Music, castles and lakes – and Berlin too
July 8, 2008
You are in Berlin for a short break, for the city’s excellent, inexpensive shopping, for its superb museums, its dark and joyful memories, its palaces and pomp (in central Mitte) and its funky edginess (in Kreuzberg). As more and more of us are discovering, Berlin makes an absorbing and affordable choice for a weekend away.
Take my strong advice: don’t go home. Not just yet. Extend your stay, if you possibly can, by a night or two away from the city, and indulge in a contrast that will make you almost disturbed by the powerfulness of its effect. “Berliners need three days to completely adjust to the tempo here”, say Helmuth and Alla von Maltzahn, owners of the romantic Hotel Schloss Ulrichshusen where we stayed. “At first they find the peace positively unsettling”.
Heading north, leave Berlin and follow the sparsely populated autobahn through a flat landscape of tall pines and even taller wind generators for an hour and a half (sat nav makes the trip a doddle). Now you are in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany’s second largest yet least populated region and, more specifically, in Mecklenburg’s lake district, an area of polite hills and of valleys filled with stretches of shining water, some huge like Müritz See, others no more than overgrown ponds. Over 600 of them make a patchwork with natural forests, undulating meadows and reedy marshland, with sleepy market towns and forgotten villages dotted between. Of course there are houses and cars, as everywhere, as well as wind farms, the odd factory or platten architecture (communist style housing blocks) in the distance, but the sense of watery calm and silence and of being about 20 years behind the times, is palpable.
Waren, on the shores of Lake Muritz, is the region’s main town and low-key tourist hub. Distinguished by a huge red brick Gothic church, typical of the area, it offers cobbled streets, leading off a spacious central square, brightly painted houses, a small harbour and an air of pleasant domesticity. The lake is for boat trips, fishing, sailing and bird watching, while to the east, the Muritz national park is the place for walking and cycle rides. Winters are sharp and cold, summers often extremely hot.
Now the northernmost part of Germany, stretching to Poland and the Baltic Sea, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern’s old fashioned tranquillity is bizarrely at odds with its history, having been pushed and punished for centuries, under the control, at various times, of Sweden and Poland as well, of course, as the communists from 1945 until the Berlin wall came down in 1989.
Baron von Maltzahn, Helmuth’s father, had inherited 35 properties in Mecklenburg, a land of castles as well as lakes. In 1945 he was forced to flee with his family to the west, and the ruination of his manor houses and farms, accumulated since the 13th century, swiftly followed. When the Berlin wall came down, Helmuth, Alla and their two young daughters drove north to see what they could find of the houses that Helmuth had heard lovingly described as a child. “I felt I knew the castle at Ulrichshusen so well that sometimes I forgot I hadn’t actually lived there as a child”, he says. “And when I stood in its burnt out shell and received a hefty owl dropping on my shoulder (since time immemorial, a good omen) I knew we had to return and rebuild it”.
It took seven years. Now the von Maltzahn family lives at its foot and the soaring Renaissance castle, standing alone on the shores of its own unspoilt lake, operates as a very comfortable low-key hotel. At once forbidding, with its cliff-like walls, and engaging, with its pretty adjoining gatehouse and rocket-like tower stuck to its side, it offers 35 spacious, elegant guest bedrooms with attractive furniture and ensuite bathrooms on two upper floors. On the ground floor there’s a vast baronial hall and gallery and a cosy sitting room and, in former stables, a charmingly rustic restaurant. Best of all is the delightful, summery breakfast room set in the glass-walled top floor of the circular tower. All for the price of a basic b&b in Britain.
How to decorate this rebuilt castle? In a stroke of genius, the von Maltzahns invited a talented Russian muralist to decorate much of it, which he has done so artfully that it’s impossible to tell what is trompe l’oeil and what is not. The breakfast room, surely, has a tented ceiling, complete with folds and seams and open flaps where the sky peeps through; the plunging circular staircase winds through a ‘family tree’, an oak whose branches are hung with coats of arms, stretching from basement to skylight; a corridor leading to bedrooms contains a glass fronted apparently filled with Maltzahn family memorabilia; step into the lift and you are in a gilded birdcage in which Papageno sings his famous aria each time it starts.
But there’s more to lure you to this lovely castle in the middle of nowhere. Stay between June and September and you can coincide your visit with a concert, set in a massive, specially converted barn as part of the annual Ulrichshusen classical music festival. “Menuhin put us on the map” Helmuth tells us, “by agreeing to play during our first season, not long before he died”. Nowadays you’ll find the likes of Alfred Brendel, Anne-Sophie Mutter and Nigel Kennedy amongst many other stellar names on the programme.
Essentials
Air Berlin (www.airberlin.com; 0871 5000 737) has daily flights from Stanstead to Berlin Tegel from £24 per person, one way. AVIS (0844 581 0147; www.avis.co.uk) have offices at Berlin Tegel, Tempelhof and Schönefeld airports, where cars can be hired from £18 per day.
Schloss Ulrichshusen, nr Waren (0049 39953 7900; www.ulrichshusen.de). Doubles from £60 to £97 per night, including breakfast.
