Top French Cities - Rennes at a glance
For more information, visit the Rennes Tourist Office at www.tourisme-rennes.com.
City region: Brittany
Population & what they are called: 213,454 inhabitants (2014 census), called Rennais
Access from Paris:
by road: about 3 h 25 min (220 miles) via the A11 and A81 autoroutes
by train: about 1 h 30 min by TGV from the Gare Montparnasse
Famous native daughters & sons:
Jean-Claude Bourlès, writer
Etienne Daho, singer-songwriter, actor and producer
François Henri Pinault, billionaire businessman
Most distinctive and/or unique fact or trait (or little known fact):
Spared from destruction, the high-rise Mabilais building, with its famous totem tower and rooftop saucer, is where the Minitel (France’s precursor to the internet), chip cards and ADSL were invented.
Rennes has the highest number of painted timber-framed houses (286 of them) in Brittany.
Notable sites:
Palais du Parlement de Bretagne – one of Brittany’s most prestigious monuments, built in the 17th century (and site of a sound-and-light show in summer)
Cathédrale Saint-Pierre – a neoclassical cathedral with a history going back centuries
Ramparts – the 15th-century Portes Mordelaises and Tour Duchesne are impressive surviving segments of the city's original walls
Top annual events:
Rencontres Trans Musicales – premier event for contemporary music and new musical trends (lestrans.com)
Yaouank Festival – revival of Breton music, featuring the biggest fest-noz (traditional dance) in Brittany (yaouank.bzh)
Mettre en Scène Festival – a three-week dance and theater festival (t-n-b.fr/fr/mettre-en-scene)
Most notable museums:
Les Champs Libres – an extensive cultural center that includes the Musée de Bretagne (devoted to the history of Brittany), the Espaces des Sciences (a science museum and planetarium) and more (leschampslibres.fr)
Musée des Beaux-Arts – a complete panorama of the history of painting (mbar.org)
Ecomusée du Pays de Rennes – set on one of Brittany's oldest farms and looking at agricultural history and rural life (ecomusee-rennes-metropole.fr)
Culinary specialties:
galette saucisse – pork sausage wrapped in a buckwheat galette (Breton-style hot dog)
frigousse – a chicken fricassee with sweet chestnuts cooked in cider
Parlementin – a pastry made of almond brittle and cider-flavored apple sauce
Local wines & spirits:
cider – traditionally served in ceramic bowls (or wide cups), not glasses
lambig – a traditional spirit from Brittany made of double distilled cider
craft beer – more than a dozen new microbrasseries (microbreweries) have opened in recent years
Shopping:
Marché des Lices – a Saturday morning traditional market, the second largest in France
Les Halles – the large, daily, covered food market
Centre Alma – a modern mall with more than 100 stores and restaurants
Most popular night spots:
Hibou Grand Duc – local bar with live music and a wide selection of wine and beer
Le Nabuchodonosor – relaxed wine bar with a terrace in season or fireplace in winter
Le Mabilay – coffee shop and restaurant with Rennes’ largest terrace and different DJs every week
Local population’s favorite activities (or hangouts):
Parc du Thabor – a large landscaped park in the center of the city
Parc des Gayeulles – the best way of getting into nature without having to get out of town
FRAC Bretagne – the regional contemporary art fund with exhibition halls, an auditorium, café, bookshop and documentation areas (fracbretagne.fr)
Local industries:
information and communication technologies – one of France's first technopoles, Rennes Atalante, was established in Rennes
agrifood – a large number of related firms, a campus called Agrocampus Ouest and even a large expo on the subject are based in Rennes
In Pop Culture:
Fleur de Tonnerre – released in 2017, a movie thriller about the biggest serial-killer of history, Hélène Jégado, guillotined in Rennes in 1852
Astérix et le chaudron – published in 1969, this comic sees Asterix and Obelix spend time in the Gallo-Roman city of Condate (current Rennes)