|
17.3 |
|
7 |
|
3.6 |
|
5.5 |
The hotel management is pleased to welcome domestic pets. If you require a rental car during your stay, our hotel staff will be happy to help. A desk, radio and a safe are standard in all comfortable rooms.
All comfortable rooms have cable TV, Internet access and a convenient minibar with cool drinks and snacks. All bathrooms include a hair dryer and bathrobe. All rooms have a television, telephone, and a kettle.
Our hotel has non-smoking rooms in which we will also be glad to place a cot for your little ones. All the 57 comfortable hotel rooms have air conditioning. Pay TV is available in every room. Enjoy the hotel's wide range of massage options.
While away the evening in the friendly hotel restaurant, which also offers a vegetarian menu. Lovers of good food and wine can visit our hotels' own wine/beer pub with an outside terrace. Enjoy a beer at the convivial hotel bar.
The hotel has its own bistro - café.Maison Martin Margiela redesigns Paris hotel ‘Maison Champs-Elysées’.
The hotel Maison Champs-Elysées commissioned Maison Martin Margiela to reconceive, renew and create a new interior design of the entire groundfloor together with 7 suites and 10 guest rooms.
Located in the historical building of the ex Sofitel Champs-Elysees in the heart of Paris, this soon-to-be five-star estate is situated at the intersection of the Grand Palais, avenue Montaigne and the rond-point des Champs Elysées.
After the 2009 projects of interior design (the creation of the Suite ‘Elle Décoration’ at Paris’ Palais de Chaillot and the redesign of the l’Ile aux Oiseaux suite in the Caudalie hotel-spa in Bordeaux), the collaboration with Maison Champs-Elysées marks the Maison’s largest and most demanding interior design project of its history.
The origin of the building at number 8, rue Jean Goujon is the essence of a French Maison (house). In 1864, the Duchess of Rivoli, Princess of Essling, Great Mistress of the House of Empress Eugenie, purchased the land to have her house conceived by French architect Jules Pellechet. The masterpiece was completed in 1866 in the purest classical Parisian style, haussmannien.
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