3/5 AMILCAR T. 3 years ago on Google • 177 reviews
Between
a
center
for
migrants
and
a
future
luxury
hotel,
the
city
of
Lyon
provides
the
St
Laurent
barracks
and
its
beautiful
view
(hence
the
name
of
the
adjoining
square)
to
a
cultural
association.
The
big
gap
is
glaring
between
humanitarianism
and
the
luxury
economy.
Certainly,
the
Croix-Roussienne
hotel
industry
is
lagging
behind
but
it
seems
that
the
hotel
project
is
not
unanimous...
Moreover,
the
site
would
attract
the
desire
of
a
wise
man
as
it
offers
a
unique
point
of
view
on
the
city.
Regarding
the
Strong
Overlay
initiative.
From
my
very
subjective
point
of
view,
I
would
say
that
cultural
management
is
now
well
integrated
by
young
people.
Yes,
we
live
in
a
commercial
world,
yes,
all
work
deserves
wages
but
an
aftertaste
of
artificiality
sits
on
my
palate.
A
taste
that
the
cuisine
of
the
'Little
Syrians,
the
food
truck
installed
in
the
courtyard,
cannot
dissipate.
After
paying
a
membership
fee
of
3
euros,
we
have
the
right
to
enter
the
barracks
courtyard
with
our
(plastic)
card.
Heritage
days
also
do
well,
for
free.
Tables
and
benches,
two
speakers
(there
is
sometimes
a
DJ
and
more
entertainment...but
not
last
night...it
smells
like
back
to
school),
a
bar
nestled
in
the
garage
and
a
not
bad
but
too
succinct
exhibition
by
Florina
Perez
in
a
room
as
large
as
a
studio.
The
veggie
plate
(or
not)
of
the
Little
Syrian
is
8
euros,
the
half
is
3.5
(plus
the
glass
rental
is
1
euro,
refundable
before
9:45
p.m.!),
the
cider
(on
tap,
very
good
idea
though)
,
at
the
indecent
price
of
4.5...
In
the
end,
the
bill
is
a
bit
for
a
young
audience
without
much
money,
while
on
the
other
side
of
the
wall,
Place
Bellevue
offers
an
identical
panorama
for
free.
A
good
Belgian
beer
bought
at
the
nearby
Red
Devils
will
bring
you
at
least
comparable
satisfaction.
This
shows
that
the
superposition
of
cultural
concepts
does
not
necessarily
make
culture.