Planning New Year's Eve in Paris
Sunday, October 14, 2007 I've already had at least three inquiries about where to spend New Year's Eve in Paris. It certainly seems like a good idea to start planning now, but in reality, it's just too early. Most Parisians don't even know what they're doing until maybe a couple of weeks in advance, and only the most touristy (or commercial) restaurants have their menus posted (like Brasserie Flo and Chez Clément...not two places I'd recommend for the night). The Eiffel Tower restaurants are not even taking reservations that far in advance.
Some things to keep in mind:
- The majority of restaurants will be open (the smaller, family-owned places are most likely to be closed).
- Almost every single restaurant that is open on the 31st will have a special, set menu for the night, usually very pricey.
- Try and stay close to your hotel (or wherever you're staying), because after midnight the metros, RERs and busses will be packed beyond belief (and this is Christmas again for pickpockets), and taxis will either be impossible to find or will be stuck in traffic.
- If you can brave the cold (and one never knows how cold it will get these days), the best way to pass the evening is to pack a picnic and a bottle of Champagne (don't forget glasses) and find a place with a view of the Eiffel Tower (NOT on the Champ de Mars...unless you love crowds).
- Clubs and bars will also usually have a special New Year's Réveillon soirée (BTW it's also called "Saint Sylvestre" in France) that will not be cheap. You could also just join the revellers on the Champs-Elysées or along the pedestrian bridges of the Seine.
- Make sure you're standing near someone cute at midnight...there will be a lot of kissing -- bisous, or air kisses, that is!
Start calling restaurants or checking clubbing websites around the first week of December. I'll start posting anything I see here on the site.
Heather
Some things to do in Paris for New Year's Eve:
- Go on the Grande Roue (Ferris Wheel) at the Place de la Concorde, open until midnight.
- See a classical music performance like Mozart's Requiem in a Parisian church.
- Go to the theatre (West Side Story anyone?)
- See the Zingaro horse show
- Book dinner with entertainment at a traditional Montmartre cabaret-restaurant such as La Crémaillère 1900.
- Go to the Château Vaux-le-Vicomte (Christmas decorations) or Chantilly's Living Horse Museum (Children's Holiday Show), both during the day.
- Go ice skating in front of the Hôtel de Ville.
- Go snow skiing and sledding with the kids at the Stade de France's winter wonderland.








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