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Book PSG Stadium Tours

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PSG Stadium Tour

Discover the behind the scenes areas of the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris , home of football club Paris Saint-Germain. Walk in the footsteps of your football heroes and see Parc des Princes like you've never seen it before, including places usually inaccessible to the public: VIP boxes, press rooms, locker rooms, the wall of trophies, the presidential area, and more.

Get a guided tour behind the scenes of the stadium, from the top of the stands to the locker room that will thrill fans and tourists alike.

Frequently Asked Questions About PSG Stadium Tours

A. You can book a PSG Stadium tour online.

A. PSG Stadium tour tickets start from €28.

A. The PSG Stadium tours include a complete tour of the stadium – VIP boxes, press rooms, locker rooms, the wall of trophies, the presidential area, and more.

A. The tour timings are from 10 AM to 5 PM.

A. The PSG Stadium tour is not available on match days and on the day before a Champions League match. The stadium may also close on very short notice due to training sessions.

A. Yes. The PSG Stadium tours are worth it because the Parc des Princes Stadium is one of the oldest in Paris It dates back to 1897 and was once the home stadium of France's national football team. It has been the home of football club Paris Saint-Germain since 1974.

A. No. The PSG Stadium tours cannot be canceled or rescheduled.

A. The PSG Stadium guided tour is about 1 hour long.

A. Yes. Children under the age of 3 years get free admission.

Parc des Princes

View the seating map for Parc des Princes stadium

The Parc des Princes is a stadium located in the south of Paris, in the 16th arrondissement. Its history began in 1897 with the construction of a velodrome stadium. This was renovated in 1932 to increase its capacity to 40,000, and the stadium was completely rebuilt in 1970 following the construction of the Paris ring road, which now passes beneath the stadium. It currently has a capacity of 49,000.

Since its construction, it has played host to a number of major sporting events, including two Euro finals, finishes of the Tour de France, matches in the Five Nations Tournament, French football team matches, French Football Cup finals and French Rugby Championship finals.

The Parc des Princes is the home stadium of Paris Saint Germain.

Seating plan

Parc des Princes seating plan (double-tap to enlarge)

List of blocks

Borelli stand.

  • Level 1 : Access 115, 116, 117, 118, 122, 123, 124, 125
  • Level 3 : Access 315, 316, 317, 318, 320, 322, 323, 324, 325
  • Level 4 : Access 417, 418, 420, 422, 423

Boulogne Stand

  • N, O, P, V (visitors)
  • Level 1 : Access 126, 127, 128, 129
  • Level 3 : Access 326, 327, 328, 329
  • Level 4 : Access 426, 429

Paris Stand

  • A, B, C, D, E, F, G
  • Level 1 : Access 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110
  • Level 3 : Access 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310
  • Level 4 : Access 404, 405, 406, 407

Auteuil Stand

  • Level 1 : Access 111, 112, 113, 114
  • Level 3 : Access 311, 312, 313, 314
  • Level 4 : Access 411, 414

Tap to enlarge photos

As the Parc des Princes is located downtown, there is no public car park nearby. You can park on the streets or in pay car parks.

To get to the stadium, take the Porte de Saint-Cloud or Porte d'Auteuil exits from the Paris ring road.

Public transit

The Parc des Princes stadium is served by numerous public transport. The RATP network guarantee you quick and secure access to the arena.

  • Metro Line 9: stop at Porte de Saint-Cloud or Exelmans
  • Métro Line 10: stop at Porte d'Auteuil
  • Buses: lines 22, 32, 52, 62, 72, 123, 175, 189, 289 et PC1 offers many stops close to the stadium.

To come by bike, Vélib’ stations are located around the stadium.

Tous les plans des stades de football et de rugby pour les matchs, les concerts et autres spectacles.

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Borussia dortmund vs paris saint-germain: how to watch live, stream link, team news.

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Paris Saint-Germain heads to the Westfalenstadion on Wednesday in a bid to beat Borussia Dortmund and move one step closer to to a second UEFA Champions League final.

PSG lost the 2019-20 final to Bayern Munich and have been aching to return to the stage. They’ll face a hostile stadium in Germany for the semifinal first leg.

