Paris, France

Experimental Marais

Price per night from$411.85

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR354.76), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Boogie knights

Setting

Ancient Rue de Temple

Welcome to Experimental Marais, the atmospheric hotel hotspot in hip Haut-Marais. Interiors by Tristan Auer tell a tale of the well travelled, through the rich colour palettes, vintage finds and carefully chosen curios that fill rooms and suites. At the chophouse-inspired restaurant, French classics come with a side of old-school New York charm; and downstairs, the American Bar sets the mood with crafted cocktails and a steady buzz of conversation.

 

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

A cocktail each at the bar

Facilities

Photos Experimental Marais facilities

Need to know

Rooms

43 including one suite.

Check–Out

Noon. Earliest check-in, 3pm.

More details

Rates don’t usually include breakfast – it starts at €37 a person for Continental breakfast; choose from freshly squeezed juices, eggs made to order and perfect pastries.

Please note

Experimental Marais is now under new management; please bear with us while we polish our content to accurately reflect the changes they've made. And if you have any concerns in the meantime, please get in touch. 

At the hotel

Free WiFi throughout. In rooms: TV, free newspapers, free in-room movies and air-conditioning.

Our favourite rooms

The Deluxe rooms feel like your own Parisian pied à terre, filled with chic objets, original artworks and photogenic nooks.

Poolside

The petite, arch-framed pool in the spa is a quiet spot for a slow unwind.

Spa

Hidden behind a studded door, the spa features a steam room and hammam, offering treatments with products by Susanne Kaufmann and Alaena. Choose from a hot stone massage to ease tension or a Glow Radiance facial to refresh your skin, after a day in the bustling Marias district.

Packing tips

Don't worry about earplugs – all the bedrooms are well sound-proofed, so you can be sure of a good night's sleep (even if the rest of Paris is partying).

Also

All common areas and a few Deluxe bedrooms are accessible for wheelchair users.

Pet‐friendly

With advance notice, four-legged friends will get a VIP welcome and a bowl to borrow. See more pet-friendly hotels in Paris.

Children

All ages are welcome – adjoining rooms and babysitting are available on request.

Food and Drink

Photos Experimental Marais food and drink

Top Table

You’ll have more chance of hearing one another over the pulsing soundtrack if you opt for a table in the corner.

Dress Code

This is a safe place to go ‘extra’ (as the youth say). The more outré the better in this club-kid hangout.

Hotel restaurant

Temple & Chapon is set in the hotel’s soaring, neo-Gothic dining room, where head chef Mélanie Serre serves elegant French fare, elevated through subtle homage to the rich flavours of NYC-style chophouses. Highlights include grilled Breton lobster, pork belly with a honey and spiced confit, beef tartare and a knockout cheesecake. On Sundays, brunch brings American classics — lobster rolls, cheeseburgers and stacked pancakes, served with mimosas, Bellinis and a gentle jazz soundtrack.

 

Hotel bar

Above Temple & Chapon, the American Bar is a stained-glass-lit hideaway with low-slung seats. The cocktail menu nods to New York’s hallowed bar scene — try the Quetzal, a smoky-sweet mix of Midori, lime, falernum, Ancho Reyes Verde and Del Maguey mezcal.

Last orders

Breakfast is from 7am to 10.30am; lunch is from noon to 2.45pm; and dinner is from 7pm to 11pm.

Room service

There’s a late-night menu of soups, salads, pasta, pizza and burgers in case hunger strikes after dark.

Location

Photos Experimental Marais location
Address
Experimental Marais
116 Rue du Temple
Paris
75003
France

You’ll find Experimental Marais on Rue de Temple in the heart of the Haut-Marais, steps from boutiques, galleries and cafés.

Planes

Paris’ main air hubs, Charles de Gaulle and Orly, are both about a 40-minute drive from Experimental Marais; the hotel can organise transfers for €200 each way.

Trains

The Eurostar departs frequently for Paris Gare du Nord from St Pancras International in London; once you arrive, the hotel’s a 20-minute taxi ride away. Direct trains from Brussels, Amsterdam and Cologne also terminate here. Hôtel de Ville and Arts et Métiers are the nearest Metro stations to the hotel.

Automobiles

If you really want to face the madcap ring roads – we don’t recommend it – there’s valet parking on-site for €50 a day.

Worth getting out of bed for

You can’t beat the hotel’s location in the middle of the historic Marais, one of the oldest parts of Paris – you’re in easy walking distance from the Place des Vosges, the Picasso Museum and the Musée des Archives Nationales, the state museum of French history.

There isn’t actually a hunchback in Notre-Dame, but you can visit the former home of the famous French writer who created him – the Maison de Victor Hugo is housed in a beautiful hôtel particulier (a mansion or townhouse) and includes photograph collections, drawings and texts.

Then, it’s time to shop for your own hôtel particulier (or studio apartment, as the case may be), filling it with finds from the concept stores and boutiques that line the streets of the Marais: Odetta Vintage is a vintage boutique where you can pick up pre-loved Chanel, YSL and Chloé, Merci is a concept store that stocks both retro and au courant design pieces, and The Broken Arm has the trends of tomorrow, underground magazines and a cool coffee shop.

