Best Luxury Restaurants To Eat In Paris
Maison et Objet September is about to start! Are you going to attend this major event? Do you have everything settled? So it is time to write about the best Luxury Restaurants in the French city of design.
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Le Grand Restaurant by Jean-Francois Piège
The bold but elegant modern style of young chef Jean-Francois Piège’s new Le Grand Restaurant, which was just awarded two Michelin stars, is the work of Icelandic-born, L.A.–based designer Gulla Jónsdóttir.
Alain Ducasse au Plaza Athenee by Patrick Jouin and Sanjit Manku
When deciding to launch a meat-free menu at his glamorous restaurant in the Hotel Plaza Athénée he named for himself, Alain Ducasse knew the place would need a new look. To mark the dramatic change in the kitchen, Patrick Jouin and Sanjit Manku centered the dining room on a deconstructed crystal chandelier, in which each piece of cut crystal is suspended from an invisible wire.
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Restaurant Guy Savoy by Jean-Michel Wilmotte
One of chicest new restaurants in Paris opened last June and occupies a suite of 18th-century salons overlooking the Seine on the first floor of the Monnaie de Paris (Paris Mint), a magnificent neoclassical limestone building by architect Jean-Denis Antoine.
Hexagone
Both in terms of its cooking and its decor, chef Mathieu Pacaud’s new restaurant Hexagone, which was just awarded one Michelin star, is intended to plot a new course for haute cuisine in Paris.
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Café de l’Homme by Gilles & Boissier
After a complete makeover by Gilles & Boissier, the mythic Café de l’Homme in the Palais de Chaillot has become one of the most stylish new tables in Paris. The design team respected the Art Deco decor of the 1937 building with views of the Eiffel Tower, the Champ de Mars, and the Jardins du Trocadéro, but made it warmer with sand-color cedar walls and ash-and-marble tables.
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Café Mollien by Mathieu Lehanneur
The Louvre’s café in Denon Hall may not be considered fine dining, but it can’t be beaten if you’re looking for a snack paired with incredible surroundings. This space was designed by Mathieu Lehanneur, who added brushed-brass light fixtures surrounded by pale-pink acrylic and a 33-foot-long marble-and-brass bar.
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Loulou by Joseph Dirand
Located in the former space of the somewhat unremarkable Saut du Loup restaurant, the two-level eatery has been designed to resemble the personal dining room of a decorative arts collector.