial city, its wealth was founded on textiles and coal mining. In 2009, the Louvre opened a branch in Lens, called - naturally enough - Louvre-Lens. Map. Directions.
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The Lens city map is your go-to tool to navigate effortlessly by car, foot, or public transport. Plan your routes, compare transport options, and easily locate essential amenities like gas stations, parking facilities, accommodations, restaurants, attractions, bus/train stations, and airports.