[ MORE: PST’s UEFA Champions League 2023-24 hub ]

The French side also have very little time to celebrate the third-straight Ligue 1 title they sealed this weekend, as Les Parisiens have now won 10 of their 12 all-time top-flight titles since 2012-13.

Dortmund, the 1996-97 European Cup champions, have reached just one final since then, losing the final and a Klassiker in 2012-13 against Bayern.

BVB sit fifth on the table and could still qualify for the Champions League by:

  • Winning the Champions League -or-
  • Winning out in the Bundesliga and seeing RB Leipzig flop -or-
  • Finishing fifth in the league but seeing Germany seal its likely top-two UEFA coefficient status.

Wins in either leg, let alone the tie, would all but seal that.

How to watch Borussia Dortmund vs Paris Saint-Germain live, stream link and start time

Kick off : 3pm ET, Wednesday (May 1)

How to watch : Paramount+ and TUDN USA

Borussia Dortmund focus, team news

Dortmund remains without leading league scorer Donyell Malen as well as Remy Bensebaini, and clutch forward Sebastien Haller, but could have Ian Maatsen back.

They’ll look to Niclas Fullkrug in the finishing department, but Julian Brandt has been the club’s top playmaker. Center back Nico Schlotterbeck has been essential at the back end.

Paris Saint-Germain focus, team news

Kylian Mbappe remains the heart and soul of PSG’s on-field hopes despite an impending exit this summer. His 33 goal contributions in Ligue 1 are 21 more than his next closest teammate (Goncalo Ramos, 12). Vitinha and Achraf Hakimi have starred for Les Parisiens this season, and goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma is always capable of a big moment. PSG is still without Layvin Kurzawa, Presnel Kimpembe, and Sergio Rico.

Paris Saint-Germain 1-2 Lyon (agg: 3-5): record winners reach 11th final

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Article summary

Lyon followed up their sensational first-leg comeback by progressing to their 11th Women's Champions League final, Selma Bacha and Melchie Dumornay scoring in a 2-1 win at Paris.

Article top media content

Article body.

Lyon are through to the UEFA Women's Champions League final for an 11th time, securing a showdown with Barcelona after goals from Selma Bacha and Melchie Dumornay earned them a 2-1 win and 5-3 aggregate success away against Paris Saint-Germain.

Key moments

3' : Bacha strike increases Lyon advantage 34' : Picaud reflexes keep out visitors 41' : Chawinga lashes in for Paris 52' : Dumornay denied by home goalkeeper 65' : Picaud thwarts Majri, Dumornay 81' : Composed Dumornay seals victory

Match in brief: Lyon experience tells in tight tie

After a sensational late comeback to turn the first leg around, Lyon gave themselves a measure of comfort by establishing an early 4-2 lead on aggregate in the French capital.

Selma Bacha collected Melchie Demornay's pass as part of a corner routine, taking aim from outside the penalty area to fizz in a low drive that beat Constance Picaud at the goalkeeper's near post.

Selma Bacha makes the breakthrough in the second leg of the all-French semi-final

Paris dominated first-half possession, but Lyon had three of the four attempts on target, Picaud responding at lightning speed to turn a ricochet behind at her near post.

With a forward of Tabitha Chawinga's prowess in attack, one accurate shot proved all the hosts needed to level in front of their passionate fans. Marie-Antoinette Katoto seized upon possession just beyond the halfway line, turned smartly and released the Malawian international, who entered the penalty area and fired a precise low finish into the far corner of the net.

Tabitha Chawinga gives Paris hope with a finish as fierce as it was precise

The goal gave Jocelyn Prêcheur's side momentum at the break, only for Lyon's vast experience to show during the second half as the eight-time champions absorbed pockets of pressure before increasing their advantage late on.

Picaud had used her legs to stop Dumornay's low strike from arrowing in shortly after the interval, but there was little she could do when Amel Majri's deft touch as part of a slick move set up the Haiti midfielder to coolly slot in Lyon's second of the afternoon with nine minutes remaining.

Dumornay's goal meant Lyon won this all-French tie by exactly the same scorelines and in the same order home and away as they did in the 2021/22 semi-finals. Sonia Bompastor's players went on to beat Barcelona in the final in her first season in charge – and their task now is to repeat the trick.

