Located on the tip of Île Sainte-Hélène, at Strasbourg, Saint-Paul's Church is a former Protestant garrison church built at the end of the 19th century at the time of the annexation. Now assigned to the Reformed cult, it is the subject of an inscription in the Historic Monuments for its magnificent Neo-Gothic Rhine architecture.
Built on the plans of Louis Muller, it can accommodate up to 2,000 worshipers and is strongly inspired by the architecture of the Church of St. Elisabeth of Marburg in Hesse. The building still unveils today two twin spiers nearly eighty meters high and a huge rose eight meters in diameter.
It is still possible to admire there some original stained glass windows not destroyed during the Second World War and which represent, among other things, allegories of the German Empire as well as the weapons of its regions.