Excellent Derbyshire hotel
July 2, 2008
One of the best things about my job reviewing hotels all over Britain is discovering how beautiful my own country is. One of the many counties I had only previously passed through is Derbyshire, but two recent visits to hotels there have put paid to that. Both were in the Derbyshire Dales, one on the Chatsworth estate and the other on the Haddon Hall estate, owned by the Dukes of Devonshire and Rutland respectively. I had the luck to be given a show round Haddon Hall by the charming present incumbent, Lord Edward Manners, and it was fascinating. Abandoned as a home by the Rutland family for two centuries it is one of the best preserved medieval great houses in the country and its kitchens are unsurpassed for their historical value. Even the 800 year old chopping blocks are still intact… the kitchen is brilliantly laid out too; you could start cooking in there right away and would hardly want to change a thing. While we looked round the Hall, the husband happily fished for rare wild rainbow trout on the river below its walls, under the patient tutelage of the estate’s chief ghillie, who managed to ensure that he caught one–in the end. See under Latest Reviews on our home page for a full review of the Peacock at Rowsley.
Off to two more country hotels, near Winchester and at Castle Combe. Will report back soon. My friend Widge and I are getting a golf lesson at Castle Combe tomorrow…the first time that either of us have held a golf club in friendship or in anger in our lives.
Hotels in Dublin and Around
June 26, 2008
Today my elder son has arrived home after a 3 month filming adventure on board the Yacht Kalani as it made its way from the furthest south to the furthest north of the British Isles, chasing the spring as it unfolded along the west coast of Britain from the Isles of Scilly in the south to the Outer Hebrides in the far north and finally, when the weather eventually allowed them, into the Atlantic to the remote and enigmatic island of St Kilda (see www.chasingspring.co.uk). Great to have him back, and even better, he has provided me with a much needed pair of wheels by buying himself a new (well, new to him) car and letting me use his old one, a Peugeot convertible which drinks so much petrol it’s impossible for him to drive. Pretty impossible for me, too, but at least it’s a car…. I rather need one in my job, discovering and reviewing hotels all over Britain, and my last one has been kidnapped by my younger son and disappeared to France…. it’s a complicated life, but we muddle through. I shall enjoy Alexander’s soft top, though it’s a pity that the handbrake cable snapped on a steep hill this afternoon….but that’s another story.
Meanwhile, back to work. Does anyone want to go to Dublin, or the countryside around that fair city? Because here’s where you should stay.
DUBLIN HOTELS
The decade-long, though now declining, Celtic Tiger success story has created a Dublin building boom not seen since Georgian times, including a slew of new, design-conscious, celeb-friendly hotels. Existing ones, too, have been revamped, notably the landmark Shelbourne, reopened as a lacklustre Marriott hotel after a £55-million refit. As well as staying in the heart of the city, you might also consider basing yourself within easy reach, in the beautiful surrounding countryside, in Wicklow, Kildare or Meath counties, where there are hotels that cater for every preference, from sleepy time warp to glitzy splashout. Prices are for a double room, per night, including breakfast. Dublin hotels – in town The Merrion Upper Merrion Street (00353 1 603 0600; www.merrionhotel.com; from €250 in the Garden Wing, €595 in the Main House). An effortlessly gracious grande dame that just happens to be 10 years old. Everything feels right, from its location opposite the Government Buildings and the twinkly Irish doorman to the polished service and the timelessly classic bedrooms. Four tall, sober Georgian town houses, one of which was the birthplace of Wellington, have been opened up to create a series of expansive, welcoming drawing rooms with elaborate stucco ceilings, peat fires, antique furniture and the owner’s outstanding collection of 19th- and 20th-century Irish art. Just as impressive is the spacious formal garden, around which the hotel’s two wings, old and new, are wrapped. The feel here is of calm and order, as it is in the restaurant of two-Michelin-starred Patrick Guilbaud, and the small spa with its pillared infinity pool. No surprise to hear that the general manager, Peter McCann, has been in place since the start. If you feel confused by Dublin’s thrusting, cosmopolitan 21st‑century face and miss its faded, pre‑boom charm, take refuge at the Merrion. La Stampa Hotel & Spa 35 Dawson Street (677 4444; www.lastampa.ie; from €180). Ideally situated between Trinity College and St Stephen’s Green, La Stampa is fun, different and full of surprises behind its Georgian façade. The narrow, Eastern‑influenced reception hall morphs into the enormous Sam Sara Café Bar, with a reputation for the best cocktails in town and, below that, Tiger Becs for Thai food in stylish surroundings. Changing the pace, Balzac, serving glamorous French food but using local produce, has the feel of a Parisian brasserie, with its airy high ceilings, vast mirrors and wood floor. The surprises continue. Proprietor Sarah Murray’s Mandala Spa is an oasis of Asian peace, while the principal Moroccan Suite is a stunning room by top designer Miguel Cancio Martins. Perfect for honeymooners, it comes with the use of a chauffeur-driven Bentley once owned by the King of Morocco. Standard bedrooms are bright and spacious, with exotic touches such as silks and velvet throws on crisp white Egyptian cotton linen. No 31 31 Leeson Close (676 5011; www.number31.ie; from €220). Part slick designer hotel, part intimate guesthouse, No 31 has a split personality that should suit all tastes. Two buildings – a Sixties mews house designed by the controversial Dublin architect Sam Stephenson, and a Georgian town house – together create one of the most visually pleasing, as well as unstuffy places to stay in the city. The tone is set in the open-plan living room of the mews house, where guests congregate in a sunken “conversation pit”. A superb, home-based breakfast is served at long tables, with fresh flowers, sparkling silver and white linen napkins, in a light-filled upper room of the mews house, where there are also five stylish bedrooms, two with patios. The 15 rooms across the garden have recently been redesigned, using