Construction of the Grand Hotel 1861-1862 (≈ 1862)
Funded by the Pereire brothers for the Universal Exhibition of 1867.
5 mai 1862
Inauguration by Empress Eugénie
Inauguration by Empress Eugénie 5 mai 1862 (≈ 1862)
Official opening with Café de la Paix.
30 juin 1862
Open to the public
Open to the public 30 juin 1862 (≈ 1862)
Soon became a major artistic place.
1901
Taking over by Arthur Millon
Taking over by Arthur Millon 1901 (≈ 1901)
Modernisation and transfer of the entrance Scribe Street in 1905.
22 août 1975
Historical monument classification
Historical monument classification 22 août 1975 (≈ 1975)
Additional inventory.
2008
Launch of the Imperial Ball
Launch of the Imperial Ball 2008 (≈ 2008)
Costumed annual Second Empire event.
7 août 2014
Sales to Qatari Constellation Group
Sales to Qatari Constellation Group 7 août 2014 (≈ 2014)
Renovation planned for EUR 60 million.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Émile et Isaac Pereire - Financial and promoters
Founders of the hotel via their real estate company.
Impératrice Eugénie - Sponsor of the inauguration
Inaugurated the hotel in 1862 with Émile Pereire.
Alfred Armand - Senior Architect
Designs the hotel with a team led by Crépinet.
Arthur Millon - Dealer then owner
Modernized the hotel and the Café de la Paix in 1901.
Henri-Paul Nénot - Architect of transformations
Redesign the court of honor in 1905.
Oscar Wilde - Writer and famous customer
Used to the Café de la Paix, witness of anecdotes.
Georges Clemenceau - Politician
Attended 1918 celebrations since coffee.
Blaise Diagne - Organizer of the Pan-African Congress
Event at the Café de la Paix in 1919.
Origin and history
The Grand Hotel, today InterContinental Paris Le Grand, is a five-star palace built between 1861 and 1862 in the 9th arrondissement of Paris, near Opera Garnier. Financed by the Pereire brothers via their real estate company, it was inaugurated in great pomp by Empress Eugénie on 5 May 1862, before its official opening on 30 June. Designed for the Universal Exhibition of 1867, it quickly became a high place of artistic life, welcoming figures such as Victor Hugo, Émile Zola, Oscar Wilde or Marcel Proust. His Café de la Paix, integrated from the beginning, was a cultural crossroads where writers, musicians and personalities from all over the world met.
The construction of the Grand Hotel is part of the Haussmannian transformations of Paris under Napoleon III, including the restructuring of the Opera district. The project, linked to the Pereire brothers – promoters of railways and real estate speculators – benefited from a loan of 11 million francs from Crédit Terrain. The architect Alfred Armand, assisted by Alphonse-Nicolas Crépinet, directs the work with innovative methods for the period: night electric lighting, simultaneous preparation of woodwork and furniture, and rational management inspired by railway stations. The hotel, designed for 800 rooms and 45 lounges, symbolizes luxury and modernity, with sumptuous decors signed by artists such as Aimé Millet or Jean-Joseph Perraud.
The Café de la Paix, originally intended as a name for the entire hotel, became an emblematic place of the All-Paris. Attended by celebrities such as Marlene Dietrich or Clemenceau, he was also a host of historical events, such as the 1919 Pan-African Congress organized by Blaise Diagne and W. E. B. Du Bois. In 1901 Arthur Millon, a coffee dealer, took control of the hotel and modernized its infrastructure, including the transfer of the main entrance to Scribe Street in 1905. Ranked a historic monument in 1975, the Grand Hotel was renovated in the 1980s to restore its Second Empire style, while welcoming contemporary events such as the annual Imperial Ball since 2008.
The hotel was also used as a setting for several films, including Frantic by Roman Polanski (1988) and Arsène Lupin by Jean-Paul Salomé (2004). Its architecture, marked by a Corinthian colonnade court of honour and a hemicycle dining room that can accommodate 600 people, reflects the ambition of the Pereire brothers to create a "palais pour voyageurs". The materials used – 18,000 m of carpets, 10,000 m2 of ice, 4,000 beaks of gas – bear witness to its splendour. Today owned by the Qatari Constellation group since 2014, it remains a symbol of Parisian hotel heritage.
The Grand Hotel also illustrates the economic rivalries of the 19th century, between the Pereire brothers and James de Rothschild. Their vision of luxury, inspired by Saint-Simonism, contrasted with the more utilitarian projects of Rothschild Bank, such as those of Magenta Boulevard. The strategic location of the hotel, between the Saint-Lazare and the East stations, made it a mandatory place of passage for an international clientele, particularly American and British. Its history thus reflects the urban, social and cultural changes of Paris under the Second Empire and beyond.
Propose an amendment
Future
The Café de la Paix has always been an integral part of the Grand Hotel, which was originally to be called "Le Grand Hôtel de la Paix", in the centre of the "Nouvel Opéra" district set up by the Prefect Haussmann, but this name was abandoned because of duplication! Only his café-restaurant could therefore retain the name "Peace".