Auxerre (dead link: January 2023) is an historical city in the French region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, at the heart of one of the country's largest wine-producing areas. It might interest mathematicians and engineers that this beautiful old city with historic churches was also the birthplace of Joseph Fourier, who is considered the founder of modern engineering.
Auxerre is located half way between Paris (170 km) and Dijon (150 km) on the A6 autoroute, at the junction of the proposed A26 Troyes-Bourges autoroute. The city is a good base for discovering northern Burgundy.
Auxerre is 15 km from Chablis, famous for its white wines, 20 km from Pontigny Abbey, 45 km from St Fargeau Castle, 60 km from Vézelay and 78 km from Troyes.
Trains to Gare d'Auxerre-Saint-Gervais 📍 are a wonderfully cheap option if you are coming from Paris or Dijon. Trains usually run every hour. You might have to make a connection at Larroche-Migennes. You can easily walk from the station to the old part of town in 10-15 minutes.
Cheaper than the train, several buses run each day between Paris and Auxerre. Ouibus and Flixbus buses depart from "Gare de bercy" in Paris and drop you 2 hours later near the city center of Auxerre.
Auxerre is small, so walking is strongly recommended for most purposes and is a pleasant thing to do in the old city.
There are free mini buses that circle the periphery of the old town and a bus system that serves suburbs (for the suburb bus, tickets are €1.75).
You can buy quality wines from the Yonne region for cheap. There are also antique stores and workshops both downtown and along the river.
If you want, to cook your own food or buy food for a picnic, Leclerc is the giant supermarket that has most of what you need, located on the northeast side of the river (14 Avenue Jean Jaurès). As you are in France, avoid buying baguettes, wine or cheese in a large commercial store; try buying those kinds of products in a local boulangerie, cave à vin or fromagerie: the charm of these such stores is the reason that you came to France and something that you cannot get at a chain store.
Auxerre is surprisingly quiet at night, but if you fancy some drinks and bumping music, head to the Place des Cordeliers in the centre, where you will find a couple of bars: Les Brimborions and Le Copacabana.
There is a row of hotels, including some budget hotels, on a ring road on the outskirts of the city that is part of National Route 151. Part of the road is called Boulevard Vauban. The location is not bad as the city is small enough that a walk from that ring road to the old city and its sights is only a few minutes.
Campers will have a look at the "Camping Municipal d'Auxerre" (generally open from April 1st to October 15th) located some 2 km from the center of the town.
As of June 2022, Auxerre has 5G from all French carriers.
Trains run almost every hour to Dijon and Paris.
If driving toward Dijon, Vézelay and Avallon are worth a stop.
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