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Paris, France

Grand Coeur Latin

Price≈$225
Size75 rooms
NoiseQuiet
CapacitySmall
Michelin

A Michelin Selected hotel on rue Cujas in Paris's Latin Quarter, Grand Coeur Latin sits in a corner of the 5th arrondissement where Haussmann-era stone and student-quarter energy coexist at closer quarters than anywhere on the Right Bank. Against the palace tier, Cheval Blanc, Le Bristol, Crillon, it occupies a different register: smaller, neighbourhood-embedded, and selected by Michelin for precisely that distinction.

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Address
20 Rue Cujas, 75005 Paris, France
Phone
+33 1 89 40 57 40
Grand Coeur Latin hotel in Paris, France
About

A Latin Quarter Address in Context

Paris hotel choices tend to collapse into two poles: the palace tier of the Right Bank, where properties like Cheval Blanc Paris, Hotel Plaza Athénée, and Le Bristol Paris compete on grandeur and spa square footage, and the boutique-independent tier scattered across the arrondissements. Grand Coeur Latin sits firmly in the second camp, at 20 rue Cujas in the 5th, a street that runs between the Sorbonne and the Panthéon and has seen more intellectual argument per cobblestone than most of Paris combined. That address is not incidental to what the hotel offers. The Latin Quarter has resisted the homogenisation that has reshaped much of the Marais and Saint-Germain, and staying inside it rather than commuting to it is a distinct proposition.

Michelin's hotel selection process operates differently from its restaurant stars. The guide's hotel programme identifies properties across France that meet specific criteria for quality, character, and sense of place. Grand Coeur Latin's inclusion in the Michelin Selected Hotels 2025 list places it in a comparable set defined by editorial credibility rather than chain affiliation or room count. That matters in a city where the volume of accommodation options makes independent curation useful.

The Street, the Quarter, the Logic of the 5th

The 5th arrondissement is not the most fashionable corner of Paris, and that is part of its appeal. Saint-Germain-des-Prés has been boutique-heavy for two decades; the Marais has fully crossed from neighbourhood to destination. The Latin Quarter retains a functional texture that the others have shed: working bookshops, university canteens, pharmacy queues, and the particular Sunday-morning quiet of a district that actually sleeps. Rue Cujas sits in the academic core of all this, close enough to the Seine to walk the quais in ten minutes, far enough from the tourist density of Notre-Dame to feel like a place where people actually live.

For context on how Paris hotels at different price points and scales compare across the city, the EP Club Paris guide maps the full spread from palace to neighbourhood property. The contrast with properties like Four Seasons George V or Hôtel de Crillon is not a hierarchy so much as a choice about what kind of Paris experience you want to centre.

Michelin Selection and What It Signals

The Michelin Selected Hotels designation is awarded to properties the guide considers to offer genuine quality and character within their category. It does not imply a star rating or a specific room count, but it does function as an editorial filter in a city with thousands of accommodation options. For a hotel on a side street in the 5th, the designation confirms what the address already suggests: this is a property operating with considered intent rather than generic hospitality.

Michelin Selected boutique hotels in Paris tend to cluster in the Left Bank arrondissements, where smaller properties with strong neighbourhood identity have historically found their audience. Grand Coeur Latin's position on rue Cujas puts it at the geographic and cultural heart of that cluster. Properties of this type rarely compete on amenity lists. They compete on location specificity, room quality, and the degree to which they feel rooted in their neighbourhood rather than imported into it.

Sustainability and Responsibility in a Neighbourhood Hotel Format

Paris has seen a quiet but measurable shift in how independent hotels approach their environmental footprint over the past decade. The largest palace properties, Le Meurice, La Réserve Paris, have sustainability programmes scaled to their size and visibility. Smaller neighbourhood hotels operate under different pressures and different opportunities. A boutique property in the Latin Quarter is, by its nature, embedded in a walkable urban fabric. Guests arriving without a car, eating at local restaurants, and moving through the city on foot or by metro generate a materially different footprint than guests arriving at a Right Bank palace with a concierge-organised car fleet.

Choosing a neighbourhood hotel in a dense, walkable arrondissement is itself a form of low-impact travel. The 5th has excellent metro connections (lines 10 and RER B both serve the area), the RER B runs direct from Charles de Gaulle in under forty minutes, and the entire central Left Bank is accessible on foot from rue Cujas. The logistical argument for this type of property and the environmental argument point in the same direction.

Beyond transit, the neighbourhood hotel model tends to direct spending into the local economy more directly than large hotel complexes with internal restaurants, bars, and retail. Staying at a property like Grand Coeur Latin means breakfast at a nearby café, dinner at a brasserie on rue Soufflot, a bottle from a local wine shop. That dispersal of spend is a feature of the format, not an inconvenience.

Michelin Selected boutique hotels are increasingly the hospitality tier that aligns most naturally with responsible travel principles, though properties like Les Sources de Caudalie in Bordeaux or Villa La Coste in Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade show that larger properties can also build sustainability into their core identity. For Paris specifically, the urban neighbourhood model has structural advantages that are harder to replicate at scale.

Planning a Stay at Grand Coeur Latin

The hotel is located at 20 rue Cujas, Paris 75005. Pricing for Michelin Selected boutique hotels in the Latin Quarter generally sits below the palace tier represented by properties like Airelles Château de Versailles or Hôtel de Crillon, making them an access point into editorially recognised Parisian hospitality at a different price register. Booking directly through official channels is advisable to confirm current rates and availability, as the hotel has 75 rooms. The RER B from CDG to Saint-Michel Notre-Dame station takes approximately 35 minutes, placing the hotel within a short walk of the station exit.

For comparison across France's premium hotel tier outside Paris, properties like Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa in Champillon, La Bastide de Gordes, and Baumanière Les Baux-de-Provence offer a different relationship with the French countryside that complements rather than duplicates what a Latin Quarter address provides.

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A Lean Comparison

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Romantic
  • Quiet
  • Modern
Best For
  • Romantic Getaway
  • Weekend Escape
  • Business Trip
Experience
  • Historic Building
  • Design Destination
  • Destination Spa
  • Garden
  • Terrace
Amenities
  • Wifi
  • Pool
  • Spa
  • Hammam
  • Massage
  • Bar
  • Concierge
  • Room Service
  • Airport Shuttle
  • Laundry
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacitySmall
Rooms75
Check-In15:00
Check-Out12:00
PetsNot allowed

Elegant and refined with carefully curated color palettes across seven floors; warm, inviting public spaces including an airy courtyard bar and spa areas that evoke historical Parisian charm while maintaining modern comfort.