A deep dive into Père Lachaise’s founding vision: garden‑cemetery logic, axial paths, and how planning shaped Parisian remembrance.

Père Lachaise is Paris’s prototype garden‑cemetery — a planned landscape where memory, ecology, and urban order meet. Founded in the early 19th century under Napoleonic reforms, it reorganized funerary practice: outside city limits, hygienic terrain, and legible plots.
A cemetery becomes a city of memory — with streets, addresses, and districts of style.
| Element | Role | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Main avenues | Orientation | Legible bearings |
| Squares | Gathering nodes | Pause and reflection |
| Terraces | Soil stability | Accessible plots |
$$ ext{Path Porosity} = rac{ ext{minor path length}}{ ext{major axis length}} o 1.6 ext{–}2.1 $$

Père Lachaise codifies remembrance in paths and plots — a landscape where urban order and mourning align.
[^founding]: Napoleonic edicts relocated cemeteries beyond city centers to improve air, drainage, and public health.

오래도록 파리를 걸어온 이야기꾼으로서, 전설과 사랑 이야기, 조용한 추모, 그리고 ‘기억을 실천하는 다정함’을 따라 페르 라쉐즈에서 길을 찾도록 돕고자 이 안내서를 만들었습니다.
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