Address: 1 rue charles v , Paris , France Show on map
This especially charming hotel built within a converted 17th-century convent is more Bastille than Marais but still within easy walking distance of the latter. Wooden beams on ceilings, terracotta tiles on the floors and heavy brocade drapes tend to darken the guestrooms but certainly add to the atmosphere.Part of small and elegant chain with properties near Opéra and the Bastille, the Hôtel St-Louis Marais' 19 guestrooms are somewhat on the small size - our ancestors were apparently midgets - so if you want to avoid that bull-in-a-china-shop feeling, book one of the more expensive 'superior' rooms. Both the public areas and guestrooms have many nice touches - antique prints on the walls, subtle lighting - but be aware that there are four floors and no lift.
Part of small and elegant chain with properties near Opéra and the Bastille, the Hôtel St-Louis Marais' 19 guestrooms are somewhat on the small size - our ancestors were apparently midgets - so if you want to avoid that bull-in-a-china-shop feeling, book one of the more expensive 'superior' rooms. Both the public areas and guestrooms have many nice touches - antique prints on the walls, subtle lighting - but be aware that there are four floors and no lift.
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Atmosphere: Elegant and Low-key
Check-in / Check-out Earliest check-in: 2:00 PM Latest check-out time: 12:00 AM
US$138.81 per night
(US$69.41per person per night)
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Anyone interested in urban planning will want to visit the Pavillon de l'Arsenal (21 Blvd Morland, 4e) opposite the Sully Morland metro station, with permanent and temporary exhibits on the architecture of Paris.
Charles V was responsible for building the city wall still visible at the western end of the street named in his honour after the aborted peasant revolt led by a wealthy draper named Étienne Marcel in 1356.
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