Elite Traveler Summer 2023
Clockwise from left The Moroccan-inspired spa; one of the suites; design details; the library’s fresco; Tarte Mirabelle cocktail
spirits into signature Proust-inspired drinks, an antique fi replace held up by Atlas has been repurposed as a striking mirrored backdrop. Next door, a secluded rotunda library o ff ersamore intimate setting for evening soirées, and a home for a precious fi rst edition signed by Proust, while in the adjoining Winter Garden, breakfast is served each morning overlooking the 19th-century glass framework of the Carreau du Temple, a former covered market now used to host pop-up events for the likes of Hermès and Ruinart. RELAX If the bar transports you to the glorious Belle Époque, then the hidden underground spa will take you to the hammams of Morocco with its Orientalist design, a movement popular during Proust’s time and chosen by the writer’s beloved Aunt Léonie for the salons in her Normandy home, where Proust spent his childhood summers. After working with the King of Morocco’s own artisans on La Mamounia, Garcia called upon the craftsmen once again for Maison Proust, who spent more than one year in Paris and thousands of hours completing the work by hand to create a sanctuary in the heart of the city. Columns covered in traditional geometric tiles and tadelakt create a pathway between the marble hammam and shimmering blue pool, crowned by a wooden ceiling and ornate lanterns. But perhaps more lavish than the decoration is the option to reserve the space during your stay for the ultimate luxury — your own private moment of tranquility. By Nicola Leigh Stewart From $705 per night. Contact contact@maison proust.com, +33 186 545 555, maison-proust.com
and rich fabrics o ff er views across the rooftops of Paris and lead into a private bar, two sitting rooms and a library, where velvet armchairs clad in shades of deep citrine re fl ect the golden highlights of foil-stamped antique books. EXPLORE On the ground fl oor, three salons nod to the Parisian salons Proust himself would’ve visited. In the fi rst, gold-threaded fabric ceilings, midnight blue armchairs and fringed lampshades create the mood for after-dark cocktails and elegantly presented petits mets , light delicacies designed for sharing. Behind the bar, where smart sta ff can be found mixing up French
character, who is sometimes depicted in the original portrait that sits at center stage. Bespoke furnishings by Garcia, including matching poufs and armchairs, have been married with antiques gathered from an auction house in Versailles. Lampshades have been designed like open books and scribed with passages from In Search of Lost Time and, in select rooms, velvet drapes hide small alcoves and writing desks for guests who feel inspired to channel their inner Proust. The masterpiece is the sixth fl oor’s 1,075-sq-ft Executive Suite, imagined as a private apartment of the writer himself, who presides over the space in a portrait by Jacques Aymer de la Chevalerie. Three bedrooms dressed in jewel shades
Photos Benjamin Rosemberg
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