Louis Vuitton Hotel Champs-Élysées
The Louis Vuitton Hotel marks the maison's first direct venture into hospitality, occupying roughly 6,000 square meters of the historic former Hôtel Élysée Palace — an ornate 1898 building by architect Georges Chedanne at the corner of the Champs-Élysées.
The Louis Vuitton Hotel marks the maison's first direct venture into hospitality, occupying roughly 6,000 square meters of the historic former Hôtel Élysée Palace — an ornate 1898 building by architect Georges Chedanne at the corner of the Champs-Élysées. Designed by the Paris-based firm Barthélémy Griño, the intimate property holds only about ten expansive suites, layered with the craft, leather, and savoir-faire that define the Louis Vuitton universe. A redesigned interior courtyard, a series of landscaped terraces, and a rooftop gourmet restaurant frame sweeping views toward the Arc de Triomphe, positioning the hotel as an ultra-exclusive flagship address on the world's most famous avenue.