Visa Player of the Match: Melchie Dumornay (Lyon)

"Highly effective in both phases of play, she helped with creating trouble for Paris in the press and was a constant outlet going forward, both with her timing to come short to receive the ball and with her runs between defenders. She showed her ability to accelerate past opponents and her technique in one-on-one situations, as well as her patience and calm in front of goal. Lyon's second goal was thanks to her timing and ability to rush into space with the ball." UEFA Technical Observer panel

Alex Clementson, match reporter

And that's why Lyon are eight-time champions! Experience has proven essential once again. Lyon can't have hoped for a more polished performance. It wasn't always pretty, nor were they at their scintillating best – but their efficiency was masterful. They've navigated this difficult task expertly and head to a deserved 11th final. As for Paris, they can hold their head high after a spirited and determined performance.

Sonia Bompastor, Lyon coach: "A lot of joy. They were two very difficult games. We knew that would be the case: this is a Paris side that has produced two good performances. There wasn't much in it, but I need to congratulate my players. We were able to bounce back and win in Lyon, and come here and win too. It's going to be a great final."

Jocelyn Prêcheur, Paris coach: "We really had the urge and desire to get a different result from this game, but we have to move forward. We've got games in other competitions coming up. We'll get over this disappointment quickly and concentrate on the end of the season."

Melchie Dumornay, Lyon midfielder: "We're very happy. We told ourselves that we had to start this match strongly and we followed our coach's orders. We wanted to do better than we did at home. We're very happy to have qualified for the final. I'm super-happy as it's going to be my first Champions League final. I feel very honoured to be part of this team and I hope we can do the best we can."

Lindsey Horan, Lyon midfielder: "It means everything. We've worked so hard this past year to get back to this point. Going into this season, we knew this was a goal of ours. That's the standard this club sets. I'm so proud of this team. After going 2-0 down in the first leg and conceding another today, it shows who we are, the belief we have in this team and what we can show on the pitch."

Grace Geyoro, Paris captain: "Disappointed, first and foremost. We wanted to qualify for the final and we did everything we could to do so. It didn't go in our favour today, but we have to bounce back. We started the first leg well but then we lost. Today we started with a one-goal deficit, so we knew it was going to be difficult. This will help us in the long run, and we can feed off that going forward."

Sonia Bompastor has won the title twice as a player and once as a coach with Lyon

  • Lyon have won 11 Women’s Champions League semi-final ties in a row since losing their first two in 2007/08 and 2008/09.
  • OL have won each of their past four Women’s Champions League semi-final ties against Paris, having previously downed their domestic rivals at this stage in 2015/16, 2019/20 and 2021/22.
  • They are unbeaten in five trips to Paris in the competition and went on to lift the trophy after each of those semi-final wins against the capital side.
  • Nine games in Lyon's current 11-match unbeaten Champions League run have ended in victory.
  • Bacha scored her first Lyon goal since December 2022 and her first in the Champions League since netting away to Ajax on 17 October 2018.
  • Paris had the distinction of being the only one of the four semi-finalists this season to have started their campaign before the group stage. They began the competition in qualifying round two with a 4-2 aggregate victory vs Manchester United (D1-1 a, W3-1 h).

Paris : Picaud; Le Guilly (Vangsgaard 73), Gaetino, De Almeida, Karchaoui; Geyoro, Groenen (Albert 84), Samoura; Baltimore (Martens 84), Katoto, Chawinga

Lyon : Endler; Carpenter, Gilles, Renard, Bacha (Morroni 90); Horan, Egurrola, Van de Donk; Diani (Becho 74), Dumornay, Cascarino (Majri 46)

What's next?

The final against Barcelona at 18:00 CET on Saturday 25 May at San Mamés Stadium in Bilbao.

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George Weah kicks the ball during the Champions league match Spartak Moscow - Paris-Saint-Germain, on September 28 in Moscow.

