HOTEL MOLIERE
 21 rue Moliere, Paris, 75001 |






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Description of Hotel:
Superior 3 star hotel. A charming hotel with a refined, very authentic style just a stone's throw from the Louvre, the Palais Royal and the Comedie Francaise. Very large rooms in the tradition of the finest Parisian hotels. Buffet breakfast. 32 rooms.
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| Customer Comments:"Our entire French vacation was very special, staring off and ending with our stay at Hotel Moliere. The rooms were cozy with lots of character. The staff was very helpful and it was amazingly quiet. We look forward to going back."
This was our third stay at the Moliere. The hotel is very conveniently located in the 1st arrondissement. Close to the Louvre museum, Opera, and the rue St. Honore. The hotel desk staff speak excellent English, and we think the hotel oozes charm. One word of advice - ask for a room on the 2nd or 3rd floor. The rooms on the first floor - at least room 11, has a very low ceiling and the floor is slanted."
Hotel Attractions:
Louvre/Chatelet/Marais
Between Le Louvre and the Tuileries palace is the charming Tuileries Garden, especially appreciated by children for puppet shows and sailboat models.
One of the famous sites of Paris is Le Louvre and though some people wouldn't know it if they were in front of it, a relatively new glass pyramid clears all doubt. Built around 1200, the Louvre was a former palace for the royal family and it became a museum in 1793 during the french revolution, and after the death of Louis 16. It is the largest royal palace in France and houses one of the richest collections of art and antiquities in the world.
Les Halles (also known as Forum des Halles) was named by Emile Zola " Belly of Paris" for all of its food vendors, but today all of that old marketplace is gone and replaced by shopping and restaurants. It is today the favorite spot of Parisian teenagers, thanks to its huge underground shopping mall. Around this lively place is Saint-Eustache, a splendid church built from 1532 to 1754.
The Centre George Pompidou (also called Beaubourg) is today one of the most popular attractions of Paris. Next to this famous building are a few cafes and bistrots, with terrace, around the amazing and funny Stravinsky Fountain with its bizarre water fountain statues.
The Marais district stretches between the Bastille and the Hotel de Ville, and Le Marais means " the marsh" which comes from the flooding by the Seine until 16th century. It has private residences, mansions and private hotels that have kept their pre-Revolution architecture. The Place des Vosges is surrounded by an ensemble of 36 symmetrical stone houses of two storeys steep pitch slate roofs. This quarter is a very lively quarter with clothing boutiques, antique shops, boulangeries /patisseries, tea shops and bistrots. This is also a middle-eastern influenced section of the city and some of the best bistros and foods can be found here.
The place de la Bastille is at the crossroads of large boulevards and its July Column reminds of the famous events of 1789. This area east of the Marais gets its name from the infamous Bastille prison, which was stormed on 14 July 1789 by insurgents, at the start of the French Revolution. Artists, galleries and the opening of the Opera Bastille in 1989 have transformed the district into one where a young crowd can find plenty to do at night. Along the strees of Faubourg-St. Antoine is the old cabinet maker's district and is still a place to find furniture. The marche Aligre is one of the best markets at the place d'Aligre.
Sites to See: Louvre, Hotel de Ville, Tuileries Gardens, St Eustache Church, Forum des Halles, Pompidou Center, Stravinsky Fountain, Place des Vosges, Picasso Museum, Carnavalet Museum, Hotel Rohan, Hotel de Guenegaud, Hotel de Soubise, Place de la Bastille, Opera Bastille. | |   | Directions to Hotel:
Metro: Palais Royal Musee du Louvre / lines 1 - 7
R.E.R: Auber / line A
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