| Length | 1 km (0.62 mi) |
|---|---|
| Location | Versailles |
| Coordinates | 48°48′19″N2°08′10″E / 48.80528°N 2.13611°E /48.80528; 2.13611 |
| North end | Place d'Armes |
| East end | Avenue des États Unis |
| Construction | |
| Completion | 2nd half of the 17th century |
TheAvenue de Saint-Cloud is a thoroughfare inVersailles,France.
Avenue de Saint-Cloud is one of three avenues that fan out fromPlace d'Armes, in front of theChâteau de Versailles, along withAvenue de Paris andAvenue de Sceaux. Avenue de Saint-Cloud is the northernmost of the three. Heading east-northeast, it ends at thecarrefour de Montreuil, at the Place Alexandre-Ier-de-Yougoslavie. Avenue des États-Unis extends it beyond the Montreuil crossroads, bending slightly to the north. It is 1,025 metres long and 78 metres wide. Medians planted with two rows of plane trees and equipped with bicycle paths separate the central traffic lanes from the two counter-alleys.
The avenue owes its name to the fact that it runs towards the town ofSaint-Cloud. In 1665, it was called Avenue de Paris. In 1793, it was renamed Avenue de l'Orient, before reverting to its former name in 1806.
A menagerie and stables occupied the site of today's Lycée Hoche during the reign of Louis XIV. The Café Amaury, where the founders of theClub Breton met in 1789, was located at the corner of Avenue de Saint-Cloud and today's Rue Carnot. In 1963, a new thoroughfare was created between Avenue de Paris and Avenue de Saint-Cloud, in place of an artillery barracks. The public treasury and the central post office, as well as a parking lot, were also built here. The new thoroughfare was named Avenue de l'Europe.[4]