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Stadium Tour

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Practical information

  • Terms and conditions

visit paris saint germain stadium

1 Going to the Parc des Princes:

Address : 24 Rue de Commandant Guilbaud, 75016 Paris (Gate L)

Coming to the Parc des Princes :

  • Line 9: Porte de Saint-Cloud stop
  • Line 10: Porte d'Auteuil stop
  • Lines 22, 62, 72: Porte de Saint-Cloud stop
  • Lines 32 and 52: Porte d'Auteuil stop
  • From the ring road, exit D910 / Boulogne
  • Velib' stations around the stadium

visit paris saint germain stadium

2 Good to know:

Opening hours :

  • From 10:00 am to 5:00 pm

Duration of the visit : 1h - 1h15

Audioguide languages : French / English / Spanish / Portuguese / Japanese / Mandarin / Italian / German

PRM accessibility : dedicated path and elevator

visit paris saint germain stadium

Take a break at the Deck:

After crossing the players' entrance tunnel, walking close to the pitch and visiting the trophy room, you wish to have a cold drink, a burger or something sweet to recharge your batteries?

During your visit, you will have the opportunity to eat at the Deck, one of the most special spaces of the Parc des Princes on match days as well as during the tour.

At the Deck, you will have the possibility to enjoy:

  • Homemade burgers and hot dogs, nachos
  • Cold drinks and cofee
  • Crepes, ice creams and sweets

visit paris saint germain stadium

The Megastore: Official store of the Parc des Princes

A few minutes before the kick-off of the Stadium Tour, you are not yet equipped with the new Paris Saint-Germain jersey that you would like to wear during your visit? At the end of your experience at the Parc, you want to visit the store to bring a souvenir of this unique moment spent in the PSG stadium?

Visit your 800 square meter Megastore located in front of the Parc des Princes, in the Jean Bouin Stadium, to immerse yourself in the world of Paris Saint-Germain.

You will find a wide range of official club products:

  • Match kits (jersey, shorts, socks)
  • Training clothes
  • Nike and Jordan lifestyle range
  • Accessories (scarves, caps, backpacks...)
  • Nike cleats and footballs
  • Gifts and souvenirs (mugs, phone cases, My Paris card...)

visit paris saint germain stadium

Entrance of the Megastore

visit paris saint germain stadium

In the heart of the Megastore

visit paris saint germain stadium

Official kits of Paris Saint-Germain

visit paris saint germain stadium

Official and personalized printing workshop

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A City Scarred by Terrorism Prepares an Olympic Opening Without Walls

The opening ceremony for this summer’s Paris Games will be held outside a stadium — an Olympics first. Making it safe is complicated.

People walk past newly built stands for Olympic observers.

By Catherine Porter and Ségolène Le Stradic

Reporting from Paris

A terrorist attack of 2015 that left her city angry and heartbroken persuaded Paris’s mayor, Anne Hidalgo, to campaign for the Olympic Games.

“I said to myself, ‘We need to do something that is unifying,’” she said in an interview this month, remembering the horrifying afternoon when masked gunmen charged into the offices of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and opened fire that January, killing 12. “Something that is very powerful, very peaceful and allows us to move forward. So, I threw myself into it.”

Nine years later, the Summer Olympics are set to open in Paris in July with France at its highest level of terrorism alert, after the attack on the Moscow concert hall last month . Yet for the first time, the opening ceremony will not be held inside the barricaded confines of a stadium. Instead, athletes will float in boats down the Seine River through the heart of the dense, ancient city before half a million spectators packed into stands and leaning out of windows.

Although some say that makes the ceremony an obvious target, Ms. Hidalgo and other government officials express full confidence in their safety plan.

“The best response is to do it, but to do it seriously and professionally,” the mayor said, adding, “If we don’t do it because we’re afraid, than they’ve won. And they didn’t win.”

Many security experts have also said they have faith in the preparations.

“Paris will be bunkerized under the current plan for the opening ceremony,” said Frédéric Péchenard, the former head of France’s national police. “The French police have spared no expense.”

Officials brewed up the idea for the ceremony to produce a spectacle that was completely new, was open to many and would “show France under its best light,” President Emmanuel Macron said in a recent television interview. The goal, he said, was “to show that we can do extraordinary things.”

visit paris saint germain stadium

champs-ÉlysÉes

Stade de France

Place de la

Iéna Bridge

des Invalides

Île de la Cité

Île Saint-Louis

Austerlitz Bridge

Official Games venues

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Even so, the security challenges are obvious and myriad.

