vincennes-castle-gothic-architecture

Visiting Chateau de Vincennes and the Bois de Vincennes

The keep at Vincennes is 52 metres tall and looks like it could withstand a siege this afternoon. Which makes sense, because it was built for exactly that purpose. The Château de Vincennes is the last great medieval fortress in the Paris region — a proper castle with a moat, a drawbridge, massive walls, and a tower that was the tallest secular structure in Europe when it was completed in 1370. While travelers queue for Versailles’s gold-leaf mirrors, Vincennes offers something Versailles can’t: 700 years of military architecture that still makes you feel small.

Vincennes sits at the eastern edge of Paris, right next to the Bois de Vincennes — the city’s largest park. The Métro takes you there in 20 minutes from central Paris, and the castle is a 2-minute walk from the station. Most visitors combine the castle with a walk in the park, a visit to the Parc Zoologique (Paris Zoo), or a pedal boat on the Lac Daumesnil. It’s a full day that feels nothing like the rest of Paris.

Vincennes Castle showing Gothic architecture
The keep (donjon) of the Château de Vincennes is the most impressive medieval tower in France. At 52 metres, it dominated the Parisian skyline for centuries. The walls are 3.3 metres thick at the base — designed to resist catapults, cannon fire, and anything else a besieging army could throw at them.
Medieval castle with towers and bridge under cloudy sky
The castle complex includes the keep, the Sainte-Chapelle (a smaller version of the Île de la Cité chapel), a massive curtain wall with nine towers, and a wide moat. The scale is impressive from the outside but even more so once you’re inside the walls — the courtyard is the size of a football pitch.
Best ticket: Château de Vincennes Entry Ticket — $15, self-guided access to the keep, chapel, and grounds. 342 reviews at 4.5 stars.

Official site: chateau-de-vincennes.fr — current hours, exhibitions, and special events.

Combine with: Bois de Vincennes park (free), Lac Daumesnil (pedal boats), and the Paris Zoo (separate ticket).

Inside the Keep

The keep is the main attraction and the reason to buy a ticket. Six floors of medieval rooms connected by a spiral staircase that’s genuinely steep — 250 steps from bottom to top. Each floor served a different purpose: the ground floor was storage and defence, the middle floors were royal apartments, and the top floor housed the treasury and records. The rooms are largely empty now, but the architecture itself — the vaulted ceilings, the arrow slits, the chimney flues carved into 3-metre walls — tells you everything about how medieval power worked.

Medieval castle tower against blue sky
The view from the top of the keep extends across eastern Paris and well into the Île-de-France countryside. On a clear day, you can see the Eiffel Tower to the west and the forests of Marne to the east. It’s a panorama that medieval kings used for military surveillance — and that modern visitors use for Instagram.

The keep also served as a prison for much of its history. The Marquis de Sade was held here before being transferred to the Bastille. Diderot was imprisoned here for his Encyclopedia. And during World War II, the Nazis used the castle as their headquarters in eastern Paris — 30 Resistance fighters were executed in the moat in 1944. A memorial marks the spot.

Medieval castle with Gothic architecture
The corner turrets on the keep contain the spiral staircases. Each turret is essentially a separate defensive tower — if attackers breached one, the defenders could seal it off and retreat to the main structure. The military thinking behind every architectural detail becomes obvious once a guide explains it.

The Sainte-Chapelle de Vincennes

A smaller cousin of the Île de la Cité’s famous Sainte-Chapelle, the Vincennes version was started in 1379 and not completed until the 16th century. It’s a beautiful example of Flamboyant Gothic architecture — the stone tracery in the windows is more elaborate than the older Paris chapel’s, and the stained glass (partially restored, partially modern) fills the interior with coloured light.

Castle with tower reflected in lake in France
The chapel sits within the castle walls, opposite the keep. The contrast between the military brutality of the tower and the spiritual elegance of the chapel is deliberate — medieval rulers wanted both divine approval and overwhelming force, and they built structures to express both.