eclectic colours and Fifties styling, with new bathrooms. Staff ensure a welcoming, easy-going but professional atmosphere. Bentley’s 22 St Stephen’s Green (638 3939; www.bentleysdublin.com; from €198). It’s all change at Brownes, a fine Georgian town house, with restaurant and 11 bedrooms, on a quiet stretch of St Stephen’s Green. It reopens next month as the Dublin branch of Bentley’s (there’s a Bentley’s in Swallow Street, London), whose current proprietor, the chef Richard Corrigan, is Irish-born. The elegant, Paris brasserie-style restaurant, with brass-railed central stairs leading to an upper floor, makes the perfect setting for Bentley’s Oyster Bar and Grill, while the newly refurbished bedrooms combine period charm with modern touches. With views over St Stephen’s Green, this has always been a fine place to stay, but has been feeling its age of late; Corrigan’s arrival gives it a new lease of life without diminishing its character. Dublin hotels – outside town Ritz-Carlton Powerscourt Enniskerry, Co Wicklow (1 274 8888; www.ritzcarlton.com; from €255). To appreciate fully this talked-up £100‑million project, next to the Powerscourt Gardens, you need to be drawn to the sort of American-style luxury that includes computerised bedrooms, a helipad, and just the merest hint of Ireland (a harpist and a recreation of a Victorian pub) to remind you where you actually are. Assuming that, you’ll be suitably impressed by the sweeping, Palladian-style curve on six floors, with 200 lavish rooms (124 are suites) in the two arms, plus a grand central lobby and, of course, a hushed spa with an infinity pool that glitters with Swarovski crystals. But whether or not you warm to it (and who doesn’t enjoy being spoiled from time to time?) Powerscourt presents some flaws. For a place that aspires to be among the top five resort hotels in Europe, its approach feels peculiarly reminiscent of a high-end shopping mall, and the view, too, is marred. Yes, Sugar Loaf Mountain is in the background, but whereas the majestic 18th-century Powerscourt Gardens along the road melt into the Wicklow landscape, here a dense wood of gloomy pines distracts the eye. And the hotel’s grounds seem to consist of a circular fountain (not working on our visit) and an unlovely helipad. The hotel’s ESPA spa, on two floors, is faultless. Bedrooms, too, are lovely: spacious, calm and classically styled, some with suntrap terraces. For me, it wasn’t the frameless television in the bathroom mirror (which leapt unbidden into life at 6am) nor the irritating screen-operated curtains, lights and temperature that impressed. It was the bed, on which I seemed to float, the pillow in the bath, and the soothing, powder-blue walls. The hotel’s restaurant is Gordon Ramsay’s, and herein lies another problem. Apart from a bar area, and the naff “pub”, there’s no other restaurant if guests don’t want the full Ramsay experience, or find the tables fully booked. Though our panoply of main dishes, pre-dishes and amuses‑bouches were up to expected standards, I wouldn’t have wanted all that fuss two nights running. But nor would I have wanted to spend my second evening in the subterranean “pub”, or the bar. I wish someone could explain the point of signature restaurants in hotels. Rathsallagh House Hotel and Golf Club Dunlavin, Co Wicklow (45 403112; www.rathsallaghhousehotel.com; from €270). Superficially similar to Powerscourt, in that it offers a fine golf course as well as beauty treatments, this family-run hotel could not be more different. Presided over by the delightful, larger-than-life O’Flynn family, Rathsallagh House offers genuine hospitality in its panelled drawing rooms, with family photographs, large, light-filled windows, squashy sofas, crackling fires and fresh flowers. Much of the produce for the excellent dinners and award-winning breakfasts come from the lovely, walled garden. Bedrooms, either in the creeper‑smothered converted Queen Anne stables or low-key extensions, are all different, but full of luxurious touches such as power showers and bath menus. If you are looking for “craic”, you are much more likely to find it here rather than via the lonely harpist at Powerscourt. Hunter’s Hotel Newrath Bridge, Rathnew, Co Wicklow (404 40106; www.hunters.ie; from €190). Ireland’s oldest coaching inn, run by the fifth generation of the same family, is a time warp, as well as an institution for traditional Sunday lunches and teas on the terrace or in the pretty dining-room. The flowers that grace the white-clothed tables come straight from the garden that runs down to the river, and though the area has become almost part of Dublin commuterland, not much changes in this little island of constancy. “We strongly recommend Mr Hunter’s inn, the most comfortable in the country,” reported travellers in 1840. Once installed in one of the fresh, homely bedrooms, you will find little reason to disagree: quirky, dowdy and more than a bit doddery it may be, but this is a proudly old-fashioned place, where you would not be surprised to hear the sound of trunks being carried into the beamed front hall, which still has the tiled floor laid in 1720. And frankly, if it’s good enough for the King and Queen of Sweden, who have stayed three times in the past 10 years, it’s certainly good enough for me. Bellinter House Navan, Co Meath (46 903 0900; www.bellinterhouse.com; from €200). Think Babington, but more expansive. Or Ireland’s Ballymaloe, but for young people. Or, if you don’t know those, just think of a hotel were you would be happy to spend every minute of the day, basing yourself in the elevated double drawing room with its delicate stucco ceilings, ever-lit peat fire, eclectic collection of armchairs and sofas, wacky art and full-height windows overlooking the Boyne, where wine, cocktails and food are served all day (and all night if you wish). You can divert to the river for a spot of fishing, or to the rustic spa for an Irish seaweed bath or beauty treatment, or to the indoor infinity pool, or the outdoor one that curls beneath large boulders overlooking the river. Or to the snooker room. Or back to the bar for another cocktail. There’s pretentious hip, and there’s that rare thing, unpretentious hip, and Bellinter House definitely falls into the latter category. Perhaps it’s the nuns who previously occupied the fine Georgian mansion that have given it such a genuinely soothing, lived-in feel. The house is allowed to speak for itself and the scuff marks and cracked paintwork that spell disaster for try-hard hip hotels just add to the charm of this one.