The procession will cover 3.7 miles of the river, passing hundreds of historic buildings of different eras, shapes and sizes, including the Louvre and Eiffel Tower. There are more than 100 access points, uneven roofs and incongruent windows, and a labyrinth of pipes, tunnels and sewers underneath. Then there is the river, with its own swells, eddies, connections and traffic.

“It will require a very long, very complex security operation that won’t eliminate all the risks,” said Bertrand Cavallier, a former commander at France’s national military police training school.

Since the 2015 deadly Islamist attacks, France has become sadly accustomed to terrorist threats and to soldiers patrolling its crowded squares and train stations, their fingers resting near the triggers of machine guns. The latest one was in December , killing a tourist and injuring three others.

Olympics organizers say the potential for terrorism was stitched into the plan for the Games from the start. Over the months of preparation, in response to security concerns, they have adjusted some of the original plans for the opening ceremony — for example, by cutting the number of spectators permitted along the river.

They also point to their experience with big events. For example, in 2016, France hosted the European soccer championships, drawing some 600,000 foreign spectators, noted Tony Estanguet, the head of the Paris Olympic Committee. Even very public failures, like dangerous crowd control problems at the 2022 Champions League soccer final that were blamed on mistakes by the security services, have offered important lessons, officials say.

“Every decision that has been made since 2015 was made through the lens of security,” Mr. Estanguet said in an interview.

He added, “For three years now, we know precisely day by day, site by site, almost hour by hour, our needs.”

The broad outlines of the plan have been made public.

The areas immediately bordering both sides of the river, stretching miles beyond the ceremony’s course, will be marked as a protected zone that will be closed to motorized vehicles eight days before the ceremony.

The 20,000 people who live and work there will need to apply for a QR code and be screened, and no one without a QR code will be allowed entry.

During that time, the river will be closed to navigation.

On the evening of the ceremony, the airspace over and around Paris for 93 miles will be closed, with all four nearby airports shuttered, including Charles de Gaulle, Europe’s third largest.

The Paris police will secure the underground sewers and tunnels. Subway stations within the perimeter will be closed, as will businesses and restaurants.

Soldiers will check the boats that bring the athletes down the river in the parade.

Four helicopters will monitor the sky, with officers trained in tracking and defusing drones.

Some 45,000 police and military police officers will flood Paris and its suburbs — about 10 times their typical presence.

There will be some 100 diver bomb specialists inspect​ing the water​; some 650 officers from specialized anti-terrorist units​; over 700 firefighters specialized in stopping nuclear and chemical attacks​; ​about 2,000 private security guards secur​ing the areas holding paying spectators​; and 2,500 foreign officers, including some from the United States, many with bomb-detecting dogs.

“There will be a gendarme or police officer every square meter,” said Ghislain Réty, the head of one of the country’s antiterrorism units, which was formed after the terrorist attack on the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, where 11 Israeli Olympic athletes were killed . “A huge amount of intelligence work has been done. Honestly, I think it will be a beautiful party.”

Behind him, as he spoke during a security drill, more than 40 members of his team rammed into an abandoned office building in a Paris suburb using a specialized armored vehicle, and then exited from the roof hanging from a helicopter.

The security for this year’s Olympics will be far greater than what London had during the 2012 Games . It will also surpass the record numbers of officers who last summer quelled riots that broke out around France .

“We have never seen anything like this before,” said Guillaume Farde, a security expert who teaches at Sciences Po University in Paris.

France’s security apparatus on average foils one planned attack every other month, Gérald Darmanin, the interior minister, told a French newspaper this month. He has said that there have been no specific threats against the Olympics.

To date, all 206 delegations — including a selection of the 10,500 Olympic athletes — plan to participate in the opening, and all 120 heads of state have indicated that they will be present, said Marc Guillaume, a top government official for the Paris region. He and others considered that a vote of confidence.

The American Diplomatic Security Service, which oversees the safety of U.S. diplomats at large international events, also expressed satisfaction with the arrangements, according to officials with the service, which sent two members to Paris two years ago to work exclusively on the Games.