The chapel is included in the castle entry ticket and takes about 15-20 minutes to appreciate. The apocalyptic stained glass in the apse is the highlight — seven windows depicting the Last Judgment in intense reds and blues. On a sunny morning, the chapel interior glows.

The History: From Royal Residence to Prison to Battlefield

Vincennes’s history reads like a greatest hits of French drama. Louis IX (Saint Louis) dispensed justice under an oak tree in the Bois de Vincennes — a scene depicted in every French schoolchild’s history textbook. Charles V built the keep in the 1360s as a fortified royal residence during the Hundred Years’ War. Henri IV kept his mistresses here (discreetly). Louis XIV spent his childhood at Vincennes before moving to Versailles. Napoleon converted it into an arsenal. And in August 1944, the retreating Germans executed prisoners in the moat and attempted to blow up the keep (they failed — the walls were too thick).

French chateau with moat
The moat at Vincennes is dry now, converted to gardens and walkways. But its original depth and width — about 10 metres deep and 25 metres wide — tell you how seriously the castle’s builders took the threat of attack. This wasn’t decorative. It was designed to stop an army.
French chateau with park and architecture
Vincennes was one of several royal residences around Paris — Fontainebleau to the south, Saint-Germain-en-Laye to the west, and Versailles eventually replacing them all. But Vincennes was the most defensible, which is why it remained in military use long after the others became purely residential palaces.

The Bois de Vincennes: Paris’s Biggest Park

The Bois de Vincennes covers 995 hectares — roughly three times the size of Central Park in New York. It’s technically not a park but a forest, with managed woodlands, four lakes, a hippodrome (horse racing), a velodrome, a Buddhist temple, a tropical garden, and the Paris Zoo. Most Parisians treat it as their weekend escape from the city, and on sunny Saturdays the paths are packed with joggers, cyclists, and families.

Temple of Love at Lac Daumesnil in autumn
The Lac Daumesnil is the most picturesque of the four lakes. The Temple de l’Amour on its island looks like a Romantic-era painting, especially in autumn when the surrounding trees turn gold and the reflections double everything. Pedal boats are available from March through October — about €14 for 30 minutes.
Swans on a lake in a Paris park with temple
The swans on the Lac Daumesnil are the park’s unofficial mascots. They share the water with ducks, herons, and the occasional cormorant. The lakeside paths are flat and shaded — one of the most pleasant walks in Paris, and completely free.
Tranquil park lake surrounded by trees in spring bloom
The Bois de Vincennes in spring — late March through May — is when the park is at its prettiest. Cherry blossoms, magnolias, and the first green leaves transform the winter-bare forest into something that rivals any botanical garden. The Parc Floral (floral garden, €6 entry) concentrates the best of it into a single enclosed space.
Park lake with trees in bright spring weather
The park is big enough to genuinely get lost in — some of the paths through the northern woodland sections feel more like countryside walking than urban park. Bring a map or use Google Maps if you’re exploring beyond the main lakeside routes. The Métro stations at Château de Vincennes, Porte Dorée, and Charenton-Écoles all provide access to different parts of the park.
Medieval castle tower against blue sky
The Bois de Vincennes was the royal hunting forest for centuries. Louis IX’s famous oak tree — under which he dispensed justice in the 13th century — stood somewhere in this forest. The exact location is unknown, but a monument near the castle marks the general area. It’s a story every French child knows and one of the founding myths of French jurisprudence.

The Parc Floral: Paris’s Best Garden

The Parc Floral de Paris sits within the Bois de Vincennes, about a 10-minute walk from the castle. It’s a 31-hectare botanical garden that was created for the 1969 Floralies Internationales and has been one of Paris’s best-kept secrets ever since. Entry is €6.50, which buys you themed gardens (Japanese, Mediterranean, iris, dahlia), a butterfly house, a children’s playground, and some of the most photogenic flower displays in the city.

The park hosts a free jazz festival on summer weekends — live performances in the bandstand surrounded by flowers. It’s the kind of event that makes you wonder why anyone pays €200 for a club when you can listen to world-class musicians for free while sitting on grass surrounded by roses.

