
Lugares pr&243 ximos Petit Palais (329 m) Pra&231 a Concorde (746 m) Museu Orangerie (907 m) Igreja Madeleine (932 m) Museu dos Esgotos de Paris (943 m)Avenue des Champs Elysees, 75008 Paris France Neighborhood : Champs-&201 lys&233 es This area is characterized by its namesake avenue which extends northwest from the Louvre to the modern business district, punctuated by the iconic Arc de Triomphe.He will also take the opportunity to meet his local representatives.The president does not wish to check in his baggage and needs his dry-cleaning to be taken care of on arrival.The president’s personal assistant uses a Business travel agency for airline and hotel reservations.Imediat Services assists him by managing the president’s roadshow.

Avenue Des Champs Elysees Professional Transfers And
Velour banquettes fit around candle-lit tables among several hundreds of tables arranged on a tiered floor that recalls a palatial cruise liner. A host in a bow tie rids guests of coats and lets his suited and booted colleague show them to their table. Famous for employing some of the world’s most beautiful and talented burlesque dancers known as 'The Bluebells', it has also hosted stars like Edith Piaf, Laurel and Hardy and even Elton John.Inside, the Art Deco lobby is punctuated with glitzy chandeliers, plush purple carpets and a grand staircase that swerves off to the right. The spruced up venue reopened after a four-month 25-million-Euro renovation with the new state-of-the-art show, Paris Merveilles, created by master theatre director Franco Dragone, also renowned for his blockbuster productions like Céline Dion's Las Vegas show and the Cirque du Soleil.Originally a theatre, Le Lido really came into its own as Paris' most prized cabaret in 1946 when it was taken over by Italian brothers Joseph and Louis Clérico. SolutionsBefore the trip, Drivers are selected and briefed to synchronize personal and professional transfers and allow for a reasonable margin.Luggage is entrusted to a dedicated baggage handler who delivers them to the baggage van then the baggage van sets off (to arrive at the hotel before the minister and his family).The minister, his family, his staff and political stakeholders are picked up by specialist convoy drivers.Certain vehicles in the fleet remain at the disposal of the official members of the delegation for the duration of their stay.Others are made available for the minister’s wife, her children and their staff for their private trips.Imediat Services provides a schedule of excursions within Paris.Imediat Services reserves a privatized spa session at Carita for the Minister’s wife.Imediat Services books the best tables for lunch in Paris and dinner without her husband.Imediat Services selects a Personal Shopper who privatizes dressing rooms in Paris’s biggest fashion houses.Imediat Services organizes a day trip to Deauville (restaurant, shopping, an overnight stay in a hotel in Normandy).Imediat Services organizes a day at Disneyland Paris (restaurant, rides and tailor-made shows for the children).A pharmaceutical group is organizing it annual congress in Berlin where its headquarters are based.Most of the Guests are arriving by train and airplane from Europe, others are arriving from the USA. They are all staying in the same hotel.A dedicated Business travel agency books the reception venue, the plane tickets and accommodation for the Guests and employees.Actual duration of the operation : 5 hours.The pharmaceutical group entrusts us with the logistics of lunch and transport for the event.

It’s also here that the exclusive lunch for the Césars, the French equivalent of the Oscars, is held each year.Although it doesn’t have a Michelin star, Fouquet's upscale home-cooked style traditional French fare by Meilleur Ouvrier de France prize-winner Yves Leuranguer is fully deserving. Now part of the Lucien Barrière Hotel and Restaurant group, the cozy establishment is an Avenue icon.Adjacent to the Louis Vuitton flagship store, it sits on the corner in all its red velvet glory and adjoins the 2006 Barrière Hotel, which was designed by master of the baroque, designer Jacques Garcia.Created in 1899 by Mr Louis Fouquet’s, the restaurant, a listed building, has ever since been a meeting place for the world's celebrities, royalty, and politicians. Well, that's unless you're going to Fouquet’s. Rub shoulders with the stars at Fouquet’s restaurant'Avoid eating on the Champs Elysées,' any local will tell you. Tel: +33 (0)1 45 62 52 57, 3. There is also a relaxing space offering Guerlain made-to-measure beauty treatments and massages, which makes for a wonderful pause from the Champs Elysées bustle.Maison Guerlain , 68 Avenue des Champs Elysées, Paris 75008.
Tel: +33 (0)1 42 99 20 20, 5. Designed by Charles Zana, the café, helmed by a new Italian chef since last summer, makes a good casual shopping pit stop.Art Curial, Rond-Point des Champs-Élysées Marcel-Dassault, 75008. Attend an auction at Art CurialOn the corner with Avenue Montaigne (Paris’ answer to Rodeo Drive) t owards the bottom of the Champs Elysées, is Art Curial, one of Paris' first auction houses.Founded in 1975, it is located inside the magnificent Marcel Dassault Villa, which belongs to the French aircraft manufacturer of the same name and was once the home of the wealthy Sabatier d’Espeyran family.Art Curial organises more than a hundred auctions a year and specialises in 20 different categories from art of all styles and periods to high jewellery, and vintage fashion to motorcars and fine wines and spirits.However, if auctions aren’t your thing, exhibitions often take place here in between auctions and are open to the public, as is the Restaurant Caffè Art Curial. Tel: +33 (0)1 40 69 60, 4.
It also has a pretty central garden courtyard with a café that’s ideal for taking a break in between exhibitions.Grand Palais, 3 Avenue du Général Eisenhower, 75008 Paris. The Dutuit cupola is adorned by ceiling frescoes, while the rest of the museum lobbies and main corridors are decorated with ornate murals and mosaics, which took more than 20 years to complete. Also built for the 1900 World Expo, it's smaller but its interiors are sublime. Today, the Grand Palais hosts 40 events a year, including major blockbuster shows and theAcross the street, is the Petit Palais, which hosts more classic exhibitions. Built for the 1900 World Expo, it has been a hospital during the First World War, and was occupied by the Nazis in the Second World War. And if peckish, book a table at three-Michelin-star chef Yannick Alléno’s Pavillon Ledoyen just a stone's thow away.A main event and art show venue in the city, the Grand Palais is one of the most recognisable landmarks with its Art Nouveau ironwork, glass dome, and French flag pinned to the top.
Tel: +33 (0)1 53 43 40 00, www.petitpalais.paris.