To address concerns, the authorities have progressively cut the number of spectators who will be allowed to sit in stands along the river and over many of its bridges — to roughly 300,000 down from 600,000. One-third of those will pay for tickets; the rest are nonpaying spectators who must be invited by government officials or the Olympic Committee.

Polls suggest that Parisians are divided over the plans for the opening ceremony. Some are concerned, but many have grown used to living with terrorism alerts and see the Games as just another potential target. They complain more about the commuting nightmares and crowds that the Olympics will bring.

“I don’t want fear to ruin the Games, which are going to a be a crazy time,” said Jeanne Huyge, 23, enjoying a sunny lunch break on a bench with a friend overlooking the Seine on a recent afternoon. “Otherwise,” she added, “you end up never doing anything.”

Two weeks ago, Mr. Macron said that if there were a serious terrorist threat, the government would be prepared to pull the ceremony off the Seine — and hold it either at Trocadéro Square or in the Stade de France, the national stadium.

“When the sports minister said there was no Plan B, I was shocked,” said Mr. Péchenard, the former head of the national police, referring to an earlier insistence among ministers that the plan would not change. “I was relieved to hear otherwise.”

Still, he pointed out, the opening ceremony will be just the first few hours of a 17-day event, followed later by the Paralympic Games — all to be secured by thousands of police officers and private security guards.

“There’s not just the opening ceremony to secure,” he said. “There are all the actual Games afterwards.”

Catherine Porter is an international reporter for The Times, covering France. She is based in Paris. More about Catherine Porter

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Briefing: CSKA Moscow v Paris Saint Germain

A DRAW AWAY TO THE EUROPEAN champions should be considered a fine start for CSKA Moscow but celebrations should be tempered because Porto dominated the game and have lost many of the players who earned them the trophy last season. Poor Paris St-Germain were destroyed at home by Chelsea, and that Didier Drogba, once of Marseilles, their great rivals, scored two of the goals added to their disappointment. They finally managed their first French league win at the eighth attempt, a late goal by Pauleta giving them a 1-0 success at home to Strasbourg on Saturday.

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Moscow Victory Park

Moscow Victory Park is located in the south of St. Petersburg on Moskovsky Prospekt . It was founded in 1945 to mark the Allied victory in World War II over Nazi Germany.

The Park, which spreads over 68 hectares, is home to more than 100 types of tree and bush, and includes elements of formal and landscape planning, being decorated with ponds, canals, avenues, and flower gardens. The main artery of the park is the Avenue of Heroes, which is lined by bronze statues of people twice awarded the titles Hero of the Soviet Union and Hero of Socialist Labor. A statue of Marshal Georgy Zhukov, who commanded the Leningrad Front in the fall of 1941, was unveiled for the 50 th anniversary of the victory over Germany.

The park is full of reminders of Leningrad's suffering during the war. In front of the park's main pavilion are two figures: "The Front", by Leonid Razumovsky, and "The Rear", by Nikolai Gorenyshev. In 1986, a cross was erected to the victims of the Second World War on the site of a brick factory in whose ovens the bodies of those who died in the Siege of Leningrad were burned.

Moscow Victory Park is located right next to Park Pobedy metro station

Rumours abounded for a years after the Park opened of strange things happening to people - many said they felt short of breath, or choked, or even fainted. Amid talk of the park having an "aura", an investigation was set up which discovered that the park was on the site of a brick factory whose ovens were used to burn the corpses of people who died during the Siege of Leningrad, as well as soldiers from the front. So many people died that many were roughly buried in unmarked graves in the factory's grounds. Leningraders swear that since a cross was erected on the sight of a mass grave, the ghosts of those who died and were not properly buried have ceased to haunt visitors to the park, and that the previous symptoms have disappeared.

Accommodation near the Moscow Victory Park

Rossiya hotel, large standard hotel from the soviet era with extensive meeting space, park inn by radisson pulkovskaya, large soviet-era superior hotel with fast access to pulkovo airport, apartment on varshavskaya, well-equipped studios in modern residential area of southern st. petersburg, dining near the moscow victory park, two above average sushi bars boasting large portions and fresh ingredients, dve palochki, very successful chain of sushi bars recommended for late-night meals, large english pub with a wide range of draft beers and pretty summer terrace.

