Pavillon D 23 Avenue Junot, 75018 Paris

Hôtel Particulier Montmartre

Hotel-restaurant in Paris

Presentation

"

A discreet hotel in Montmartre, between avenue Junot and rue Lepic

There are places in Paris that you do not find by chance. Hôtel Particulier Montmartre is one of them: to get there, you have to take the Passage de la Sorcière, a cobbled lane hidden off avenue Junot, pass through a wrought-iron gate, and leave the noise of the city behind. What you then discover is anything but ordinary.


The property occupies a grand Directoire-style house, once owned by the Guerrand-Hermès family and now run by Oscar Comtet. This former family home is felt from the moment you enter: you are not welcomed as a passing guest, but as an invited guest in a house with a history. The walls, the garden, and the layout of the spaces each tell, in their own way, the long and singular story of this address.


The hotel is located in the 18th arrondissement, between avenue Junot and rue Lepic, two streets with very different personalities. One, broad and residential, is home to some of Montmartre’s most beautiful façades. The other, lively and commercial, descends toward Pigalle, passing through the neighborhood market and cafés. From the hotel, both are within a few minutes’ walk. The Lamarck-Caulaincourt metro station on line 12 provides quick access to central Paris, and Abbesses station is a pleasant alternative for those who enjoy a scenic downhill walk on the hill.


The house is surrounded by a listed and protected garden, the largest you can find in a hotel in Paris. Around nine hundred square meters of greenery, shielded from view and noise, in a district that is nevertheless very lively. From the first fine days of spring, this space becomes the beating heart of the hotel, a place where time slows down without you even noticing.


Five suites decorated by artists: unique worlds between 35 and 85 m²

The hotel offers only five suites, and it is precisely this choice that gives it its value. Each one has been designed entirely independently, in collaboration with a different artist or visual creator. There are no standard rooms here, no décor repeated identically from one floor to the next. Each suite is a world in its own right, with its own atmosphere, its own color palette, its own character. Decorator Pierre Lacroix took part in a recent restoration: the names he gave them — Grand Tralala, Jardin sur le Nil, Les Folies du Ciel — give an idea of the creative freedom that guided the choices. Generous drapery, 1900s furniture, Art Deco mosaics: the whole plays on contrasts between apparent classicism and fully embraced decorative boldness.


Suite number one develops a boudoir atmosphere with Asian inspiration over forty-five square meters. The camellia-toned carpets create a visual softness extended by an open bathroom rendered in shades of beige. Suite number two, slightly more compact at thirty-five square meters, plays on carmine tones and the feel of an elegant country-house sitting room. Its bright bathroom offers a direct view of the gardens, which gives it a rare quality in an urban setting.


More assertive in its aesthetic choices, suite number three embraces an African atmosphere, with carpets and walls decorated with leopard motifs over forty-five square meters, and an open bathroom in black tones. Suite number four evokes a winter garden: green and white tones, a bathroom dressed in Art Deco mosaics overlooking the outdoor gardens. These two suites each cover thirty-five square meters. Their fully embraced singularity will appeal to travelers in search of originality; those who prefer a more neutral or conventional décor will find here a deliberately distinctive world, which is precisely the house’s signature.


The fifth suite occupies a special place. Accessible by a private staircase, it extends over eighty-five square meters in a loft spirit. Its large glass roof opens onto the rooftops of Paris and, in clear weather, onto the Eiffel Tower. It is the most spectacular suite in the property, the one that alone sums up the contrast between the house’s secrecy and the grandeur of the city that surrounds it.


Le Grand Salon restaurant and Le Très Particulier bar: from 8 a.m. into the evening in Paris’s largest hotel garden

On the dining side, Le Grand Salon offers French, seasonal cuisine made from fresh produce selected from French growers. The menu is bistronomic, in a setting that blends indoor elegance with, depending on the weather, an opening onto the garden. The restaurant operates throughout the day: breakfast from eight o’clock, lunch from noon, tea time from three o’clock with a selection of desserts, and dinner from seven o’clock. This broad schedule is appealing, even if it means the restaurant caters to very different audiences throughout the day, which can influence the atmosphere depending on the time chosen.


On Sundays, lunch takes on a more festive and relaxed feel. It reflects the house’s family spirit, that sense of being invited to a celebratory meal that happily carries on into the afternoon. It is one of the most pleasant ways to soak up the special atmosphere of the place.


From six o’clock in the evening, the Le Très Particulier bar takes over. Hidden in a green setting, it is aimed at those who know how to find it. The décor plays on velvet armchairs and refined woodwork, creating an intimate atmosphere conducive to conversation. The cocktail list is divided into two families: the Éternels, permanent house signatures, and the Temporels, which change with the seasons. On Wednesdays, a pianist accompanies the evening. At weekends, DJ sets take over, without the mood ever tipping into excess. Le Très Particulier remains above all a bar for insiders, a place where people come for the quality of the moment.


Museums, walks and cultural outings in Montmartre and from the 18th arrondissement

The Basilica of the Sacré-Cœur is close by, as is Place du Tertre, a landmark of Montmartre painting. For those wishing to explore the artistic riches of the capital, the Montmartre Museum, just a few minutes’ walk away, traces the history of the neighborhood and its artists through permanent collections and temporary exhibitions. The Renoir gardens next to it are well worth a stop, especially in spring.


