- Visit Rue du Dragon between Saint-Germain-des-Prés and Le Bon Marché
- Around Rue du Dragon, Saint-Sulpice, Luxembourg Gardens and Boulevard Saint-Germain
- Private shuttle to Rue du Dragon from Orly, CDG and Beauvais
Visit Rue du Dragon between Saint-Germain-des-Prés and Le Bon Marché
Left Bank transfer guide: Prepare your trip with our Left Bank street transfer guide.
From Rue du Dragon in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, shuttle vans provide direct access to Orly airport.
Convenient for departures from central Saint-Germain toward Orly airport with direct access.
Location overview: Rue du Dragon sits in the 6th arrondissement, between Boulevard Saint-Germain, Rue de Rennes and the streets leading toward Le Bon Marché. This well-known Left Bank address belongs to the Saint-Germain-des-Prés atmosphere, where narrow façades, bookshops, galleries and discreet doorways create a historic setting rather than a monumental avenue. For visitors, the street offers a compact entry into one of Paris’s most recognizable cultural districts, close to Saint-Sulpice, the Seine side and the refined shopping route around Rue de Sèvres.
The name of Rue du Dragon comes from a carved dragon set into a doorway near Rue de Rennes, a landmark detail that gives the street its singular identity. The road was once known under another name before its current title became established in the nineteenth century. Its short length, older alignments and narrow proportions keep the feeling of a layered Paris street, shaped by residential life, artistic memory and the daily movement of Saint-Germain. A second dragon figure closer to Rue de Grenelle reinforces this unusual local symbol.
Rue du Dragon has also been linked to writers, publishers, performers and artists who used nearby buildings as homes, offices or creative spaces. This gives the street a quieter cultural value than the larger references around it. Visitors do not come here for a single grand monument, but for the connection between Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Le Bon Marché, Rue de Rennes and the Left Bank’s literary identity. Travelers arriving after a flight can use a Paris airport shuttle service for Saint-Germain to reach nearby addresses directly before exploring the district at a slower pace.
Around Rue du Dragon, Saint-Sulpice, Luxembourg Gardens and Boulevard Saint-Germain
Access overview: The area around Rue du Dragon is easy to understand once the main Left Bank references are identified. Boulevard Saint-Germain gives the district its active rhythm, Rue de Rennes leads toward shopping and station connections, and Saint-Sulpice Church provides a major historic point within walking distance. The street itself remains narrower and calmer, which creates a clear contrast with the busier crossings nearby.
A short walk brings visitors toward Café de Flore and Les Deux Magots, two iconic Saint-Germain cafés that still work as living meeting places rather than simple photo stops. Their terraces, nearby bookshops and constant pedestrian flow give the area a strong cultural presence. In another direction, Luxembourg Gardens offer open paths, benches and long sightlines that can be useful after travel fatigue. Le Bon Marché and the streets around Rue de Sèvres add a shopping and service dimension to the district.
Movement is generally straightforward, but pavements can become crowded around Boulevard Saint-Germain, Rue de Rennes and the café terraces. Travelers with suitcases may also notice uneven surfaces and narrow crossings around older streets. For families, older visitors or guests arriving late, a direct drop-off near Rue du Dragon can be more comfortable than changing metro lines with bags. A pre-booked airport shuttle taxi for Paris hotels and stations helps connect the district with airports, hotels and train stations without unnecessary walking through crowded Left Bank routes.
Private shuttle to Rue du Dragon from Orly, CDG and Beauvais
Transfer insight: Reaching Rue du Dragon from Paris airports requires a route adapted to the compact streets of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Rue du Dragon is about 17 km from Orly Airport, around 34 km from Charles de Gaulle Airport and much farther from Beauvais Airport. Travel time varies with traffic, especially near the Left Bank and Boulevard Saint-Germain.
Public transport can involve stairs, platform changes and walking with luggage, while taxis remain dependent on congestion. A private shuttle offers direct airport pickup, door-to-door travel and clearer timing for hotel arrivals, family stays or late flights. From Orly, the ride is usually around 35 to 60 min depending on traffic; from CDG, it is often between 45 and 75 min. For visitors who want a wider city route after check-in, private vehicle services in Paris can also support direct movement without carrying bags through metro corridors.


















