Showing posts with label travel ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel ideas. Show all posts

4.9.13

5 Quiet Hotels to Stay in Paris


Traveling is partly stressful. You're bound by the rules of a jam- packed itinerary, on top of no time to fully fray the jet lag. It's no doubt that you heart will itch for a silent sanctuary to recoup for lost energies. 

There's also a recent study by J.D. Power that says most of the 53, 000 travelers surveyed encounter problems with ranked noise at hotels-- either brought by street drillers or door- slamming guests. 

The thing is, you can be as intentional with your choice on the best place to exercise your rights to silence. It will depend on which you prefer to experience most-- a quiet place that overlooks a hundred acre woods or a quiet place at the atrium of the city? Whichever the case, expect that you cannot always find a place with all the A- list criteria combined. 

For the meantime, below are hotels I suggest you to check in to give your sleep and rest impediments a fair remedy, or so I say:

1. Hotel du Jeu de Paume

Pictures of Hotel du Jeu de Paume - Hotel Photos
                                                  This photo of Hotel du Jeu de Paume is courtesy of TripAdvisor

This hotel is earning good reviews for being clean, well- decorated, and intimate. It is suggestive of a Parisian atmosphere. In fact you can reach Notre Dame, shopping spots, wonderful restaurants, and most of the Metro stations by dint of easy walking. But you can still sleep without having your ears blanketed with pillows. It has access to wifi connection and staffs replenish the toiletries everyday.

Location: 54 Rue St. Louis en Ile, 75004 Paris (Hotel de Ville)


2. Jays Paris

Photos of Jays Paris, Paris
This photo of Jays Paris is courtesy of TripAdvisor

This is considered an enormously quiet hotel in the 16th arroundisement. You can never go wrong with the rooms, only that it has no elevator so care to pick one in the lower floors. Concierge arranges airport transfers besides the fact that they will specially welcome you upon arrival. 

You can speak to the staffs in English, or practice your French without getting snickered for your novice- ness (if that's even a word). Also meet your fascinating neighbors, Arc de Triomphe, Champs Elysees, and Eiffel Tower. Aaahh, how about a 5- star experience like that? 

Location: 6 Rue Copernic, 16th Arroundisment, 75016 Paris

3. Secret de Paris

Image of Design Hotel Secret de Paris, Paris
This photo of Secret de Paris is courtesy of TripAdvisor
Would you even think twice at the thought of its name? If that looking-at-the-Eiffel-from-a-terrace scenario in your mind is hardly possible to realize, this is the right place to go. Because the rooms are designed after the most frequented tourist spots in Paris being the Louvre, Musee d'Orsay, and of course Eiffel Tower. It is perfectly quiet and romantic, best for those who dared tie the knot. 

Location: 2 Rue de Parme, 75009 Paris


4. Hotel Fouquet's Barriere

Photos of Hotel Fouquet's Barriere, Paris
This photo of Hotel Fouquet's Barriere is courtesy of TripAdvisor

This is a clean and tidy hotel located at the corner of Champs Elysees. Probably one with excellent sound proofing despite being close to swanky tourist areas. But not the best-est one for comfort. However spas and pool areas are well - appointed and it offers a courtyard for you to dote on peacefulness. 

It also has a touch of discretion as you won't have to always pass through the reception area where customers crowd. 

Location: 46 Avenue George V, 08 Arroundisement, 75008 Paris (Champ Elysees)


5. Hotel Luxembourg Parc

Photos of Hotel Luxembourg Parc, Paris
This photo of Hotel Luxembourg Parc is courtesy of TripAdvisor

This hotel is also walking distance from St. Germain and Notre Dame. It has a quiet and inviting atmosphere as it is more of a private residence than a hotel. It has rooms that offer views of the peaceful garden-- a view that might be a good option to rest your eyes after seeing so much of the cosmopolitan Paris.

It is 10- 15 minutes away from shopping spots and museums, but the rooms are astoundingly guzzled with a French aura.

Location: 42 Rue de Vaugirard, 6th Arroundisement, 75006 Paris


I hope this post helped. Here is where you can also find quiet places to dine in Paris, just in case. Stay tuned on my next post for The Quiet City [Paris] Travel Series!




20.8.13

5 Quiet Outdoor Spots Every Book Reader Should Go in Paris


I'm closest to travelers, and travelers who are book readers. Oftentimes, too, travelers who are book readers who are peace- seekers. But with a city full of rubbernecks, finding an outdoor spot with hardly any crowd is a threat to people like that. 

