officially Avenue des Champs-lyses (French: Avenue of the Elysian Fields) broad avenue in Paris, one of the world's most famous, which stretches 1.17 miles (1.88 km) from the Arc de Triomphe to the Place de la Concorde. It is divided into two parts by the Rond-Point (roundabout) des Champs-lyses. The lower part, toward the Place de la Concorde (and beyond, the Tuileries Gardens), is surrounded by gardens, museums, theatres, and a few restaurants. The upper part, toward the Arc de Triomphe, was traditionally the site of luxury shops and hotels, restaurants and pavement cafs, theatres, banks, and offices but, since World War II, has steadily declined, becoming the scene of fast-food restaurants, garish movie houses, souvenir vendors, sidewalk hawkers, airline offices, and shopping malls. When first designed in the 17th century, the Champs-lyses consisted of fields, an open area then on the outskirts of Paris, containing the Cours de la Reine (Queen's Drive), an approach road running along the Seine River to the Tuileries Palace. Later in the same century, Andr Le Ntre landscaped the broad, shady avenue and extended it to the crest of the hill on which the Arc de Triomphe now stands. In the 18th century the whole came to be called the Champs-lyses. The Arc de Triomphe was inaugurated in 1836, and by the 1860s, when Baron Georges-Eugne Haussmann was grandly redrawing the boulevards of Paris, the Champs-lyses had become a prestigious thoroughfare of palaces, hotels, and restaurants.
CHAMPS-LYSES
Meaning of CHAMPS-LYSES in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012