VILLA-DES-PRÉS
Un hôtel élégant au cœur d'une maison parisienne de collectionneur, dans le quartier de Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Décorés par l’architecte d’intérieur Bruno Borrione et la galeriste d’Amélie du Chalard accompagnée de ses onze artistes, les trente-quatre chambres doubles, suites et appartements (avec terrasse ou balcon) sont lumineux et soignés. Côté prestations, le spa de Villa-des-Prés offre un très bel espace bien-être pour les clients de l'hôtel ; tandis que le bar et son patio végétalisé sont l'endroit idéal pour prendre un verre et se relaxer.
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When checking in, we clearly informed the concierge that we needed a room at 28°C, as we had been outside in 3°C Paris weather for quite a while. Yet upon arrival, we discovered that our AC was not working—there was no air coming out.
We immediately contacted the concierge, and they told us to wait 20 minutes because the AC needed time to “warm up.” We waited—nothing changed. When called housekeeping, they lied again, insisting that the AC was working—just “not that obvious.”
After suffering in the cold, finally a staff confirmed the AC is not working. We asked for another room. They immediately lied again, claiming there were no available rooms—yet their website showed that suites were still available. When confronted, they suddenly changed their story, saying we could switch rooms, but only if we paid extra. When we refused, they showed us a filthy, unacceptable room, saying it was the “only option”—a blatant attempt to pressure us into upgrading.
At this point, it was obvious we were being fooled around. With no other choice—it was already 9 PM, and we were exhausted from a long flight—we had to accept their only “solution”: a small heater that dried out the air and made the room unbearably uncomfortable. The next morning, I woke up with a bloody nose and a painfully cracked throat.
The worst part? When we tried to escalate the issue, the staff got super defensive and blocked us from speaking to management. They hoped we would just give up and accept their mistreatment, while insisting their actions were legitimate.
After a long argument, we finally spoke with the manager, Camille, who gave us a completely contradictory and nonsensical explanation:
• First, she claimed that French ACs do not provide heating, and only a heater can warm the room. (Yet multiple staff members had previously told us the AC was “warming up” and working fine! Also, when we later stayed at a four-star hotel, we found this to be an outright lie.)
• Then, she presented room temperature monitoring data, claiming that the heater was effective. But when we pointed out that we were asking about AC, not a heater, she changed her story again, now claiming that the monitor only measures AC temperature and cannot detect the heater’s warmth, even though a staff have confirmed the AC is not working.
• When my mother—exhausted from a 7-hour flight and freezing Paris weather—tried to explain our frustration and just have a working AC, Camille accused her of “making a scene.” Not once did she acknowledge that we were only upset because her staff had repeatedly lied to us and refused to provide a real solution.
And then, the most condescending and offensive part: Camille had the audacity to say that she had lived in Hong Kong before and knew “how people like me like” things, but that France was “just more environmentally friendly” and “things don’t work like that here.”
What exactly was she implying? That Asian guests are being not eco-friendly for expecting basic warmth and comfort in a freezing Paris winter? That lying to customers is somehow part of “sustainability” in France? That because we’re in France, we should just accept being cold and deceived?
This was not only dismissive but outright arrogant. After speaking with our travel agency, we discovered that Villa des Prés has a history of issues with Asian guests over air conditioning problems.
This is not an isolated incident—it is a pattern. They knowingly deceive, mistreat, and manipulate non-French-speaking guests, assuming we won’t fight back.
This experience has completely ruined our trip, but more importantly, it has raised serious concerns about how this hotel treats non-French guests.
I strongly advice travelers who don’t speak French to avoid this hotel. Yes this hotel offer SPA and Diptyque, but it’s not providing comfort and respect.
Paris has many wonderful hotels. Don’t waste your money on this one.