Fodor's Travel Talk Forums

Fodor's Travel Talk Forums (https://www.fodors.com/community/)
-   Europe (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/)
-   -   HOTELS PARIS - MARAIS DISTRICT (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/hotels-paris-marais-district-453524/)

Jane50 Jun 26th, 2004 05:23 PM

HOTELS PARIS - MARAIS DISTRICT
 
Does anyone have any recent experience of the Hotel Beauborg or any suggestions for a comfortable 3 star hotel in the Marais district that doesn't have poky rooms. We're looking at up to 120 Euros a night.

LarryJ Jun 26th, 2004 05:29 PM


I hesitate to recommend a hotel for you cause I don't know what a "poky" room is. Don't want to mislead you by sending you to one of them there "poky" rooms.

Larry J

Christina Jun 26th, 2004 06:00 PM

I can't name a place, but I was recently doing research on hotels in the Marais because I was considering staying there, and did not find any hotel in that price range with anything but poky rooms. The Beaubourg would probably be where I might choose if I wanted to stay there, though, but I thought it was a lot more expensive than that.

Eloise Jun 26th, 2004 06:04 PM

As the previous poster has pointed out, in that price range you may have to settle for poky rooms.

One hotel in the Marais specifically prides itself on the fact that most of its rooms are 14 meters square. If you do a little math, that translates to roughly 12 feet by 12 feet...

Flyboy Jun 26th, 2004 06:46 PM

Grand Hotel Francais is a place I've stayed at a number of times that is just outside the Marais. I don't know what "pokey" is either, but the website is:

http://www.grand-hotel-francais.fr/english/accueil.html

Rates are reasonable and it's in a decent neighborhood.


mike_b12 Jun 26th, 2004 09:31 PM

The hotel Jeanne De Arc was very nice. The staff weas very nice and the location was great. Is is located on Rue De Jannette.

Airlawgirl Jun 26th, 2004 10:04 PM

Flyboy-in order to understand what a "poky room" means, you have to wear flip-flops.

Jane50 Jun 27th, 2004 02:20 AM

For those of you who were lost in the translation of "poky" it refers to smaller than acceptable room size and is common usage down under.

ira Jun 27th, 2004 03:14 AM

>...rooms are 14 meters square. If you do a little math, that translates to roughly 12 feet by 12 feet<

Actually 14 meters square is about 45 x 45 feet.

I think you mean 14 square meters.

(Just feeling pedantic this morning)

Croque_Madame Jun 27th, 2004 05:49 AM

Hey, I'll take the 14 meters square room!

Finally, space for all my Marie Antoinette ballgowns and towering wigs with sailboats!

Stuffing the hairdresser, the maids, and the cook who travel with me into a closet each time visitors arrived has led to some dreadful rows on past journeys. Now, I can just put up a screen in one corner and they can all enjoy their own spacious pied-a-terre.

The last time I heard them scratching and scuffling about in the closet, I had to summon m_kingdom 2, who dealt quite smartly with the ingrates.

Flyboy Jun 27th, 2004 06:01 AM

Thanks for the "poky" definition. I'll look for a pair of flip-flops. ((h))

Scarlett Jun 27th, 2004 06:38 AM

Croque Madam, add to that the dog walker!

Pokey as in "Do the hokey pokey" ?

Croque_Madame Jun 27th, 2004 07:33 AM

Scarlett: the dog walker was, most unfortunately, devoured by the wretched hounds when last sequestered in the closet with them.

That is the LAST time I shall own chihuahuas!

Poodles, I've heard from a reliable source, are a far more jovial species.


N2it Jun 28th, 2004 06:39 PM

This is the type of post that wastes everyone's time. What is a pokey room?? Use English, be definitive.Fodorites want to be helpful but don't like this jibberish!!!

Croque_Madame Jun 28th, 2004 07:41 PM

N2it: I believe Jane50 subsequently explained that "pokey" is a term in "common usage down under".

There are varieties of English, you know. Even if we who don't live "down under" aren't familiar with the term itself, it was pretty easy to figure out what she was talking about.

Ridiculing people who don't speak the way you might hardly contributes to world peace or helps make people feel welcome on this website.

Why not try a little kindness or humor instead?

sailorsdoll Jul 30th, 2004 03:19 AM

a bit of a late reply--stayed at the Hotel Beauborg a year ago and I would recommend it to anyone. Rooms are a bit "pokey" but the staff was friendly, rooms clean, breakfast just right and the location can't be beat! Mere steps from the Pompideau Centre, metro stops, shopping and some of the greatest crepes stands ever! The hotel "mascot"--George, a wire-fox terrier, is there to greet you each morning for breakfast too! Definitely worth considering--for the money its a great deal!

TopMan Jul 30th, 2004 03:33 AM

Price is certainly no guarantee of size. I usually stay in the P. de la Reine on the Place des Vosges and some of that place's rooms are poky, or is it "pokey"..anyway, not real BIG...so go for whatever seems to fit economically and can handle all those wigs and footmen, too.

Have a great trip.

francophile03 Jul 30th, 2004 06:14 AM

What is the cost for a pokey Pavillon de La Reine room? I wouldn't want to pay 300 euro or so for that type of a room!

Britty Aug 3rd, 2004 11:30 AM

Whenever I visit Paris I always stay in the Marias. I think the Axial Beaubourg is a great hotel. The service is great; not to mention the location. I always ask for room number 34 (just be sure confirm the number). This is a corner room with a double bed and a decent size bathroom.
Another hotel I would recommend is the Hotel de la Brentonnerie (sp?). The rooms are slightly small but the decor is very nice.

PatrickLondon Aug 4th, 2004 01:09 AM

'Poky' is common usage in England too(well *I* use it, and no doubt I'm common, so there), but, Airlawgirl, I always thought flip-flops was an English term for what the Aussies call thongs (but both of us wear them on our feet, unlike what the English and Americans call thongs - now there's a potential source of hilarity, however big the room).

However, Scarlett, 'hokey pokey' was a sort of ice-cream or water ice that hasn't been seen in England for decades: the dance is the hokey-cokey (which would be much more fun in a poky room).

All together now:

You put your left leg in..
(or are we back to thongs and flip-flops?)

Perhaps I'd better get back to work.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:14 AM.