
"Christian Lacroix decorated each room differently — toile de Jouy meets postmodern maximalism in a building that sold bread to Henri IV. The result is irresistible and irreproducible."
The building at 29 Rue de Poitou in the Haut Marais is the oldest bakery in Paris, dating to the reign of Henri IV in the early 17th century. It was still operating as a bakery until 2000. When it was converted to a hotel, the owner commissioned Christian Lacroix — the Arles-born couturier whose fashion house had defined a certain mode of maximalist French elegance — to design the seventeen rooms. The results are unlike anything else in Paris.
Each room is unique. Lacroix brought his couture sensibility — his love of toile de Jouy, his appetite for colour, his interest in the tension between historical reference and contemporary irony — to each space without repeating himself. Some rooms are rich and dark; others are bright and pattern-driven. Some read as references to French provincial tradition; others are entirely of the moment. All are precisely resolved. The junior suite offers the greatest dimensions; the standard rooms require a guest who embraces compression.
The hotel has no restaurant and no spa. This is not a failing but a clarification: the Hôtel du Petit Moulin is for guests who came to Paris to use the Marais, not to stay within a hotel infrastructure. The neighbourhood provides everything a restaurant programme could and considerably more — the covered market at Marché des Enfants Rouges, the galleries on Rue de Bretagne, and the concentration of serious restaurants within a five-minute walk make the absence of in-house dining a genuine advantage.
The Marais location is the hotel's strongest argument for guests who understand Paris beyond its monuments. The Musée Picasso is a ten-minute walk. The Centre Pompidou is fifteen. Place des Vosges is directly accessible. The galleries, studios, and concept stores of the Haut Marais are immediately surrounding the building. This is the Paris that was rebuilt in the 1980s and 1990s from the rubble of history, and istyle="color:var(--t2);line-height:1.8;margin-bottom:40px;">
The Petit Moulin is for the honeymoon couple who came to Paris for its character rather than its grandeur. Lacroix's rooms create the right atmosphere without the palace scale that some couples find alienating. The Marais neighbourhood makes every day an itinerary without effort: markets, galleries, the best falafel in Europe, and Place des Vosges for the evening hour before dinner.
Seventeen rooms, no spa, no restaurant, and the entire Marais to walk through: the Petit Moulin is the correct address for a solo Paris visit that wants character over comfort. The room design rewards solitary attention. The neighbourhood is inexhaustible. The covered market at Marché des Enfants Rouges is the best solo breakfast in the 3rd arrondissement.
A Lacroix room that both of you have opinions about — this is the anniversary conversation the hotel enables. The Haut Marais neighbourhood provides the afternoon walking and the evening dining without a hotel recommendation required. The junior suite for the occasion.


Rates shown are approximate. Verify at time of booking.
The King's Suite
Monthly. No noise.