Upcoming hotel reviews
June 4, 2008
Just stayed at the Yew Tree Inn in Berkshire, which has the words Marco Pierre White emblazoned in three foot high letters on the front of the building, lest we forget that he is one of the four business partners that owns the place. The food was so-so but the bedrooms, which the great man is in charge of decorating with artworks by contemporary artists, sculptures and photographers, are unique to stay the least. Only three have been filled with art so far, and make some of the most unusual pub bedrooms you’ll ever see. Has anyone eaten or stayed there? What do you think? Next week I’m off to the Star at Harome in Yorkshire, about which I’ve heard great things, and the Devonshire Arms at Beeley on the Chatsworth Estate, which sounds equally good. Upcoming reviews in the Sunday Telegraph include the Peacock, also in Derbyshire, Jesmond Dene in Newcastle and Durrants in London. When I was staying at the Peacock at Rowsley I got the luck of being given a personally guided tour round the wonderfully atmospheric Haddon Hall by its owner Lord Edward Manners. Left untouched for two hundred crucial years, when it might have been substantially altered, its authenticity is incredible, including the finest example of a medieval kitchen in the country. While I looked round the house my husband fished on the river below, and managed to catch one of the wild rainbow trout that only that river is now home to. Sometimes I love my job!
Parisian pleasures
March 29, 2008
Whatever your style, there’s a Paris hotel to fit the bill. They fall into four distinct categories; once you know what they are, it’s a question of choosing the type that suits you, or your mood, best. Find all our recommendations, below, on the Hotel Guru.
First, there’s the thing that Paris does better than anywhere in the world, that indeed it invented: chic. Don’t stand at the reception desk of a chic Paris hotel in a pair of trainers, with a rucksack trailing on the ground. The reception staff won’t expel you, but the merest glance, even the flicker of an eyelid, should be enough to send you straight round to Prada for emergency supplies. You won’t mind the expense: these hotels may be haughty but they are also elegant and beautiful in a way that’s authentically French, entirely natural and very seductive.
The French may have invented chic, but they do hip pretty well too, though not always with such successful results. Sometimes style beats substance by a country mile, but when it works, it works spectacularly well. Witness Costes, in rue St Honoré (tel 0033 1 42 44 50 00) a hotel so cool that it doesn’t even stoop to a website, and where, once you are inside its faux-Napoleon III cocoon, you are swept into a parallel universe of beautiful people (the staff often outdo the guests) lolling on stuffed velvet love-seats, grooving to DJ Stephan Popougniac’s disco sounds, and canoodling behind wispy curtains around the misty, subterranean pool. But if Costes is still the daddy of them all, there have been a crop of successful new openings of late, each one creating a well-deserved buzz and its own following. We bring you the best.
And then there are hotels with traditional French character, legions of them. Crooked floors, old beams, breakfast rooms in stone-walled cellars, nostalgic decoration. Many of them have been around for decades; some are on their last legs, while others have been refreshed. A few, even, are new, or have been substantially renovated in a characterful way. The trick is to know which are well run, and which have had their day.
As for budget hotels, most in Paris tend to be of the ‘character’ variety rather than contemporary, although there are one or two exceptions. Expect tiny wrought iron lifts and the feeling that you should be writing a novel at your desk, in the style of Colette, or getting out your easel. All the hotels listed here are in locations that make the best of this incomparably beautiful city.
CHIC HOTELS
Meurice (228 rue de Rivoli, 1st; (00 33 1 44 58 10 10; www.meuricehotel.com; doubles from £599 per night, including breakfast).
If Costes is the daddy of hip, then the Meurice is the mère of chic. Officially Paris only rises to “four star luxe” rather than five-star hotel accommodation, which is probably what makes its top hotels so sensational: they are all in traditional mode and set in historic mansions, rather than bling new builds as in so many other cities. If only for its location, entered from the arches of the rue de Rivoli and overlooking the quintessentially Parisian Jardin des Tuileries, it has the edge, for my bar of gold, on its rivals the Ritz, Plaza-Athénée, Four Seasons Georges V, Bristol and Crillon. Once inside, it only gets more and more chic, the revamped interior glittering in gold, marble and glass in a way that’s dramatic yet dainty, with rows of gilt framed glass doors leading into the shadowy majesty of the Bar Fontainbleu, and the scintillating Versailles-themed, Michelin-starred restaurant. Rooms and suites hark back to the Empire and 18th century and many have superb views, while the terrace of the Belle Etoile Suite has an amazing 360º panorama over Paris. Spoiling spa; appropriate service.