If you happen to be in Paris and would still want to be unapologetic with your reading routines, here are the right places you can drop by to dote on your first editions without necessarily having to stare constantly at  a lifeless wall.


Stay tuned for more of The Quiet City [Paris] travel series here on Pens n' Paper!

Watermark copyright Pens n' Paper l Image: All Things Hub








Photo Credits:
Creative Commons
Paris Perfect
The New York Times

6.8.13

Get Firsthand Travel Tips on Trip Gems


Traveling is no longer a fad but a need that lets people move beyond the comforts of their cities and learn some things they didn't know existed. But the more people discover how to map out their trips, the less special places become. They hoard to top destinations, add to the crowd, pollute at some point, and learn things they can relate with other travelers who have been to the same destination that they have been. Everyone else has seen the same place-- too common that nothing makes Chianti, or the Taj Mahal, or the Singapore Merlion extraordinary. But that's the real point of traveling, I guess. People travel and encourage other people to travel so that there is a way for amazing and unexpected stories to come out. Otherwise these tourist attractions will not be accounted for what makes them the most frequented destinations on earth, or for the wonders of the world to not be justified for being called a wonder.


Each person who travels has the right to every excitement she can feel at the prospect of boarding in the plane, or having to speak a foreign word or two to a local. As traveling will open the best and worst of experiences, everyone of us will always have that distinctive way with words of telling our travel stories to others-- because we'll have somehow different points of view about our experiences. And that's when sharing travel tips becomes even more fun and reliable. 

Most importantly today, we are offered with so many options from where we can collect information or a guide for our travel. Odds are these pieces of information go outdated overtime or get lost along the way. But that's when TripGems become one good solution. 

What is TripGems?

TripGems is where you can get all travel tips in on place-- ask your friends, build your own timeline, and get deals on your next destination. It was launched last June 1 this year by travel enthusiasts from Amsterdam. Their goal is to bring as many travelers together and use this collective travel wisdom to give you the best tips for your destination. You give one tip and you receive a thousand of others. The good thing is that the more travelers ask or give tips, the greater the possibility that fresh travel inputs are updated and shared.


They have been selected for Web Summit 2013-- a tech conference in Dublin, and was nominated for the Accenture Nomination Awards 2013 under the 'new concepts' category. You can like, tweet, or share their submission to vote.

What else can you get from TripGems?

Recently, they have added new features to the platform and raised seed capital that allows to put their developer on it 24/ 7. You can add photos to your travel tips and pin them to your own map and see how many percent you have seen of the world through a BETA travel timeline. 

Soon they are putting up more updates like travel status, notifications, follow possibilities, and new features to allow you to find travel deals, create your travel map, tag your friends, or access them on your mobiles. 

You have something worth to share. Be a traveler.

 
Get helped by travelers, and help other travelers in return. Log on, NOW!
 









Photo/ Video Credits:
1st photo- paris2london hub
video from Celesty Lee

23.7.13

25 Ways to a Parisian Travel Dream


My affinity to romantic cities always finds its way to one, among many other places, Paris. I'm probably one of the most hopeless romantic person you'll ever find in the planet because of it.

Most people think that life has no mystery and magic. But think about me, and all the other people out there who dream of one day setting foot on Paris. The fact that we share the same fascination is mystery enough that relative things happen to different people at different parts of the globe.

They sure have their own version of Paris. But me? This is how I hope it'd be:

    1. Brunch at a Parisian Cafe'

Find a table at Le Petit Cafe', Paris
I wouldn't mind whatever pavement cafe' it may be. The important thing is having to laze and see the usual social and culinary life in Paris- nestling my derriere on a couch while ruminating on a delicious  French croissant and wearing a quintessentially French tongue.

French croissant
     2. Experience an elaborate French Gourmet

Won't you drool just by the look of it?
French gourmet is known to be exquisite, not only for the jet set. I wonder how an authentic French culinary cabaret feels like. After all, they say a dinner in France is never second best. A little refining of the palate here and there.

     3. Spend afternoons at Shakespeare & Co

Heaven on earth
It's an English bookstore that stood across from Notre Dame on the left bank since 60 years ago. If you are like me who finds ultimate happiness in reading, this would also be your sanctuary. My goal is to find and read an authentic first edition- a classic book at that- and have it stamped with their insignia on my way out. Some say, the bookstore has readings every Monday night at 7. I would sure dare try.