Park lake with trees in bright spring
The Parc Floral’s themed gardens peak at different times — iris in May, roses in June, dahlias in September. The pine woodland paths that connect the gardens provide shade and a sense of being much further from Paris than you actually are. It’s a 20-minute Métro ride from the Louvre, but it feels like a different world.
Aerial view of Parisian park
From above, the Bois de Vincennes is clearly visible as the green lung of eastern Paris. The castle sits at its northwest corner, the zoo at the west, and the hippodrome at the south. The four lakes are connected by paths that form a network popular with runners — the full circuit is about 12km.

The Paris Zoo (Parc Zoologique)

The Paris Zoo reopened in 2014 after a six-year, €167 million renovation that transformed it from one of Europe’s worst zoos into one of its best. The design is organized by biozone — Sahel-Sudan, Madagascar, Amazonia-Guyana, Europe, and Patagonia — rather than by species. Each zone recreates the ecosystem, not just the animals. The Amazonian greenhouse is a full tropical forest under glass, complete with humidity, heat, and the sound of invisible birds.

Aerial view of Parisian park with river and skyline
The zoo sits at the western edge of the Bois de Vincennes, near the Porte Dorée Métro. The Grand Rocher (artificial mountain) at its centre is 65 metres high and visible from across the park. It’s a landmark that was controversial when built in the 1930s but has become beloved — a mountain in a flat park in a flat city.

The highlights include the Sahel-Sudan zone (giraffes, rhinos, and a panoramic viewing platform), the Madagascar greenhouse (lemurs in a recreated rainforest), and the Patagonia zone (sea lions with an underwater viewing tunnel). The Grand Rocher — the 65-metre artificial mountain at the zoo’s centre — houses the Amazonian biosphere and is visible from across the park. The renovation was criticised for its cost, but the result is a zoo that takes animal welfare seriously while still being spectacular to visit.

The zoo ticket is separate from the castle (€22 for adults, €17 for under-13s). It takes about 3-4 hours to see everything. Combined with the castle in the morning and the zoo in the afternoon, you have a full day that’s completely different from central Paris tourism — nature, history, and animals instead of museums, monuments, and museums.

Lake with trees and pavilion in Paris park
The walk from the Château de Vincennes to the Paris Zoo takes about 25 minutes through the Bois de Vincennes — a pleasant stroll along tree-lined paths. Alternatively, the Route de la Pyramide runs through the park and is popular with cyclists. Rent a Vélib’ bike at the castle Métro and ride to the zoo — it’s flat and the bike paths are good.

Best Ticket to Book

1. Château de Vincennes Entry Ticket — $15

Chateau de Vincennes entry ticket
342 reviews at 4.5 stars. At $15, this is one of the cheapest major monument visits in the Paris region — and one of the most underrated. The keep alone is worth the ticket; the chapel and grounds are a bonus.

The entry ticket covers the keep (all 6 floors including the rooftop panorama), the Sainte-Chapelle, and the castle grounds. Self-guided, available in English, and typically uncrowded — you might share the keep with a dozen other visitors on a weekday morning, compared to the thousands at Versailles. Allow 90 minutes for the castle and chapel. Our review covers the visit in detail, including which floors of the keep are most worth lingering on and whether the rooftop view rivals the Montparnasse Tower.

2. Conciergerie with Histopad — $15

Conciergerie with Histopad
If you’re interested in medieval French architecture, pair Vincennes with the Conciergerie on the Île de la Cité. Same era, same builders, completely different purpose — one was a fortress, the other a palace turned prison.

The Conciergerie — on the Île de la Cité in central Paris — is the other major medieval building open to the public. The Histopad augmented reality technology adds virtual reconstructions to the empty stone rooms, showing how the palace and prison looked when occupied. Pairing Vincennes (morning) with the Conciergerie (afternoon) gives you a complete picture of medieval Parisian power for $30 total. Our Conciergerie guide covers the full visit.