Local restaurants

Reservations aren’t easy to come by at Septime on Rue de Charonne – it’s run by Passard-trained chef Bertrand Grébaut, so if you get a table go all out and order the five-course tasting menu. Hip Vivant on Rue des Petites Ecuries has mural-tiled walls, and small plates to enhance its lengthy list of natural wines. Fine-dining fish restaurant Le Mary Celeste, on Rue Commines, keeps things fresh by changing its menu daily.

Overindulged? Detox at Bob’s Juice Bar or go try brunch at Holybelly – arrive early for teetering pancake stacks and fluffy eggs.

 

 

Local bars

Think pink at Bisou, a cocktail bar with rose-coloured walls in the Haut-Marais where you order drinks based on your mood, not a menu. Andy Wahloo celebrates all things kitsch with neon-pink signage and fern wallpaper – pick your poison from the little cubbyhole shelves behind the bar, or choose from the cocktail menu of martinis, negronis, sazeracs and other tried-and-true classics.

Reviews

Photos Experimental Marais reviews
Robyn Donaldson

Anonymous review

By Robyn Donaldson, Literary aesthete

Frequent visitors to Paris often fall into familiar rhythms: arrondissements you navigate on auto-pilot, restaurants you always beeline for and itineraries that can end up a little stale — all very comforting, but sometimes a shake-up is needed. That’s exactly what Experimental Marais provided for Mr Smith and I — a refreshing reset in one of the city's most central and characterful districts.

As it was sunny, we trundled over from the Gare du Nord on foot — it took us a very manageable half an hour, crossing the iconic Place de la République and Marché Saint Quentin (the perfect place to stock up on cheese for the return leg). But for those not keen to drag a wheelie for miles, it's an easy metro journey whether you arrive in Paris by air or rail. 

The building itself is a brooding, Brutalist structure, but what greets you inside is a revelation: a beautiful central atrium flooded with light, arch motifs and diaphanous drapery that create an otherworldly calm. Tristan Auer has designed a space that serves as a fantastic flagship for the group, with Seventies aesthetics, a palette of creams, taupes and chestnuts, sumptuous leathers, Persian rugs and rich woods. 

We're led down a cavernous corridor to our expansive room, which has been decked out in every conceivable shade of white, along with a multi-coloured Ligne Roset Pumpkin sofa and glossy splashes of red. The wet room is colossal, with a gloriously powerful rainforest shower, hi-tech loo and very lovely bath.

Art has been deployed expertly at the hotel, from enlivening abstracts and quirky sculpture adorning the main spaces, to thrilling little nudes tucked away in the illuminated wardrobe. A petite workspace is provided for those determined not to switch off, but it's purposely close to the record player and well-stocked bar, complete with the delicious pre-mixed cocktails that feature in any Experimental Group stay. There was an array of vinyl on offer, but Mr Smith and I decided to curate our own playlist, spending a joyous few hours rummaging in the local record shops.

After a fairly hectic arrival, changing our Eurostar at the last minute due to unforeseen circumstances (read: having three dogs), we were glad we’d earmarked the first day for gentle exploration. The Centre Pompidou is on your doorstep, as is Musée National Picasso. The Louvre is a 25-minute walk away and the Place de la Concorde a little further across the Tuileries Garden. Fifty minutes on foot in the other direction is Montmartre and the Sacré-Coeur. The few hotspots that demand a metro trip — like the Eiffel Tower, the Père Lachaise cemetery and the Saint Ouen flea market — are no further than a morning commute might be.

But why would you ever leave the Marais? It’s ideal for shopping, from vintage (Selection and Citizen) to French high-street staples (Sandro to Sézane), and of course the iconic Merci concept store. Don’t miss Le Loir dans La Théière for the almost insurmountable lemon meringue pie (reader, I surmounted it); Parcelles for classic French fare; and Candelabra for tacos and the coolest drinks behind what looks like a well-used kitchen door. Bar Nouveau is beautiful, tiny and a riot of foxed mirrors and gorgeous glassware; and The Cambridge Public House is the place to go for something delicious and highly experimental – leek cocktail anyone? Though we had a good base knowledge of the area, the deeply stylish and infinitely helpful staff were always on hand to assist, dispensing their insider knowledge so we could really get the most out of the Marais.

After the excitement of the morning, a hot-stone massage was just what the doctor ordered. The hotel's petite but well-appointed spa houses a steam room and plunge pool, and there are treatment rooms offering all kinds of relaxing facials and massages, elevated by the use of Susanne Kaufmann’s organic ingredients. The therapist, like the rest of the team, was so friendly and accommodating, and kneaded out knots I didn't even know I had.

Afterwards, we floated down to dinner via the American Bar, sampling two more of the house specialities as we went. Staff had an encyclopaedic knowledge of the city's mixology scene, now committed to my Google Map of Paris Future Fun™. We had been a little hesitant when we saw Temple & Chapon was American in theme, but the execution of the menu was all French. My starter of red tuna with a sesame and yuzu vinaigrette was so spectacular, I returned to order it again before I even had a chance to file this review. And the crunchy choux and creamy pecan ganache was an almost religious experience — the very best of a Paris-Brest with a transatlantic twist.

In no small part thanks to the intel of the generous staff, we had the most wonderful stay in the Marais. The hotel opened our eyes to a new side of Paris, and reminded us to stray from the familiar every now and then.

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Price per night from $385.42