Lancaster (7 rue de Berri, 8th (00 33 1 40 76 40 76; www.hotel-lancaster.fr; doubles from £336 per night, including breakfast).
A recent stay at this aristocratic Champs-Elysées hotel proves that its new owners, the Spanish Hospes group, headed by the high society owners of Zara, have left well alone, only improving amenities such as beds and in-room entertainment. The grand ancien régime townhouse was bought in 1930 by legendary hotelier Emile Wolf, who filled it with unusual things and a starry array of guests from Coward to Dietrich. The original furniture remains intact, as does the enchanting Salon Berri and the red leather lift that takes you to your lovely bedroom. For the epitome of chic, choose the Marlene Dietrich Suite. Michel Troisgros oversees the menu in the classy restaurant.
Verneuil
8 rue de Verneuil, 7th (00 33 42 60 82 14; www.hotel-verneuil.com; doubles from £146 per night, including breakfast).
Chic usually means expensive, and it certainly doesn’t mean cheap, but this Saint-Germain address is at least affordable and provides a bolthole that feels both exclusive and welcoming, decorated in the manner of an elegant private house. Bedrooms (specify a large one) are furnished with antiques, with attractive lighting. There’s a cosy sitting room, and once you step outside, a wealth of antique and fashion shops. Owner Sylvie de Lattre, Parisian to her fingertips, picks out her favourite local shops and cafés on the hotel’s website.
Thérèse (57 rue Thérèse, 1st; 00 33 1 42 96 10 01; www.hoteltherese.com; doubles from £154 per night, including breakfast).
A smart whitewashed building in a narrow street near the Louvre announces the Thérèse, carefully and calmly designed in classic/contemporary style, with an eye for quality. The elegant bedrooms have good quality beds and linens, while bathrooms neatly mix contemporary with traditional, such as Philippe Starck lighting and attractive old style tap fittings. Most importantly, the hotel attracts an interesting clientele, many from the world of publishing and fashion.
HIP
Amour
(8 rue de Navarin, 9th; 0033 1 48 78 31 80; www.hotelamour.com; doubles from £115 per night, including breakfast).
Brainchild of graffiti artist and nightclub entrepreneur André, the Amour has come storming on to the Paris hotel scene. It has the right name, is in the right place – up-and-coming SoPi (south Pigalle) – and is achingly hip. Bedrooms lead off black-painted corridors lit by naked bulbs. Some have been decorated by named artists; others display risqué photographs; all are eclectic, done out in vintage colours and with finds from the marché aux puces. The buzzing bistro downstairs, all black, white and fire-engine red, swarms at night with young bohos. In warm weather, tables and chairs spill out into the lush courtyard garden.
de Sers
(41 avenue Pierre 1er de Serbie, 8th; 0033 1 53 23 75 75; www.hoteldesers.com; doubles from £401 per night, including breakfast).
Less than 100 metres from the iconic George V, here is a smaller mansion turned hotel with a dash of zaniness. When architect Thomas Vidalenc remodelled the 19th-century home of the Marquis de Sers, he made a happy marriage between the traditionally elegant and cutting-edge design. Through a sliding glass door, the entrance hall sets the tone: a gallery of heavy gilt-framed portraits hangs on the panelled wall above a row of funky grey armchairs on deep purple carpet. The wood-clad, candlelit S’Bar becomes a magnet for a glamorous young crowd at the cocktail hour, and bedrooms offer deep-pile, wrap-around comfort.
Murano Urban Resort
(13 boulevard du Temple, 3rd; 00 33 1 42 71 20 00; muranoresort.com; doubles from £290 per night, including breakfast).
If Costes is hip in an opulent way, then Murano Urban Resort, a close contender for top contemporary hotel of choice for A listers, is hip in a fun way. You may find the lift lined in faux fur on your first visit, glitter on your second; the iconic white chesterfield sofa stretches in front of an enormous working fireplace; the restaurant ceiling is a sea of stalactite lights; fingerprint scanners have replaced room keys, the corridors feel like nightclubs, two of the suites have tiny rooftop pools. Austen Powers is in there somewhere, and A Clockwork Orange, with a dash of Sci-Fi. Fun. And not nearly as intimidating as you might think.
CHARACTER
Daniel
(8 rue Fréderic Bastiat, 8th; 00 33 1 42 56 17 00; www.hoteldanielparis.com; doubles from £350 per night, including breakfast).
Turning its back on the all-white minimalism of some of the latest hotels, newcomer The Daniel puts Chinoiserie firmly back on the style map, with Khotan carpets, hand-painted Chinese wallpaper, jewel-coloured silk sofas and porcelain lamps. The look, created by designer Tarfa Salam, is flamboyant and uplifting. From the lobby, in tones of almond green and grey, a lift resembling a Chinese box whisks guests up to the lovely bedrooms, most lined with toile de Jouy and all furnished with hand-picked oriental pieces. An Asian influence continues on to the menu of the excellent restaurant.
Caron de Beaumarchais (12 rue Vieille-du-Temple, 4th; 00 33 1 42 72 34 12; www.carondebeaumarchais.com; doubles from €129 per night, including breakfast).