3. Fontainebleau + Vaux-le-Vicomte Day Trip — $138

Fontainebleau and Vaux-le-Vicomte day trip
If Vincennes sparks a taste for French castles, Fontainebleau and Vaux-le-Vicomte are the natural next step — larger, more ornate, and covering 800 years of palace evolution from medieval fortress to Baroque masterpiece.

For visitors who catch the castle bug at Vincennes and want more, the Fontainebleau and Vaux-le-Vicomte day trip covers two of France’s most impressive châteaux — one that evolved over 800 years (like Vincennes) and one that was designed as a single unified masterpiece. The guided tour adds historical context that makes the progression from medieval fortress to Renaissance palace to Baroque garden come alive.

Practical Tips

Getting there: Métro Line 1 to Château de Vincennes (the end of the line). The castle entrance is a 2-minute walk from the station — you literally can’t miss it. The journey from Châtelet takes about 20 minutes.

Opening hours: Daily 10am-5pm (winter) or 10am-6pm (summer). Closed January 1, May 1, and December 25. Check the official site for current hours. The keep occasionally closes for restoration work — verify before visiting if the keep specifically is your priority.

Vincennes Castle Gothic architecture
The best time to visit is weekday mornings — the castle is genuinely quiet. Sunday afternoons are busiest, especially in spring and autumn when the Bois de Vincennes attracts families. The keep’s spiral staircase can feel crowded if multiple groups are climbing simultaneously, so off-peak timing makes the experience significantly better.
Swans on lake in Paris park with temple
The Lac des Minimes — the most secluded of the four lakes — has three small islands that are home to nesting birds. Access is by footpath only, and even on busy weekends, this corner of the park feels genuinely quiet. It’s a 20-minute walk from the castle, deeper into the forest, and worth the detour if you want the opposite of Paris.
Castle tower reflected in lake
The moat around the Château de Vincennes — now dry — was once fed by a diversion from the nearby Marne river. In medieval times, the water defence was supplemented by drawbridges at the north and south entrances. The north drawbridge mechanism is still visible in the gatehouse, and the portcullis groove in the stone shows where the iron gate dropped.
Tranquil park lake in spring bloom
Spring at the Bois de Vincennes transforms the park into a colour palette. The cherry blossoms around the Lac Daumesnil bloom in late March, the magnolias follow in April, and by May the entire forest canopy is green. The contrast with the stone castle just metres away — military grey against botanical green — is one of the visual treats of visiting in spring.

How long: 90 minutes for the castle and chapel. Add 2-3 hours for the Bois de Vincennes (lakeside walk + pedal boats). Add 3-4 hours if you’re doing the zoo. A full castle + park + zoo day runs about 7 hours.

Budget: Castle: $15 (free for EU under-26). Park: free. Pedal boats: €14/30 min. Zoo: €22 adults, €17 under-13. A full day costs about €50 per adult, which is less than most half-day Paris museum visits.

Medieval castle with towers and bridge
The castle gift shop sells decent historical books and surprisingly good reproductions of medieval objects. The café in the castle grounds is basic — coffee and sandwiches — but the park has better picnic options. Pick up supplies at the shops near the Métro station and eat by the lake.
Temple of Love at Lac Daumesnil
The Lac Daumesnil at sunset — with the Temple de l’Amour silhouetted against the sky and the water catching the last light — is one of the most romantic spots in eastern Paris. It’s a 15-minute walk from the castle and free to access. The pedal boat rental closes at dusk, but the lakeside paths stay open.

Where Vincennes Fits in Your Paris Trip

Vincennes is the perfect day 3 or 4 activity — after you’ve done the central Paris landmarks and want something different. It pairs well with the Père Lachaise Cemetery (both are in eastern Paris, connected by Métro Line 1). The Conciergerie offers a direct medieval comparison. And for castle enthusiasts, the Fontainebleau and Vaux-le-Vicomte combination shows what happened when French builders stopped worrying about defence and started focusing on beauty.