Mac Rating: 0.00 | Votes: | Date: 08/06/2026 13:13:00
Housed in a graceful eighteenth-century mansion at 8 Rue d'Anjou in the 8th arrondissement, Restaurant 1728 takes its name from the year the building was raised and weaves that heritage through every detail. The period architecture sets a tone of genuine refinement, with high ceilings, ornate mouldings and the accumulated patina of three centuries of Parisian history. The house once belonged to the Marquis de La Fayette, lending the address a romance that few dining rooms in the city can claim. The kitchen serves classical French cuisine, often with subtle Asian accents, in a series of intimate salons that feel more like a private home than a restaurant. Antique furnishings, paintings and a salon de the give the place the air of a small museum, where lunch or dinner becomes an occasion in its own right. Its position between the Madeleine and the Place de la Concorde puts it at the heart of the city's most elegant quarter. A mansion turned restaurant, 1728 endures as one of the most atmospheric addresses in central Paris, a Beaux-Arts townhouse whose historic rooms and classical cooking treat dining as something worthy of its remarkable surroundings. Long popular for romantic dinners and discreet business entertaining, it offers a glimpse of aristocratic Paris that has all but vanished from the modern city.
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