Meurice

 

Address: 228 Rue De Rivoli X 75001 Paris

Area: Louvre

metro: Tuileries

map

Description:

Between Place de la Concorde and the Grand Louvre, facing the Tuileries Gardens, a few steps from the Opéra Garnier and the jewelry stores on the rue de la Paix and the Place Vendôme.

Each floor has a distinct style. Space and silence provide the utmost in luxury.

125 different rooms each decorated in a style reminiscent of Louis XVIII. To provide an ideal environment each soundproof room is equipped with air conditioning, Internet access, multiple telephone lines, a direct line, fax machines upon request, and cable television.

25 suites and 11 junior suites, including two Presidential suites on the first floor and the deluxe Belle Etoile suite on the Seventh Floor. The 2,960 square foot private terrace of La Belle Etoile Suite offers a spectacular, 360-degree, panoramic view of Paris.

Le Meurice restaurant offers exquisite French cuisine in a lavish dining room. Le Jardin d’Hiver, a winter garden in the heart of the hotel, offers a lighter, less formal menu and daily tea service. Sunlight streams into the Winter Garden through a striking century-old art nouveau style ceiling made entirely of glass.

Espace de Bien-Être, a 3,000 square foot spa located on the mezzanine, features treatments, products, and specially trained masseuses from Les Sources de Caudalie, the world’s first “vinotherapie” spa. Separate changing rooms for men and women each offer a sauna, steam bath, showers, toilets, and a Jacuzzi for up to six people. A fitness area is also available.

There are four sitting rooms on the ground floor, including the ceremonial Pompadour room. Two new adjacent conference rooms have been added for diplomatic parties, fashion shows, luncheons, and dinner parties. These rooms can accommodate receptions for 20 to 400 people.

Room service 24 hours a day; concierge; fine laundry and dry cleaning; currency exchange; individual safes; secretarial services. For business travellers, the concierge will provide laptop computers as well as secretarial and translation services. All guestrooms are wired to meet the most demanding business traveller’s needs.


 

Hotels In Other Districts

Louvre / Concorde
Madeleine / Opera
Marais / Bastille
Latin Quarter / Notre Dame
Saint Germain
Montparnasse / Luxembourg
Eiffel Tower
Champs Elysees
Opera / Montmartre
Arc de Triomphe
Elysees / Trocadero

 

Private Transfers

Private Car
From 85.00€

 

 

Car Rentals

           Sixt Holiday Cars
           Autoeurope

 



From $632

 

Hotel Facilities

• Babysitting
• Laundry Service
• Restaurant
• Room Service
• 24 hour Room service

Room Facilities

• Air Conditioning
• Hairdryer
• In-house Movies
• Mini-bar
• Radio
• Color TV
• Cable
• Trouser Press

Leisure Facilities

• Fitness Room
• Sauna

Near    Jardin des Tuileries •  Rue de Rivoli •  Place Vendome •  Louvre •  Place de la Concorde •  Palais Royal •  La Madeleine •  Musee d •  Orsay 


Jardin des Tuilleries
The Tuileries Gardens were designed by Andre Le Notre in 1664 and is one of the largest parks in Paris. It is bordered by the Louvre, Rue de Rivoli and, at the western end, the Orangerie and the Jeu de Paume. The Orangerie houses Monet's magnificent 'Nympheas' series of paintings of water-lilies which were painted at Giverny and donated to the nation by the artist as a 'spiritual testimony'. It also houses other great Impressionist and 'Ecole de Paris' artists. It is undergoing a major re-haul at the moment. The Jeu de Paume holds special exhibitions.

Rue de Rivoli
This lovely arcade was begun by Napoleon in 1811. Under its arches are two English language book stores; Angelina's, a tea salon famous for its thick hot chocolate; and the luxurious Hotel Meurice. Tolstoy at one time lived in one of the apartments above the Arcade.

Place de Vendome
This classically elegant square built in 1685 has a 44 meter high column with a crowning sculpture of Napoleon as Caeser, although this has changed several times. It is home to the world's most opulent jewelers and the legendary Ritz Hotel, a favorite haunt of the famous, such as Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Cole Porter, Proust, and Chanel.

Louvre
Once a royal Renaissance palace, the Louvre Museum houses some of the world’s most famous works of art, highlights of which are the Mona Lisa, the Venus de Milo, the Winged Victory, 360 degree visit . Closed on Tuesdays.

Place de la Concorde
The grandest and most infamous square in Paris. It is situated at a crossroads, the National Assembly to the south facing its mirror image a neo-Greek Temple, the Madeline church, to the north and the Arc de Triomphe and Champs Elysees to the west facing the Tuilleries Gardens and the Louvre to the east. It was constructed between 1754 and 1763 to hold a statue of Louis XV and was then called Place Louis XV. It then became the Place de Revolution and the site of the guillotine which beheaded nearly 3000 people including Louis XVI, Marie-Antoinette, Danton and Robespierre. After the Reign of Terror it was renamed Place de la Concorde, then after several name changes, it once again became the Place de la Concorde. See it in 360 degrees

The statue of Louis XV, removed during the Revolution, was replaced by the over 3000 year old Obelisk of Luxor, given by the viceroy of Egypt to Louis Phillippe in 1883.

The Palais Royal & Gardens
The Palais Royal was constructed for Cardinal Richelieu in 1628. On the southwest corner is the Comedie Francaise and on the northwest corner is the 4-star 'Grand Vefour', an haute cuisine restaurant since the 1760s. The Palais Royal was home to Colette and Jean Cocteau.

La Madeleine
The building of the Madeleine Church, named for Mary Magdalene, began in 1763 but was not finished until 1842. The famous Maxim's restaurant is nearby on the rue Royale and on the square of the Madeleine are two famous specialty food stores; Fauchon and Hediard's.

Musee d'Orsay
Across the river from the Louvre, was originally a Beaux-Arts train station but by the 1950's its platforms became too short and it was up for demolition. An innovative restoration transformed the train station into a museum spanning art from 1830 to 1914. Its sky-lit Impressionist Gallery holds the jewels of Impressionist Art with masterpieces by Monet, Degas, Renoir, Pissaro and Van Gogh. Next to the gallery there is a cafe built to incorporate one of the two original giant clocks of the station, with a balcony (open in the summer) and lovely view over the Seine. The other restaurant is the more formal Restaurant du Musee d'Orsay , which was the dining room of the old hotel in the station and is an ornately gilded period piece. Its buffet brunch or prix-fixe menu is good value. Museum closed on Mondays. National Museums as the ‘Louvre’ are closed on Tuesdays and Paris Museums as the ‘d’Orsay’ are closed on Mondays.

Continued...

 

 


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