     4. Visit the Louvre


Architectural masterpiece
And why not? Paintings are another reason to visit Paris, and the Louvre is one of the world's largest and most historic museums that contain the awesom-est work of art-- The Raft of Medusa, Death of the Virgin, The Coronation of Napoleon, and the eminent face of Mona Lisa

     5. Stroll from St. Germain to Notre Dame


I'd like to see the narrowest streets of the city, the oldest churches, and other best English bookstore.

     6. Visit Musee d' Orsay


Home to French art since the 1800s. My objective is to see the works of Vincent Willem Van Gogh. He must be familiar to you too, mustn't he?

     7. See the Place Des Vosges


It is the oldest square in Paris. Victor Hugo, the French novelist of the famous Les Miserables was said to have lived there.

     8. Go to Vogue Paris


I am a sucker for fashion as I am for travel, and to be able to visit the office of one of the most credible fashion authorities is another dream to cross off my life list.

     9. Pastime at La Siene


It's another way to complete my Parisian trip aside from the Eiffel. I want to see the best of spectacles in Paris by cruising the Siene river especially by night, when monuments and landmarks shimmer as they reflect in the waterway. C'est magnifique!

    10. Buy a Parisian Beret


Beret- wearing French might have already stopped the craze of wearing one, especially the navy  blue ones, back from when Simon and Garfunkel were even formed. At one point French fashion nowadays may be a little intimidating, with natives being an ultimate believer of high fashion standards (read: polished shoes, no underrated day wear like flip flops, no mismatch, edgy, and NO FAKE). But berets are still piece for French fashion. The secret maybe is to pay respects to their fashion standard by wearing ensembles clean, with confidence, and sleek-- meaning, no too many statement pieces. It's not dressing to the nines.

    11. Visit Disneyland Paris

Source
I cannot miss a nostalgic park like that. Not even the one in Hong Kong, or LA.

   12. See the Versailles Palace


Source
I like a little history from time to time. What I know is that Versailles is where most French monarchs lived. Its architectural design is also worth a capture.

    13. Experience Paris Story by Victor Hugo

Source
I could probably do this on my first day in Paris. To see France in a forty-foot panoramic onscreen audiovisual presentation hosted by a holographic Victor Hugo would be a perfect starter!

     14. Watch a show at the Paris Opera House

Source
I'm an endless dreamer for classical operas and stage plays. If Broadway is for New York, and West End is for London, this could most likely be for Paris.

     15.  Try a delicious brewed coffee and a French toast


I don't drink brewed coffee. But I might try, for the sake of Paris. A cup wouldn't be bad I guess and a French toast will compliment it perfectly. Besides, I think it's better than to try to wear a ridiculous mustache.


     16. Eat tons of French Macarons 


Can Parisian calories be an exemption to the slimming rules? Tee hee! 

     17. Stop by the Arc de Triomphe


For the hope of seeing it in the flesh than in magazines and books. Plus it's one of the most historic sites in Paris.

     18. Go to Mont Saint-Michel


I also want to go somewhere a little far from the center of the City of Lights. Saint-Michel is a good option, a small island just off the coast of Normandy. I'd love to see structures from the medieval times. From afar, it looks like the jumble of towers in Harry Potter's Hogwarts.

     19. Buy homecoming treats at La Grande Epicerie 




La Grande Epicerie is said to be the most impressive food find store in Paris- quoted as, the Temple of Foodistas, so why not bring some home?

    20. Shop at Saint Germain, hopefully, really hopefully!

Source
To shop at what they call, the hub of French bourgeois, perhaps my guiltiest Parisian fashion pleasure, the other being Shopping with Jackie (Kennedy Onassis) in Paris and Audrey Hepburn in Paris. I'll sweat it out! 

    21. Dine at La Maison Rose Paris



Blissfully because there is the same restaurant in Cebu, Philippines which I also love!

    22. Visit Moulin Rouge Paris


I love the movie, and surely this one too. I'd like to see can-can dancers in this cabaret. 

     23. Window shop at Montaigne Market

Source
If buying a beyond-150-dollar item in a one-off boutique is a little far out for me; at least, I could get into a place where I could find fashion inspirations the way I flip through the pages of Vogue.

      24. Have a photo taken in front of a colored art door 


For the love of all things dainty!

     25. Trip up the Eiffel Tower

Oh Eiffel! My Eiffel!
Of course! It's in my life list. Kudos to Gustave Eiffel for engineering this global icon. It isn't Paris without it. 

Audrey Hepburn was right, Paris is always a good idea








Photo Credits:
pinterest (dot) com
google (dot) com (slash) images