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    Home » Hôtel Dame Des Arts — Hotel Review
    Review

    Hôtel Dame Des Arts — Hotel Review

    By Room NeticApril 24, 20265 Mins Read
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    Why book?

    The 360-degree views from the rooftop bar alone are a reason to book. On a clear day you can see practically the entire city. If your faith in Paris is flagging—which does happen but seldom lasts—a visit to the rooftop of Hôtel Dame des Arts will restore it. When this reviewer described the stupendous panorama to a Paris-born-and-bred friend, she sighed and said simply: “Oui. I sometimes think about leaving Paris but the thing that prevents me is the rooftops.”

    Set the scene

    The Quartier Latin is, of course, a famously artsy part of town and one with strong cinematic associations. It’s no coincidence that the main typeface on the hotel’s printed materials is called Jean-Luc Godard. But you needn’t have stumbled out of a screening room at the nearby Le Champo rubbing your eyes with one hand and clutching an issue of Cahiers du Cinéma in the other to appreciate what designer Raphael Navot has done here. It’s all about the interplay between curved and straight lines, hard and soft textures, glossy and matte surfaces. It’s true that the look is approximately mid-century, which fits with the Nouvelle Vague idea, but there’s no sense of pastiche about it. It’s its own thing. You’ll inhale it at a glance the moment you step inside, along with a whiff of the house perfume—nothing cloying or over-the-top, faintly nostalgic yet with an unmistakable contemporary zing and altogether rather lovely.

    The backstory

    Interesting for several reasons. The building was built in 1959—yesterday by Parisian standards. (The street behind the hotel has been there since 1179.) Initially it was a drama school, subsequently a Holiday Inn. “Oh, I see-e-e-e,” you might be thinking. But in fact it’s a remarkable building in every sense of the word. The main entrance, in particular, is fantastic—a long opaque sliding door with a metal lattice that takes its architectural cue from the traditional Japanese shoji but also brings to mind the dynamic modern geometries of Mondrian.

    The rooms

    Once again the views are a huge plus. Roughly speaking, the higher you are, the better the views get—or rather the bigger they get. Ask for a room on the sixth, seventh, or eighth floor, on the Rue Suger side, with a terrace. But this is Paris and there’s charm in all directions, à tous les étages. Style-wise, the 109 rooms are similarly got-up in a way that is at once spartan and spoiling, chic and subdued. (This applies even in the littlest rooms, which are indeed little.) There are deft touches everywhere—the bedside tables with tops as rich and glossy as a crème caramel; the autumnal tones of the curtains; the contoured eau-de-nil tiles in the bathrooms; the ongoing juxtaposition of straight and curved lines that you find throughout the hotel. All very coherent and discreetly sensuous.

    Food and drink

    Pimpan, the all-day restaurant with the bonus of garden seating, offers modern French food, which means a lot and nothing on paper until you see that dishes like grilled scallops are given a twist with miso-infused onion jus, and the lamb chops are served with carrots in lavender and wildflower honey. You might find outlier and incongruous dishes on the menu, like a pad thai, but they aren't unwelcome. As for the wine and cocktail selection, it all tastes better with a sensational view from the rooftop bar during the warmer months (reservations strongly recommended, even for hotel guests).

    The spa

    Downstairs there’s a sauna and, next to it, a single treatment room, with massages outsourced to a local firm. Appointments are available on request with two hours’ notice. Adjacent to the treatment room is an incredibly cool fitness space. With its hypnotic wave-like wooden ceiling, trick mirrors, and matchy-matchy wooden equipment (including boxing gloves in precisely the right shade of brown), it warrants a visit even if your idea of exercise is to smoke heavily on your terrace while gazing moodily at the Paris skyline.

    The neighborhood/area

    The Quartier Latin is one of the most photogenic corners of one of the most photographed cities on earth, instantly recognizable and familiar even to those who’ve never set foot on its narrow streets or broad boulevards. The magic is potent whether it’s your first visit or your fiftieth. Familiarity breeds not contempt but love. Hôtel Dame des Arts is very much in the thick of it, just minutes away from all manner of marvels both large and small. The cathedral of Notre-Dame—the clue is there in the hotel’s name—is foremost and largest among them. For the small and less familiar variety, try the Musée Delacroix, with its astonishing courtyard garden.

    The service

    Delivered with charm by a young, multilingual team, brimming with enthusiasm, high on life, low on old-fashioned Parisian contempt.

    For families

    There are 12 rooms that can be connected. No roll-out beds, however, or kids’ menus or fluffy toys upon arrival. Not an obvious choice for families, overall.

    Eco effort

    Pas mal. Almost no single-use plastic and plenty of refillable containers including large-volume eco-totes for many of the spirits in the bar. On-site carton-compacting and organic-waste management. All “Clef Verte” suppliers, many of them local—none more so than the Boulangerie Liberté, which supplies the bread and pastries from its premises around the corner on Rue Saint-André des Arts.

    Accessibility for those with mobility impairments

    There are four accessible rooms with handrails, emergency buttons, walk-in showers, and extra space for wheelchair access. The ground-floor restaurant and courtyard, rooftop bar, basement fitness center, and massage rooms are all wheelchair-accessible, too.

    Anything left to mention?

    There was an intriguing “watch this space” aspect to the way things were shaping up at the hotel at the time of its opening. The management is very keen not only to see locals mingling with guests in the bar and restaurant—which in any case they were doing from day one—but also to make it a meaningful part of the local arts scene.

    Check Availability at Booking.com

    4 Rue Danton, Paris 75006
    France
    https://www.damedesarts.com/en/
    +33 1 81 69 00 60

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