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IMAGES

  1. Parc des Princes, Paris Saint Germain's Headquarters

    visit paris saint germain stadium

  2. Stadium Tour

    visit paris saint germain stadium

  3. ⚽ Paris St Germain Stadium Tour

    visit paris saint germain stadium

  4. Paris Saint Germain (PSG) Stadium

    visit paris saint germain stadium

  5. Estádio do PSG

    visit paris saint germain stadium

  6. Fußballreisen nach Paris Saint-Germain

    visit paris saint germain stadium

VIDEO

  1. Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) Stadium Tour

  2. PSG set to build a New Stadium

  3. 🔴 (LIVE) SAINT-ETIENNE VS PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN |PES 2021

  4. Nike Paris Saint-Germain Stadium Soccer Gymsack ⚽️ Sac de Football (CK6655-657)

  5. Paris Saint Germain Stadium Tour

  6. INCREDIBLE Behind the Scenes at Parc des Princes PSG: Unbelievable Stadium Tour Beauties Exposed

COMMENTS

  1. Stadium Tour

    With more than 35,000 season ticket holders each season, the Parc des Princes is a stadium resolutely dedicated to football. The Paris Saint-Germain brand and its logo are now inscribed in the setting of the stadium where the Rouge et Bleu have played more than 1,000 official matches since the first of them, on November 10, 1973, against Red Star.

  2. Matchday Visits

    Dive into the action and history of Paris Saint-Germain with our new matchday tours of the legendary Parc des Princes! Accompanied by passionate guides, explore behind the scenes of the stadium, discover well-kept secrets and feel the excitement build as the stadium transforms to host the event. This exclusive experience offers total immersion ...

  3. The PSG EXPERIENCE kicks off

    Paris Saint-Germain has today launched a brand new Parc des Princes experience that will enable all of our supporters to discover the mythical Parisian arena and take in the history of the Club in an interactive and immersive manner. ... A REINVENTED STADIUM VISIT The stadium tour offers unique access to the Parc des Princes. Visitors can go ...

  4. Stadium Tour

    Rejoignez-nous. http://www.facebook.com/PSG; https://www.instagram.com/psg/ https://twitter.com/PSG_inside; Youtube; https://www.snapchat.com/add/psg; https://www ...

  5. Visit Paris and discover a PSG match

    3 - Choose your transport (optional) With the Visit Paris offer of Paris Saint-Germain, you will also be able to add transport to Paris. From Berlin, London, Madrid, Amsterdam, Lyon, Bordeaux and many others, compose your pack according to your needs and desires, and come live an unforgettable experience! Come and make the good of your tour in ...

  6. PSG Experience Stadium Tour • Paris je t'aime

    Book now. COVID19: Stadium Tour visits resume on September 5, 2020. Wearing a mask is compulsory. The mixed zone (too small) can no longer be visited. The visit to the locker room for PSG players is replaced by the visit to the visitor locker room.Guided tours only (groups of up to 30 people) with a departure every 30 minutes from 11am to 4pm.

  7. Buy PSG tickets

    Discover Stadium Tour. ... If you want to buy or sell tickets to a Paris Saint-Germain match in the Parc des Princes, then you've come to the right place! ... Sold-out Ticketplace. Visit the Parc des Princes. Enjoy a unique moment with family and friends. Book my tour now ! Ligue 1 Uber Eats • Journée 33 PARIS vs Toulouse ...

  8. Stadium tour at Parc des Princes

    Book a guided tour of the Parc des Princes Stadium and walk in the footsteps of the heroes of Paris Saint-Germain.Fun and immersive visit.

  9. Parc des Princes

    The current Parc des Princes was inaugurated on the 4th of June 1972 and became one of the world's most unique venues and was way ahead of its time. Underneath its concrete shell, it holds a double-tier stand that runs all around the ground. The stadium has a seating capacity of 48,712 spectators and has been the home of the French football ...

  10. Visite du Parc des Princes

    Take a unique and unusual tour of the institution's headquarters in Paris. Learn more about UNESCO's projects and missions. €15. The Stadium Tour, an immersive and exciting visit to the Parc des Princes, the legendary stadium of one of the world's most famous football clubs: Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). Now a tourist destination in its own ...

