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The different markets of the Puces de Saint-Ouen

each market has its own atmosphere

The Puces de Saint-Ouen is much more than just an antiques market. It’s a living labyrinth, an ecosystem where Sunday bargain hunters, cutting-edge decorators and collectors in search of the Holy Grail come together. From covered alleyways to hidden corners, each market has its own speciality, its own soul. Here’s where to set your sights on the best finds.

The puciere streets The adrenalin of hunting

Everything here is in constant motion. The second-hand dealers unpack their stock at dawn, and the stalls come and go as the sales go on.

It’s a merry chaotic mix of military second-hand goods, ephemeral graffiti, antique, vintage and designer furniture, second-hand goods, unusual objects, factory furniture, old books… and factory furniture. If you like the unexpected, this is the place to be.

Vernaison market The historic birthplace

With its small village-like alleys and maze of stalls, Vernaison is the granddaddy of the Puces. It’s a purist’s haven, where you can find everything from Belle Époque trinkets to vintage furniture with a patina of age.

The “Village” spirit of this market attracted second-hand dealers, bargain hunters and particularly dealers in period furniture. It was an immediate success.

Paul Bert - Serpette market The temple of style

This is serious business. A perfect mix of classicism and avant-garde, where antique dealers are constantly reinventing taste. From 50s furniture to tribal art, this is the crème de la crème of design. Decoration professionals make no mistake: this is where trends are born. Paul Bert Serpette offers an eclectic range of styles and periods, from antiquity to the 21st century, from classicism to design, including painting, sculpture, fashion and lighting…

Marché Dauphine Art deco and pop culture

An XXL patchwork of cutting-edge design, vintage vinyl and pop culture. Add a hint of 70s architecture with the Maison Futuro, and you have a veritable cabinet of curiosities.

Classic and modern antiques, plastic design from the Pop years, furniture and objects from the 20th century, jewellery from the Roaring Twenties, antique tools, vintage fashion, colifichets, industrial furniture, ornate and prepostcards, furs, tapestry and passementerie, orientalism, Americana, hi-fi and sound, old books and catalogues, small second-hand goods, toys, sheet music…

Jules Vallès Market The raw soul of the Flea Market

There’s no fuss here. The stalls look like forgotten attics, and that’s the charm. Yellowed posters, weapons from another era, records that still crackle… If you like the raw side of second-hand goods, this is a must. It is rightly said that this market has remained true to the original spirit of the Puces. It’s true, the two covered aisles are only accessible from the end of rue Jules Vallès, at number 7 to be precise.

Biron market Elegance in large format

Since 1925, Biron has been playing in the big league. A perfect alignment of galleries where art deco rubs shoulders with prestigious antiques. It’s the address for discerning collectors, where people come to admire as much as to invest.

Already at the time, the aim was to differentiate itself from the two competing markets by offering well-chosen merchandise referenced in the history of art.Malik, which sold mainly clothes, and Vernaison, which focused on second-hand goods.

Marché Malassis Between tradition and modernity

Antiques, eighteenth-century furniture, futuristic design… this market, with its large dome, makes a stylish splash. It’s a hybrid space where the past and the present meet to discuss interior design. The hundred or so dealers at the Malassis have created a unique atmosphere at this young market.

Cambo Market Singular and charming

A fine, hushed selection of period furniture and objets d’art. A confidential market where each piece seems to have a story to tell.

The merchandise on display is of the highest quality: eighteenth- and nineteenth-century furniture, earthenware, objets d’art… You’ll also find some very fine regional furniture and objects from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.You’ll also find beautiful 17th and 18th century regional furniture and objects, linen and old musical instruments, as well as a decorating area upstairs (Art Nouveau and Art Deco ceramics, drawings, etc.).

Marché l'Usine Decoration & architecture

L’Usine is a covered market located in the heart of the Puces de Saint-Ouen. It is reserved for antique professionals, interior designers and architects, and is also open to cinema rentals. The 3,600m2 show floor features everything from antique furniture and objects to contemporary furniture and objects by 20th-century interior architects and designers. The forty or so dealers on the site all have large surface areas ranging from 40m2 to several hundred m2.

Marché le Passage An atypical market

An atypical market and one of the last of the Puces, covering more than 1000m² in a single block, this market lives up to its name: located between 18 rue Jules Vallès and 27 rue Lécuyer, it is the junction of these two shopping streets.

Le Passage offers an unusual choice of furniture, antiques and curiosities, attracting lovers of antiques and vintage of all kinds, including decorators, stylists and antique dealers who come to browse every week.

Market warehouse Architecture & volumes

Opened in the 90s, the warehouse market specialises in “non-standard” goods, with the added advantage of being able to load them on site! Because the market is so spacious, dealers can display bulky items such as monumental staircases, bookcases and woodwork from grand residences, “zincs”, garden kiosks, castle gates, etc. It also offers traditional furniture and second-hand goods.