A glimpse through the glass front of this Marais hotel tells all: a recreation of 18th century taste, complete with pianoforte, card table and first editions, and the world of Mozart’s librettist Caron de Beaumarchais, who lived in the street. It may be mannered, but it’s impossible not to be caught up in the charm and warmth of the place. Bedrooms, the best with walk-out balconies, are decorated with as much care as the public rooms. Good value for the area.
L’Hôtel
(13 rue des Beaux-Arts, 6th; 0033 1 44 41 99 00; www.l-hotel.com; doubles from £236 per night, including breakfast).
The ‘pavillion d’amour’ of the early 19th century, the final home of Oscar Wilde in the early 20th century and the louche and decadent celebrity hangout of the 60s and 70s is now, resplendent in its Jacques Garcia livery, in the caring hands of Jessica Sainsbury and husband Peter de Frankopan of Cowley Manor. Climb the fabulous circular staircase to rooms like jewel boxes and themed suites (if you can bear the tristesse you can sleep in the room in which Wilde expired beyond his means).
BUDGET
Arvor Saint-Georges
(8 rue Laferrière, 9th; 0033 1 48 78 60 92; www.arvor-hotel-paris.com; doubles from £88 per night, including breakfast).
Around the corner from one of the city’s hidden gems, place Saint Georges, the Arvor is the new kid on the budget block. Behind a sober façade, hands-on owner Nadine Flammarion has transformed a standard three star into a hip, laid-back hotel with chic, retro-contemporary looks. The finished bedrooms – some are still being refurbished – major in white but with a single wall of vivid colour and are minimally yet carefully furnished. The open-plan ground floor incorporates a sitting area with bookshelves, a bar, reception and breakfast area decorated with the striped posters of French conceptual artist Daniel Buren. The tiny patio comes into its own in summer.
Chopin
(10 46 passage Jouffroy, 9th; 0033 1 47 70 58 10; www.hotel-chopin.com; doubles from £76 per night, including breakfast).
Glimpsed through a glass façade at the end of one of the 19th-century arcades which thread this shopping and theatre neighbourhood, the Chopin’s entrance looks cosy and inviting. Inside, plants, a piano and, predictably, Chopin playing in the background infuse it with old-world charm. It could easily be a tourist trap. But it’s not. Staff are caring and attentive, and prices close to rock bottom. The bedrooms, off salmon pink corridors, are simple but attractive and blissfully quiet. The best, tucked under the eaves, have classic views across the Paris rooftops.
Mayet
(3 rue Mayet, 6th; 0033 1 47 83 21 35; www.mayet.com; doubles from £90 per night, including breakfast).
Fun, relaxed, breezy and good value, the Mayet shows how colour – judiciously applied – can lift a hotel from the rut. There’s colour everywhere: graffiti-style murals; painted tables; carpets; even the mugs for your self-service breakfast (which you can take back to bed or eat at a long table d’hôte in the vaulted cellar). The more sober bedrooms in red, grey and white use stylish ‘office’ furniture to good effect, and all have excellent beds. Wondering where to dine? The friendly staff chalk up recommended restaurants on a lobby blackboard.
Dubai
March 10, 2008
Just back from Dubai. What an extraordinary, wacky place. The 21st-century building boom shows little sign of slowing. Sneeze and another hotel goes up! I was there to check out the hotels, everything from the gold and glitz of the attention-grabbing Burj Al Arab to the terrific new European-style La Maison d’Hôtes, opened by a delightful French woman who previously ran a small auberge in Brittany. I was ferretting out the small, charming boutique-style hotels that are opening up in the city alongside the marble palaces on the beach and the skyscraper business hotels in downtown Dubai. My discoveries will be going up on the Hotel Guru website soon. Keep checking.
More hot tips from Paris
March 9, 2008
New Paris Hotels
Check out the Paris lists (Chic/Hip/Character/Budget) on our Hotel Guru website (www.thehotelguru.com) to find our new discoveries. One in particular, the Académies et des Arts in Monparnasse, stands out, but there are others too: the Serrs, Daniel, Le A, Murano Urban Resort to name but four. If you want a blow out and a serious treat, look no further than the Meurice, which we prefer to all the other deluxe city hotels. And the 360º view from the roof terrace of the Belle Etoile Suite is quite simply staggering.
Great Paris Restaurants
The theme of the single chef cooking with the help of just one waitress in tiny restaurants no larger than a postage stamp could take you on a gourmet trail across Paris. Apart from Le Timbre and La Cerisaie, described in my article on 24 hours in Paris, there are others, notably the amazing Spring, whose chef/patron is a young American, Daniel Rose. You must go there, and unless it’s lunchtime (Thursdays and Fridays) you must book (dinner is served on Mondays though Fridays). Daniel has no menu, he just cooks what he feels like and according to what he finds in the market on the day, and his choices are inspired. On a Friday lunch we ate snails in a wonderful broth of coriander and lemongrass, followed by a melting lamb salad and a to-die-for chocolate mousse. We chatted to Daniel for a long time afterwards and he was pretty interesting, not just about the culinary scene in Paris (very poor) but also about Paris itself. Oh dear. To quote Daniel “Paris is dead. No it’s worse than dead – at least death is interesting. It’s fossilized”. Wealth tax, the thirty hour week and the bypassing of Paris as a financial hub has meant that educated young Parisians are largely working abroad (they all seem to be living in South Kensington, don’t they?) and the city has lost much of its sense of importance. “It’s just another European backwater of a city” another cultured but disgruntled Parisian told me.
