L'hôtel Dyel des Hameaux est un hôtel particulier situé sur la place des Vosges à Paris, en France. Il s'agit de l'ancienne résidence personnelle de l'ancien directeur général du FMI, Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
Gallery
Sponsored
Location
1 explorer visited this place
34 m
L'Ambroisie is a traditional French restaurant in Paris, France. It was founded by Danièle and Bernard Pacaud, and is now owned by Walter Butler of Butler Industries Group. L'Ambroisie maintained three Michelin stars from 1988 until 2026, where it lost a star. The name "L'Ambroisie" comes from Greek mythology and means both "food for gods" and "source of immortality."
74 m
Ma Bourgogne is a bistro in Place des Vosges in the Le Marais district of Paris. It is on the North-West point and is a café in the traditional French style. It has been around for many years and it has been spoken of as one of the best bistros in Paris.
Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir came here after escaping from a dangerous protest about Algeria.
97 m
The Place des Vosges, originally the Place Royale, is the oldest planned square in Paris, just before the Place Dauphine. It is located in the Marais district, and it straddles the dividing-line between the 3rd and 4th arrondissements. It is an enclosed square, accessible via a main street on one of its four sides and two streets running beneath pavilions. It was a fashionable and expensive square to live in during the 17th and 18th centuries, and one of the main reasons for the chic nature of the Marais among the Parisian nobility. Along with the Place des Victoires, the Place Dauphine, the Place Vendôme and the Place de la Concorde, it is one of the five royal squares in Paris.
155 m
The Hôtel des Tournelles is a now-demolished collection of buildings in Paris built from the 14th century onwards north of Place des Vosges. It was named after its many 'tournelles' or little towers.
It was owned by the kings of France for a long period of time, though they did not often live there. Henry II of France died there in 1559 of wounds he received in a joust. After his death, his widow Catherine de' Medici abandoned the building, by then quite derelict and old-fashioned. It was turned into a gunpowder magazine, then sold to finance the construction of the Tuileries Palace, designed and developed to suit the Queen's Italian style.
165 m
The Maison de Victor Hugo viktɔʁ yɡo]; Victor Hugo's House) is a writer's house museum located in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, where Victor Hugo lived for 16 years between 1832 and 1848. It is one of the fourteen City of Paris museums which have been incorporated since January 1, 2013 in the public institution Paris Musées.