Along the world’s most iconic river
They’re back. After lighting up the Seine last summer, Disco Disco cruises have once again become one of the season’s most sought-after outings. Through September 8, night owls are swapping overheated dance floors for open-air celebrations aboard a floating music venue. Every Tuesday from 7 p.m., fans of disco, funk, soul, and house music gather aboard a barge moored at Quai Saint-Bernard in the 5th arrondissement. More than 20 local collectives and DJs—including Boogie Frizante, Donna Gibson, Écran Total, and The Disco Express—take turns behind the decks, transforming a three-hour river cruise into a moving dance party. The experience combines classic tracks from the 1970s and 1980s with front-row views of Paris’s most celebrated landmarks as they glide past after sunset.
With CN19, this summer is the perfect time to try waterskiing or wakeboarding on the Seine.
Polpo Plage brings together sand, lounge chairs and cocktails — everything you need to feel by the sea while staying in the Paris region.
Moored at Port de Javel Bas, the Annette K barge leaves no excuse not to get — or get back — into shape this summer.
Far more than a river, the Seine becomes an open-air playground during the summer months. Just a short distance from Quai Saint-Bernard—close enough for the adventurous souls willing to take another dip in the river this year—several venues offer their own take on dancing on the water.
Among them is Wanderlust, the sprawling riverside venue at Quai d’Austerlitz, which has revived its summer residency program. Every Tuesday and Wednesday evening, free outdoor events draw crowds until 10 p.m. before continuing into the early hours, with R&B, hip-hop, Afro-inspired DJ sets, and live performances setting the pace.
The venue will also host several ticketed after-parties, including one following The Weeknd’s After Hours Til Dawn Tour concert at Stade de France.
Across the river, directly opposite Wanderlust, Le Mazette embraces a similarly festive spirit. Spread across three levels and somewhere between a nightclub, a bar, and a restaurant, the floating venue at Port de la Rapée rarely sleeps. From Tuesday through Sunday, themed nights with knowingly playful names keep the city’s party crowd coming back for more.
Culture along the seine
A gathering place for night owls, the Seine’s barges and embankments also serve as cultural meeting points for Parisians who refuse to abandon the arts during the summer months.
Rather than retreat indoors, many head to Fluctuart, the world’s first floating urban art center. Moored beneath the Quai d’Orsay since 2019, it has established itself as one of the city’s most dynamic exhibition spaces. This summer, attention turns to Les Bacchantes, a large-scale immersive installation presented along the riverbanks opposite Fluctuart through October 31. Conceived by artist Olivia de Bona in collaboration with spatial designer Thomas Heagles, the project draws inspiration from the mythological figures associated with nature, celebration, and collective joy. The result is a contemplative and poetic environment designed for both reflection and shared experience.
Further downstream at Port de Suffren, culture takes a more lighthearted turn. Bonnotte, the floating bar overlooking the Eiffel Tower, hosts a comedy club every Tuesday evening from 7:30 p.m., quickly becoming one of the funniest—and busiest—summer addresses in the city.
In the heart of Paris, at Port de Montebello, literature lovers have discovered a new headquarters. Opened in early June, Nanna is an unconventional barge where books and celebration coexist effortlessly. The venue has already attracted attention thanks to events such as Les Conférences de Philo x des Liens and its increasingly popular literary speed-dating evenings, where guests meet through a shared love of literature, whether in search of romance, friendship, or simply stimulating conversation.
A little farther east, at Port de la Gare in the 13th arrondissement, Quai de la Photo will present an exhibition dedicated to Hungarian-born photographer Katalin Száraz from July 25 through September 5, offering visitors a closer look at the Paris-based artist’s compelling body of work.
And because summer in Paris increasingly extends beyond the city limits, the season also brings visitors to La Seine Musicale on Île Seguin. Through July 26, the venue hosts the latest edition of L’Été en Seine, an annual cultural festival featuring opera, ballet, and open-air film screenings. This year’s program places biographical films in the spotlight—yet another reason to spend an evening beneath the stars.


