Top visits

Best Districts

St Honoré
In the heart of the City of Lights, amidst a wealth of heritage and history that includes some of the world’s greatest museums and monuments, as well as internationally acclaimed shopping opportunities and picturesque walks.
Culture around the corner

Montmartre
Our intimate tour of the Martyrs’ Mount revives the oft heroic past of this unique little world in Paris, perched atop a hill. You will encounter the unavoidable crowd of the Sacred Heart Basilica and its panoramic view of the Capital, the calm streets of the village, refuge of artists and witness to many events since 1000 years.
The concierge team stay at your disposal for any information or reservation.

St Germain
From the powerful medieval monastery to the jazz clubs of the 1950s, you will understand how intellectuals have long dominated the area and you will share in their nostalgia each time a bookshop is replaced by a fashion store. But you’ll also love to discover the many art galleries in the neighbourhood. This visit can be added to the Latin Quarter tour to last a whole day.

Marais
Rich and abundant in diversity, with both its gay and Jewish quarters and its fashion boutiques, the Marais will also enchant you with its many magnificent princely residences and the Place des Vosges testifying to its glorious past, when kings lived nearby. Ideal to mix culture and shopping, it can be visited in a half-day or full day by adding the Ile St-Louis and the so delicious Berthillon ice creams.

Top Museums & Monuments

Louvre
The Louvre is an art & antiquities museum based in the center of Paris. The world's largest museum with almost 460 000 art pieces. Discover the famous Mona Lisa painting and Venus de Milo statue.

Louis Vuitton
Inaugurated in October 2014, this building is a jewel of architecture designed by Frank Gehry and is adjacent to the Jardin d’Acclimatation in the Bois de Boulogne in Paris.
Founded by LVMH foundation and Bernard Arnault, the museum is dedicated to contemporary art exhibitions.

Orsay
Housed in an old Train Station, on the left bank of the Seine. The Musée d’Orsay houses the largest collection of impressionist masterpieces in the world, by painters including Monet, Manet or Renoir.

Picasso
The Musée Picasso is an art gallery dedicated to the life and the work of the artist Pablo Picasso and some artist associated with him. The museum is based in the Hôtel Salé in Le Marais.

Arc de Triomphe
One of the most visited and famous monument in Paris. Walk through the Champs Elysées and admire the view from the top!

Eiffel Tower
From the very moment you climb the stairs to the first floor, you feel as if you’ve embarked on a fantastical journey. And what a way to end it, when you reach the top in the lift! Discover the magic of the Eiffel Tower!

Other museums
Often referred as “Museum City” Paris offer a large choice in different style and different art.
Do not hesitate to contact the concierge service should you need any information. 

Best Parks

Parc des Buttes-Chaumont
If you're looking for gardens a little less formal than Tuileries and Luxembourg, one patch of greenery definitely worth a stroll is the Parc des Buttes-Chaumont. Set high up in Belleville and often missed by weekenders keen not to stray too far from the tourist loop, this 19th arrondissement gem is one of the city's most magical spots. 

Jardin du Luxembourg
The 25-hectare park is a prized family attraction. Kids come from across the city for its pony rides, ice-cream stands, puppet shows, pedal karts, sandpits, metal swingboats and merry-go-round. 

Jardin des Tuileries
Between the Louvre and place de la Concorde, the alleyways of these gardens have been a chic promenade ever since they opened to the public in the 16th century. André Le Nôtre created the prototypical French garden with terraces and central vista running down the Grand Axe through circular and hexagonal ponds. 

Parc Monceau
Surrounded by grand hôtels particuliers and elegant Haussmannian apartments, Monceau is a favourite with well-dressed children and their nannies. It was laid out in the 18th century for the Duc de Chartres in the English style, with a lake, lawns and a variety of follies: an Egyptian pyramid, a Corinthian colonnade, Venetian bridge and sarcophagi.

Champs de Mars
Between the Ecole Militaire, where Napoleon trained to be a soldier, and the Eiffel Tower, lies the vast Champs de Mars, a market garden converted into a military drilling ground in the 18th-century. In its southeast end you’ll find the Mur pour la Paix (wall for peace) erected in 2000 to articulate hopes for world peace - somewhat paradoxically seeing that the military school is just metres away and that the park took its name from Mars, god of war! Still, it can be peaceful place in which to stroll, even in high season, and there is something rather beguiling about sitting on the lawn, looking up at Eiffel’s filigree grande dame. Pack a picnic and make an afternoon of it.