Rue de Berne

Rue de Berne is a street situated in down town Geneva, Switzerland, located in the popular and multicultural quarter of Les Pâquis on the right bank (Rive droite) of the Lake Geneva and the Rhone, near the railway station of Cornavin. Les Pâquis are known for night life, cafés and is the most multi-cultural part of Geneva.[1]

Rue de Berne in 2020

La rue de Berne has several restaurants, bars, hotels, cabarets, brothels and sex shops. Several Arab, Turkish, Chinese, Portuguese, Thai, Indian, Italian and Swiss restaurants are spread in and around the street making it one of the best places in Geneva for dining out. It is known as "the hip part of town".

In arts and literature

The 2003 novel of writer Paulo Coelho, Eleven Minutes, is set on this street.

The Arsène Lupin story "The Red Silk Scarf" by Maurice Leblanc is partly set on this street.

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gollark: Because it gives IO actions to the runtime. Without one, no IO.
gollark: A true purely functional OS would in fact be incapable of any IO.
gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/9sfcu7/even_more_efficient_communist_sorting_algorithms/Communism allows for very efficient sorting.
gollark: There's an Enterprise FizzBuzz project on Github.

See also

References

  1. Matthew Teller (2003). Switzerland. Rough Guides. pp. 551. ISBN 978-1-84353-064-0.
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