  11. Stadium Tour

    Fort de plus 35 000 abonnés chaque saison, le Parc des Princes est un stade résolument dédié au football. La marque Paris Saint-Germain et son logo sont désormais inscrits dans l'écrin du stade où les Rouge et Bleu ont disputé plus de 1 000 matches officiels depuis le premier d'entre eux, le 10 novembre 1973, face au Red Star.

  12. PSG Stadium Tours

    PSG Stadium Tour. Discover the behind the scenes areas of the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris, home of football club Paris Saint-Germain.Walk in the footsteps of your football heroes and see Parc des Princes like you've never seen it before, including places usually inaccessible to the public: VIP boxes, press rooms, locker rooms, the wall of trophies, the presidential area, and more.

  13. PSG.FR

    Paris Saint-Germain official website : news, fixtures and results, player profiles, videos, photos, transfers, live match coverages, highlights, tickets, online shop.

  14. Parc des Princes Seating plan

    View the seating map for Parc des Princes stadium. The Parc des Princes is a stadium located in the south of Paris, in the 16th arrondissement. Its history began in 1897 with the construction of a velodrome stadium. This was renovated in 1932 to increase its capacity to 40,000, and the stadium was completely rebuilt in 1970 following the ...

  15. Borussia Dortmund vs Paris Saint-Germain: How to watch live, stream

    Paris Saint-Germain heads to the Westfalenstadion on Wednesday in a bid to beat Borussia Dortmund and move one step closer to to a second UEFA Champions League final. PSG lost the 2019-20 final to Bayern Munich and have been aching to return to the stage. They'll face a hostile stadium in Germany for the semifinal first leg.

  16. Paris Saint-Germain 1-2 Lyon (agg: 3-5): record winners reach 11th

    Lyon followed up their sensational first-leg comeback by progressing to their 11th Women's Champions League final, Selma Bacha and Melchie Dumornay scoring in a 2-1 win at Paris.

  17. 286 Moscow V Paris Saint Germain Premium High Res Photos

    Find Moscow V Paris Saint Germain stock photos and editorial news pictures from Getty Images. Select from premium Moscow V Paris Saint Germain of the highest quality.

  18. Access to the Parc des Princes

    By Metro: Line 9: Porte de Saint-Cloud stop. Line 10: Porte d'Auteuil stop. By bus: Lines 22, 62, 72: Porte de Saint-Cloud stop. Lines 32 and 52: Porte d'Auteuil stop. By car: From the South ring road: exit D910 / Boulogne. Discover here how to easily get to the Parc des Princes: from your starting point and your mean of transport, etc.

  19. Practical information

    1 Going to the Parc des Princes: Address: 24 Rue de Commandant Guilbaud, 75016 Paris (Gate L) Coming to the Parc des Princes: Metro: Line 9: Porte de Saint-Cloud stop. Line 10: Porte d'Auteuil stop. Bus: Lines 22, 62, 72: Porte de Saint-Cloud stop. Lines 32 and 52: Porte d'Auteuil stop.

  20. Zenit Saint Petersburg vs Dynamo Moscow at Gazprom Arena on 06/12/19

    Book tickets online for the Zenit Saint Petersburg vs Dynamo Moscow match on 06/12/19 Fri 19:30 in the Russian Premier League right here. Tickets starting from

  21. Paris, Despite Terrorism Scars, Prepares an Olympic Opening Without

    The opening ceremony for this summer's Paris Games will be held outside a stadium — an Olympics first. Making it safe is complicated. By Catherine Porter and Ségolène Le Stradic Reporting ...

  22. Briefing: CSKA Moscow v Paris Saint Germain

    A DRAW AWAY TO THE EUROPEAN champions should be considered a fine start for CSKA Moscow but celebrations should be tempered because Porto dominated the game and have ...

  23. Moscow Victory Park

    Moscow Victory Park is located in the south of St. Petersburg on Moskovsky Prospekt. It was founded in 1945 to mark the Allied victory in World War II over Nazi Germany. The Park, which spreads over 68 hectares, is home to more than 100 types of tree and bush, and includes elements of formal and landscape planning, being decorated with ponds ...