
As the oldest bridge in the capital, the Pont Neuf offers a stunning stone backdrop that’s perfect for street photography.
Set with stones, this elegant Parisian photo spot attracts a wide variety of passersby, thanks to its proximity to several luxury boutiques on the Right Bank. Its fully cobblestone-paved central lane faces the Louis Vuitton stores and La Samaritaine on one side, and the Île de la Cité on the other.

In June 2025, as I step onto the Pont-Neuf from the Île de la Cité, the sky is heavily overcast, but a small break in the clouds to the west lets in a low, enveloping light, perfect for illuminating faces.
1 hour of photography on the Pont-Neuf: highlights from a street photography session in Paris.
Interactions

While a bridge is primarily about crossing, many people stop there for a moment to enjoy the view or take their time to chat.

To capture the first glimpses of life, I settle into one of the cozy nooks lining the deck, and I find I’m not the only one curling up there.

When it comes to cell phones, facial expressions don’t lie—they tell us whether or not there is human interaction.

Crossing the Pont Neuf
Resting ever since its spectacular wrapping by Christo and Jeanne-Claude in the 1980s, the Pont Neuf remains as captivating as ever—still a coveted icon that continues to draw the most extravagant artists, as in June 2026 when JR transformed it into a cavern.

Passersby cannot escape the piercing gaze of the mascarons depicting the heads of old men, which, for their part, cannot escape the countless padlocks left by Parisian lovers.

There was a time when Paris had no riverbanks, and when, even from the bridges, Parisians could not see the Seine!
The Pont-Neuf, in fact, owes its name to the fact that it was one of the first stone bridges in Paris to be built without any dwellings on it.
Its wide stone sidewalks, once designed to protect pedestrians from the mud, now provide an elegant setting for a few crossings.



About the cover image

The photograph accompanying this article was the obvious choice.
It may look staged, but it isn’t at all: it’s actually a snapshot.
Just for the anecdote, here is the photograph that precedes it.

Fixation cone
This Parisian street photography session wrapped up right near the Pont Neuf metro exit.
The unusual sight of a traffic cone perched on a bollard caught my attention for a few minutes, and I tried to work with it…



Side Notes
And what had happened just before?

Just before the Pont Neuf, a detour across the Pont au Double “forced” me to take a photo of passersby standing in pairs in front of the bridge’s plaque…
Voir une session photo de rue conceptuelle à La Défense.
And after?

Next stop: the Louvre Pyramid, one of my favorite photo spots in Paris, which will soon be featured in this blog’s series of Parisian street photos.
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