✦ Captured by TLC Paris
Designed by architect Jean Nouvel
The Branly museum combines contemporary architecture, gardens and world cultures, just steps from the Eiffel Tower.

Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac

World Cultures, Architecture & Garden Experiences

Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac

Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac showcases the arts and cultures of Africa, Asia, Oceania and the Americas through one of Paris’s most distinctive museum experiences. Designed by Jean Nouvel and surrounded by lush gardens near the Eiffel Tower, the museum combines architecture, exhibitions, performances and cultural discovery in a unique riverside setting.

What You'll Discover
Permanent Collections · Africa · Asia · Oceania · The Americas · Indigenous Art & Culture · Masks & Ritual Objects · Textiles & Craftsmanship · Temporary Exhibitions · Jean Nouvel Architecture · Living Garden · Green Wall Façade · Auditorium & Performances · Talks & Cultural Events · Family Activities · Museum Bookshop · Café Jacques · Les Ombres Rooftop Restaurant · Eiffel Tower Area · Seine River Walks · Cultural Discovery

TLC Paris Concierge note: Allow time for both the collections and the gardens. One of the museum's greatest strengths is the transition between architecture, nature and culture. Consider ending your visit with lunch, coffee or dinner at Les Ombres, where Eiffel Tower views provide a memorable finale.

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Highlights (evergreen)

World Arts Focus

Africa, Asia, Oceania & the Americas — objects, sounds & stories.

Nouvel Architecture

Jean Nouvel’s riverside museum & lush planted facade with garden paths.

Programs & Performance

Talks, films, concerts — a living platform for cultural exchange.

Digital Access

Explore the collection & multimedia online before your visit.

TLC Paris Concierge — riverside architecture, living collections, global voices.

Restaurant Les Ombres
Visit Les Ombres for refined French dining and one of the closest Eiffel Tower views in Paris.
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Sound & Vision — Les collections ont leur bande-son +

The museum invites visitors to experience a new sonic journey across its permanent collections — over 120 sound points spread throughout the galleries. Instrumental tones, voices, chants and ambient recordings create a living dialogue between sound, space and object.

Official video © Musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac — via YouTube.

Address, Hours & Map+

Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac

Visitor information ↗

Show map — 7ᵉ, riverside
Tickets & Booking+

Reserve entry slots online; some events require separate tickets.

Book tickets ↗ · Diary / Agenda ↗

Exhibitions & Events+

Explore current shows and upcoming programs in the auditorium and galleries.

Current exhibitions ↗ · Agenda ↗

Collections & Multimedia+

Search the online collections, then dive into films, podcasts & digital stories.

Collections database ↗ · Multimedias ↗

Architecture, Garden & Atmosphere+

The museum is also a landscape experience: Jean Nouvel’s architecture, the planted garden and the riverside setting create a quieter, more immersive rhythm than many central Paris museums.

Best for visitors who want culture, design, greenery and a Seine-side pause in one stop.

Services — Map, Restaurants & Accessibility+

Plan your route, book a table, and review accessibility details before you go.

Interactive map ↗ · Restaurants ↗ · Visitors with disabilities ↗

Nearby — TLC Paris Picks (7ᵉ & Seine)+

Tip: arrive via Passerelle Debilly for a quiet Seine approach; book Les Ombres at sunset.

World Cultures, Architecture, Gardens & Art Beyond Europe

Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac

Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac is a striking museum near the Eiffel Tower dedicated to arts and civilizations from Africa, Asia, Oceania and the Americas. Designed by Jean Nouvel and surrounded by lush gardens, it offers a quieter, more immersive cultural experience beside the Seine.

Best For
World cultures, art & architecture
Atmosphere
Immersive, calm & design-led
What To Expect
Collections, exhibitions & gardens
First Visit?
Yes, for culture beyond Europe
Location
Quai Jacques Chirac, 7th arrondissement
Nearby
Eiffel Tower, Champ de Mars & Seine
Visit Time
1.5–2.5 hours
Best Time
Weekdays or calm afternoons
Visitor Highlights
World Cultures · Africa · Asia · Oceania · Americas · Indigenous Art · Jean Nouvel Architecture · Museum Gardens · Temporary Exhibitions · Eiffel Tower Area · Seine River · Paris Museums · Quiet Cultural Visit

TLC Paris Concierge note: Musée du Quai Branly is a strong choice when you want culture near the Eiffel Tower without the intensity of the major central museums. Allow time for both the exhibitions and the garden setting, which gives the museum a quieter, more contemplative rhythm.

Tucked between the Seine and the Eiffel Tower, just steps from the Pont de l’Alma and the peaceful lawns of the Champ de Mars, there is a place where stories rise from the soil of distant lands—where ancestral voices resonate in carved wood, dyed fiber, beaten metal, and painted skin.
This is the Musée du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac, a museum unlike any other in Paris.
Here, TLC Paris Concierge offers a passage not only into a gallery space but into a living dialogue between continents, traditions, and generations—framed not by linear history, but by shared presence.

At first glance, the museum’s lush garden by Gilles Clément seems to envelop the visitor, softening the shift between city and sanctuary. A winding, elevated footpath leads not just to a building but into a mindset—one that listens more than it explains, and observes more than it prescribes.

Inside, the space unfolds not in sections but in zones of quiet wonder.
The architecture—fluid, immersive, almost theatrical—refuses the traditional rigidity of Western design. Walls curve, light fluctuates like forest shade, and the eye drifts toward what lies beyond.

When the visit ends, step back into daylight and let Paris unfold:
have coffee at Les Ombres, the museum’s rooftop restaurant with a breathtaking view of the Eiffel Tower; cross the bridge toward Palais de Tokyo and its contemporary galleries; or stroll along the Seine quays toward Trocadéro Gardens and the Musée de l’Homme.
Each turn, each reflection, feels part of the same conversation—the city itself becoming an exhibition under open sky.