But I digress.
Here is a list of small chef/patron eateries in Paris, as recommended by a couple of charming gents we got chatting to in La Cerisaie. You can find their details by entering their names and then ‘Paris restaurant’ in Google.
Spring xxxx
Le Timbre (see my post ’24 hours in Paris’)
La Cerisaie (see ’24 hours in Paris’)
Fulvio, in the Marais (Italian)
Le Goupil, Place Jules Reynard, Porte Maillot
Atelier Berger, Rue Berger, Les Halles (Norwegian chef)
L’Epi Dupin, in Saint Germain
Pasco
Le Temps au Temps
L’Enredgeu
Le Chai, in the suburb of Boulogne. Ony lunchtimes. Highly recommended by our informant
Ribouldingue
Le Comptoir du Relais, at l’Odeon in the 6th arr. Well known chef.
A great weekend break
February 19, 2008
Where were you for Sunday lunch? I found myself, quite unexpectedly, on the border between the old East Germany and Poland. A charming restaurant, and one of the best meals I’ve had in ages, for about a quarter of the price one would pay at home.The weekend had started badly: an inspection trip to add a few more hotels to the Berlin section of this website, for which I suggested to my husband that he choose the hotel we stayed in on Friday night. We could have gone anywhere, including the slew of five star properties that Berlin now offers. But the husband made a mistake, got a couple of names muddled up and booked a student hostel! We were lucky…we had a room to ourselves instead of a dormitory, but we shared the (very clean) bathroom and the bare walls and metal wardrobe of our room didn’t particularly help my husband’s prospects of not being clubbed to death by his wife with one of the large, German style pillows! But it wasn’t all bad….not at all: it was set in an atmospheric pre-war factory in the funky, ‘real Berlin’ district of Kreuzberg and actually makes a great budget address, so much so that we are pleased to included it on the website: Die Fabrik.The next day, a great surprise in store. We headed out of Berlin for an hour and a half for the peaceful, little visited lake district of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Read about the very special place we found on my next post…. Before heading back to Berlin Tegel airport on Sunday we drove north to another place we’d heard about (we were researching for our Charming Small Hotel Guide to Germany as well as for Hotel Guru) which turned out to be a low key hotel in a farmyard setting…with the great restaurant. If you find yourself up there, its called Rittergut Bomitz, in the village of Bomitz. A three mile track across fields takes you there. A West German couple with a background in hotels are bringing it up to speed. More work needs to be done to the bedrooms, but the restaurant…. already superb.
A Perfect 24 Hours in Paris
February 11, 2008
Here’s Fiona and Leo’s recipe for a perfect 24 hours in Paris, now that it takes no time at all to nip across from St Pancras. We came on Eurostar, now making Paris only just over two hours away from London. Now that the city of light is so close, consider nipping over for just one night: here’s my recipe for a perfect 24 hours in Paris. To complement your trip, buy Paris Walks by Fiona Duncan and Leonie Glass, published by Duncan Petersen Publishing Ltd at £8.99. It’s a little out of date (the odd shop has closed or changed) but the walks still take you to some fascinating out of the way places. Paris is a great city for walking in…. we loved writing that book three or four years ago. I did all my walks in a brace because I’d done my back in! Since you are going to be there for such a short time, you can devote yourself to fun. Paris may have lost its edge as a city of global significance, but it’s still all about l’art de vivre, astonishing views, great shopping and classic food and wine. Forget the set piece sights like the Louvre. Instead, concentrate on getting to know one area of the city well. In 24 hours you’ve got time for no more than two meals, an afternoon at leisure and a night’s sleep but for such a short trip to be memorable, all those elements need to be even more carefully chosen than for a longer one. You may have a favourite quartier where you would prefer to base yourself; if not, here’s my recipe for a stay on the Rive Gauche. The Hotel A perfect reason for basing yourself in Montparnasse and exploring the Left Bank is the new Hôtel des Arts et Academies (15 rue de la Grande Chaumiere; 0033 1 43 26 66 44; www.hoteldesacademies.com; doubles from £165 to £214 per night, including breakfast). The best hotel, in my opinion, to have opened in the city for some time, it’s happy proof that the small charming Parisian bolthole is alive and kicking. Husband and wife Laurent and Charlotte Inschauspé have created a spotless, highly individual haven, cosy yet contemporary and full of artistic flair, right opposite the art school where Gaugin and Modigliani took courses and a few steps from the famous artists’ cafés of Montparnasse. Two artists have deftly created the hotel’s unique look: Jerôme Mesnager, whose joyous white silhouettes are painted directly on to bedroom walls and all the way up the lift shaft (making this the most intriguing glass lift ride in town) and sculptor – and mother of Charlotte – Sophie Watrigant, whose equally endearing figures climb a dainty steel ladder from the bottom to the top of the five-storey stair well. As for the 20 bedrooms, they are compact but have the classy feel of a top hotel and come in four distinct designs, all cleverly lit with stone-lined bathrooms, sculptured taps and exceptional beds. Room service is provided by the well-regarded restaurant, Wadja, opposite.