Further away, but easily accessible by metro, the Centre Pompidou and the National Museum of Modern Art are a fine destination for contemporary art lovers. In a different vein, the Musée de Cluny, devoted to the Middle Ages, and the Musée d’Orsay, whose Impressionist collections are among the most important in the world, offer dense and memorable days of visiting. Montmartre itself is an inexhaustible area for strolling: the lanes descending from the hill, the stairways, the vineyards of rue Saint-Vincent, the artist studios that still survive here and there allow you to spend an entire day in the neighborhood without ever exhausting it. The Moulin Rouge, a few hundred meters away, remains an essential address for anyone who wants to enjoy a Parisian cabaret evening.


For lovers of live music and popular culture, the Pigalle district and boulevard de Rochechouart, a few minutes’ walk from the hotel, bring together concert halls, jazz clubs and record shops. La Cigale and L’Élysée Montmartre regularly host well-known artists in intimate venues, ideal for an evening with no distance between audience and stage.


What Hôtel Particulier Montmartre concretely offers: a stay in Paris off the beaten track

Hôtel Particulier Montmartre brings together, in one place, qualities that are rarely found together: the discretion of a confidential address, the comfort of a very high-end hotel, and the warmth of a house that has crossed the decades with its personality intact. With only five suites, capacity is intentionally limited, which guarantees peace and personalized attention, but also means booking ahead, as availability is naturally restricted. A nine-hundred-square-meter garden that shields you from the urban bustle without really taking you away from it, dining and a bar that live up to the setting: everything contributes to making this stay an experience unlike any other. All this in one of Paris’s most endearing neighborhoods, at once popular and refined, familiar and always a little surprising.



A few activities and discoveries near this hotel

  • Le Clos Montmartre is less than ten minutes away on foot: this urban vineyard of more than 1,700 vines, visible from rue des Saules and rue Saint-Vincent, can be discovered every Saturday through a guided tour with tasting organized by the Montmartre festival committee (about 39 euros per person). In October, the grape harvest festival brings the whole neighborhood to life for several days.
  • The Montmartre Museum, on rue Cortot, is worth a half-day visit: its collections retrace the artistic history of the district since the 19th century, and its gardens inspired by Renoir’s work offer a direct view of the vines. The Renoir café inside the museum is a pleasant stop before continuing the walk.
  • Starting from the hotel, avenue Junot itself is worth a detour: lined with Art Deco façades and private passages, it leads to Villa Léandre, a flower-filled Anglo-Norman-style cul-de-sac little visited by tourists, ideal for a few quiet photographs. The Passe-Muraille sculpture on Place Marcel Aymé is located at the end of the avenue.
  • The Montmartre Cemetery, accessible in ten minutes from the hotel, is one of the most beautiful cemeteries in Paris: in addition to its remarkable funerary architecture, it is the resting place of Dalida, Berlioz, Truffaut and Nijinsky. A map is available at the main entrance, on the avenue Rachel side.
  • Le Lapin Agile, on rue des Saules, is one of the oldest cabarets in Paris, still active in the evening. Far from the mainstream spectacle of the Moulin Rouge, it offers evenings of French song in an intimate room where people usually come at the end of the week by reservation.
  • For a cultural break off the usual routes, the Halle Saint-Pierre, at the foot of the Sacré-Cœur, hosts exhibitions of outsider art and singular art in a former 19th-century market hall. It also has a café and a specialist bookstore, open during the day Monday through Friday.

Summary of some positive reviews read on the Web

  • A family dinner in this bucolic garden remains a unique memory. The service was refined, and the concierge remarkably attentive and passionate about his work. You feel like you are in the countryside while still being in Paris, which is almost a miracle. The dishes were delicate and well executed, the prices a little high but the experience is clearly worth it.
  • We come back every season for several years now, and the place retains that timeless atmosphere that keeps drawing us back. The staff is attentive, the ambiance always perfect. A completely different way of experiencing Paris from what you get in a classic hotel.
  • We booked the Lazy Léopard suite for a personal event. The welcome on arrival was warm and quick, and the suite itself is truly iconic: its decorative choice is bold, with a very pronounced retro atmosphere. A place unlike any other.
  • What sets this place apart in Montmartre in general is that it lets you completely escape the neighborhood’s tourist bustle. Hidden behind its gate, it works like a bubble. The service was warm, professional, truly sincere. The cuisine, light and flavorful, perfectly complements the setting.
  • An excellent brunch in a noble and elegant place. The menu was well put together, the service attentive. Ideal for a moment for two before a walk through the neighborhood streets. An address we would recommend without hesitation.
  • Suite number five, with its glass roof overlooking the rooftops of Paris and the Eiffel Tower, is a truly special place. The room service dinner was excellent, the team attentive to every detail. Of our many stays in Paris, this one remains the most memorable.
"

Other services

Activities

  • Walking tours

General

  • Pets allowed
  • Wi-Fi available everywhere

Services

  • Internet
  • Wi-Fi
  • Free Wi-Fi

Dining

  • Restaurant
  • Room service
  • Bar
  • Breakfast in the room
  • Snack bar
  • Special diet menus (on request)
  • Grocery deliveries
  • Wine/Champagne
  • Coffee on site

Pool and wellness area

  • Sun umbrellas

Shared spaces

  • Garden
  • Terrace
  • Game room
  • Sun terrace
  • Outdoor furniture

Entertainment

  • Board games/puzzles
  • Baby safety gates

Miscellaneous

  • Non-smoking rooms
  • Elevator
  • Soundproof rooms
  • Heating
  • Entirely non-smoking property
  • Air conditioning
  • Smoking area
  • Pet bowls
Pavillon D 23 Avenue Junot, 75018 Paris

Photo gallery

From 817 EUR per night


Rated : 8.4 / 10 (103 reviews)