Address: 21 rue vavin , Paris 75006, France Show on map
Hôtel de Danemark, a positively scrumptious boutique hotel southwest of the Jardin du Luxembourg, has 15 very tastefully furnished rooms and eclectic contemporary décor contrasting with ancient stone walls.Public areas such as the reception and its corner rooms are full of vibrantly coloured furniture and objects that match and contrast. The guestrooms, well soundproofed and generously sized for a boutique hotel in central Paris, contain original artwork - though not all of it is museum-quality. Some of the rooms, which are bigger on the top floor, gaze onto Henri Sauvage's Carreaux Metro, an Art Nouveau tiled apartment building designed in 1912 and a masterpiece of modernity. One of the higher priced rooms has a jacuzzi in the bathroom. Montparnasse, with all its bars, brasseries and cinemas, is a short stroll away.
Public areas such as the reception and its corner rooms are full of vibrantly coloured furniture and objects that match and contrast. The guestrooms, well soundproofed and generously sized for a boutique hotel in central Paris, contain original artwork - though not all of it is museum-quality. Some of the rooms, which are bigger on the top floor, gaze onto Henri Sauvage's Carreaux Metro, an Art Nouveau tiled apartment building designed in 1912 and a masterpiece of modernity. One of the higher priced rooms has a jacuzzi in the bathroom. Montparnasse, with all its bars, brasseries and cinemas, is a short stroll away.
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Atmosphere: Boutique and Low-key
Check-in / Check-out Earliest check-in: 12:00 AM Latest check-out time: 12:00 AM
US$200.59 per night
(US$100.30per person per night)
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South of the hotel, Montparnasse Cemetery (blvd Edgar Quinet & rue Froidevaux, 14e) is the final resting place of such illustrious personages as Charles Baudelaire, Guy de Maupassant, Samuel Beckett, Alfred Dreyfus, Jean Seberg, Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre and the crooner Serge Gainsbourg, whose grave has become a pilgrimage site for fans.
Montparnasse came into its own after WWI when writers, poets and artists of the avant-garde abandoned Montmartre and crossed the Seine to take up here.
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