In the morning take breakfast (all fresh) in the tiny ‘petit bistrot’ or at a velvet sofa beside shelves stocked with art books. Or take a seat facing the wall screen and watch an art video as you eat, perhaps of Mesnager at work painting his white figures on to the hotel’s walls. Service is from smiling, smartly uniformed waiters, while receptionists are relaxed and warm. A perfect fusion of quality and character. There’s even a little Moroccan style spa downstairs, where treatments can be arranged at short notice. Alternatives Two other alluring hotels in the same area are the intimate Ste Beuve (9 rue Ste Beuve; 0033 1 45 48 20 07; www.hotelsaintebeuveparis.com) with double rooms from £132 to £282 per night, including breakfast, and the romantic Duc de St Simon, set around a pretty, secluded courtyard (14 rue de St-Simon; 0044 1 44 39 20 20; www.hotelducdesaintsimon.com) with doubles from £188 to £305 per night). Lunch and Dinner Leave London at breakfast, and you will arrive in Paris with plenty of time to check into your hotel and relax there before setting out for that all-important first French meal of the trip. It had better be good. Simple, but good. Which means knowing where to go in advance and not just plunging into the nearest restaurant you see.
You have to look much more carefully these days. Brasseries, in particular, are no longer to be relied on, however inviting they may look. Most are now run by chains and their food is at best predictable, at worst, dire. Instead, look for well established, privately owned bistros that still have integrity, and for the crop of tiny restaurants run almost single-handed by young, committed chefs.
Two such places can be found in Montparnasse. Le Timbre (3 rue Ste Beuve; 0033 1 45 49 10 40) is just that, a postage stamp of a restaurant, its kitchen open to view at one end. Here a modest self-taught Mancunian, Chris Wright, cooks for up to 24 people entirely without help, in domestic French manner, with admirable results. Choose from his weekly changing menu of three to four starters, main courses and puddings; nothing will disappoint but you shouldn’t miss the lambs’ kidneys if they are on, or the millefeuille de la maison. We met the owners of La Cerisaie (70 boulevard Edgar Quinet; 0033 1 43 20 98 98 and their baby, at Le Timbre. “Cyril cooks like a dream”, Chris told us. “You must go there”. This is another one-chef/one-waitress operation, with Cyril Lalanne producing delicious regional dishes (including cochon de Bigorre – pork like you’ve never tasted before) from his native southwest France out of a kitchen no bigger than a large cupboard. His wife Maryse is front of house, and everyone chats. If you lunch simply at either Le Timbre or La Cerisaie, it would be fun to dine in style, maybe in the new clothes you’ve bought that afternoon. Of the famous grands cafés of Montparnasse, La Closerie de Lilas (171 boulevard de Montparnasse; 0033 1 40 51 34 50) is the one that feels most like a special occasion. Choose from the brasserie or the more formal restaurant, and be sure to have a drink in the piano bar before you eat. Alternatively La Coupole (102 boulevard de Montparnasse; 0033 1 43 20 14 20) still packs them, especially for birthdays, while Le Dôme (108 boulevard du Montparnasse; 0033 1 43 35 25 81) is the place to go for those fruits de mer platters one dreams of back home.
The Afternoon Paris is made for walking, with a constant stream of diversions as you stroll. Close at hand is Jardin de Luxembourg, a sheer delight, as appealing to lovers as to mothers with children to entertain (model boats, Shetland pony rides, playgrounds and puppet shows). It makes the perfect start to a stroll along elegant rue Servandoni to St-Sulpice and on into the fashionable St-Germain district, perfect for shopping. In rue de Grenelle you could pop into the refreshingly cool and tranquil Musée Maillol, and afterwards the diminutive cheese shop Barthélémy, where white-coated ladies dispense perfect cheeses which M. Barthélémy has personally criss-crossed France to find. Odour-proof bags are provided for the trip home on Eurostar.
If you want culture, the Musée d’Orsay and Rodin Museum are both nearby. Little known curiosities in the neighbourhood, off the tourist track but well worth seeking out, include the silent, richly ornamented Chapel of St Vincent de Paul and his eerie shrine in Rue de Sèvres, the bucolic Jardin Catherine Labouré, entered via Rue de Babylone, and Notre-Dame de la Médaille-Miraculeuse round the corner in rue du Bac, which reveals Catherine Labouré’s story.
Bonjour from Paris
January 20, 2008
Leo and I are in Paris, getting up to date, on your behalf, on the current hotel scene there (we’ve written several books on the city together, including the Charming Small Hotel Guide to Paris). We each stayed in a different hotel each night, as is our custom on our inspection trips, for the first few nights, but now that we need to get together and do some work, we’ve rented an enchanting 7th floor apartment (reached by a tiny wrought iron cage lift) near Bastille. I feel I should be penning a novel – probably something in the style of Colette– up here. Its got polished wood floors and pretty pictures on white walls and a tiny but sweet kitchen with an amazing view of the Eiffel Tower. Every hour, on the hour from nine pm to midnight, it bursts into an explosion of flashing, gittering lights lasting for ten minutes, before sobering up for the next 50 minutes. Amazing! Go to www.parisinsight.com for more details of the apartment and its rental. More from Paris in my next post, including where to eat, where to stay and what to do.