| | Facilities within the Property |
Restaurant: The restaurant "Il Lotti " offers a refined Italian cuisine sure to entice in a cosy atmosphere. A special "business lunch" menu is offered for your professional luncheons. Breakfast, lunch and dinner served. Access is available from the hotel lobby or a private entrance on the Rue de Castiglione. Restaurant Capacity is 70 persons seated. |
Terrace: The Lotti's magnificent courtyard is the ideal place to unwind and find calm after a busy day in the city.
Bar: The hotel's "La Dolce Vita" is not to be missed. In addition to numerous cocktails, "La Dolce Vita" offers you a limited snack menu served non stop from 10:00 am until 11:00 pm. Open daily. Daytime offers a seasonal lunch menu. In the evening, this magical setting is the perfect place to enjoy that first aperitif or last nightcap. |
Amenities: Multilingual staff (French, Italian, English, Arab, German, Spanish), currency exchange, 24 hour concierge service, valet and underground private parking, business centre are at guests' disposal. Available upon request: limousine, car rental, restaurant, theatre, train and airplane reservations, babysitting, baby crib, daytime laundry, dry cleaning and pressing. Newspaper of your choice delivered right to your room. |
Banquets and Conferences: Hotel Lotti offers ten banquet, meeting and conference rooms for all of your professional needs, such as press conferences, seminars, cocktails and banquets. Certain facilities benefit from natural lighting and open up into the courtyard which is at your disposal for professional lunches, dinners and cocktails. |
| Property Facilities Summary: | Banquets | Bar | Business Centre | Car Rental | Concierge Service | Congresses & Meetings | Currency Exchange Service | Dry Cleaning | Internet Connection | Internet Point | Laundry & Ironing | Lift | Meeting Room | Newspaper | Restaurant | Small Pets Welcome | Ticket Reservation Service | Valet Parking | Wake Up Service | Wi-Fi | | |
Latin Quarter - Saint Germain des Pres Paris: since the Middle Age the left bank quarter in Paris has been dominated by the Sorbonne, and takes its name from the early latin speaking students. It dates back to the Roman town across the Ile de la Cité. In 1215 the Pope approved the establishment of a university on the left bank of the Seine in Paris. Students and teachers alike settled in the area and since Latin was the official language of education at that time, the area came to be called the Latin quarter. The area is generally associated with artists, intellectual and a bohemian way of life. The left bank contains many of the Paris monuments, museums and gardens, ranging from the brand new Institut du Monde Arabe to the Middle Age Musée de Cluny, or the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in the Jardin des Plantes.
The Louvre museum is the probably the most famous and largest art museum in the world! It has approximately 6,000 European paintings and was originally designed as a palace. It has been influenced by major events in French history and has had many architects and decorators make changes and additions to the original structure. When the Musee d'Orsay was created in 1986, most of the post 1848 works left the Louvre and were transferred to the new museum which is close by. Paris operas, built between 1862 and 1875 by Charles Garnier, is a baroque example of neoclassicism: it has an ornamented façade, monumental stairs and Italian type hall with Chagall paintings on the ceiling. Maria Callas and Rudolf Noureev are among the many artists who wrote its history as one of the world foremost scenic stages for opera and ballet alike. Since the opening of the Opéra Bastille in 1989, the Opéra Garnier is devoted to ballets. |
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