Guest-guided hotel insights

La Maison d'été

★★★Salon-de-Provence
9.3/ 10Excellent

Based on public data

Review

This hotel has little guest-verified firsthand data yet. 0 reports; thin data, conclusions stay cautious. High-value questions (upgrades, lounge, breakfast) stay marked insufficient — we label thin data, we never fabricate.

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06External scores · reference only, not verified
9.31/10FlyerKey composite · 2 sources

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Rooms & Views

Deluxe Family Room
1x Twin 25 Up to 3

This spacious air-conditioned room has a window overlooking the patio. It has a TV, free Wi-Fi access and private bathro…

Deluxe Double Room
1x Queen 21 Up to 2

Deluxe room is overlooking the street or the pation, these spacious air-conditioned rooms have a TV and free Wi-Fi acces…

Triple Deluxe Family
1x Queen 17 Up to 3

1 Queen Bed and 1 Twin Bed 183 sq feet Internet - Free WiFi and wired internet access Entertainment - Plasma T…

Cozy double room
1x Double 16 Up to 2

The cozy room is facing the patio or the street This air-conditioned room is faces a semi-pedestrian street. It has a T…

Standard Double Room Single Use
1x Double 14

1 Double Bed 151 sq feet Internet - Free WiFi and wired internet access Entertainment - Plasma TV with premium…

Standard Single Room
1x Twin 14

Facing the rear if the hotel, this room has a TV, air-conditioning, free Wi-Fi access and an private bathroom.

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • Villa Salone★ Michelin This handsome mansion in the heart of Salon-de-Provence is the lair of Alexandre Lechêne. He treats diners to remarkably creative cuisine unveiled in surprise set menus that adhere to a single guideline: "Go with the flow"! The beautifully plated dishes showcase market garden produce and local fruit, such as flame-seared Mediterranean liche (fish) paired with a medley of parsnips and a fishbone stock. Fresh, tasty and perfectly seasoned! The combinations of ingredients can be daring but are always spot on and deftly crafted. The stylish interior sports mouldings, frescoes on the ceiling, Prove25m
  • Atelier SaloneBib Open for lunch only (Tue-Sat), Atelier Salone is the bistro sibling of Villa Salone. In a laid-back atmosphere, dishes such as pig's-head pâté with sauce gribiche, confit of veal breast with glazed vegetables, or tarte Tatin with caramel sauce and vanilla ice cream are served in a small dining room with a moulded ceiling and a fireplace, on the light-filled veranda or on the shaded outdoor patio.30m
  • Le Bon TempsBib By the side of the former Route Nationale 7, this inconspicuous little restaurant serves as a reminder not to judge a book by its cover! The couple at the helm cook up a storm in the kitchen, rolling out delicious and indulgent market-fresh cuisine, with a focus on local producers. Carpaccio of calf’s head, pork spider steak, egg flan and butterscotch. Fresh produce (especially the veg), the joy of a job well done and unbeatable prices – good vibes all round.11.0km
  • Le RabelaisBib Housed in the 17C vaulted room of an old wheat mill, this family-run restaurant would very likely have found favour with Rabelais's insatiable Gargantua! Dig into hearty seasonal fare that is meticulously prepared (the menu changes several times a week). The chef is also the author of a delicious signature dish: pâté en croûte (cold meat pie) of poultry and green veggies with a black garlic mayonnaise. The establishment is located in the immediate vicinity of Saint-Chamas' Poudrerie – the black powder mill founded in 1690. History, literature and good food: what’s not to like?11.5km
  • Le Mas Bottero★ Michelin In this restaurant near Aix-en-Provence, head chef Nicolas Bottero (previously in Grenoble) serves up exciting, flavoursome and fragrant cuisine. As a child, he used to spend time in the region visiting his grandmother, and has retained an affection for the colours of the South of France and an attachment to the land. You can tell as much from the green asparagus from Mallemort, sautéed à la minute, with creamy morels and a vin jaune emulsion, or the blood oranges on a baba au rhum infused with star anise and a refreshing sorbet. Local farmers are among his suppliers, and a small kitchen garde19.0km
  • Dan B.★ Michelin This restaurant in the heart of the picturesque hilltop village of Ventabren is certainly one of the most elegant in the region. The interior design is strikingly modern: Scandinavian furnishings, angled mirrors on the ceiling and, of course, the superb panoramic view over the Étang de Berre and the valley of the River Arc. Under the direction of Toulon-born chef Dan Bessoudo, the creativity also extends to the fresh, colourful cuisine, which is full of contrasts and is made with carefully selected local produce.19.4km
  • La Terrasse des Cigales Between the Durance River and the Sud Luberon, this modern restaurant lives up to its name with a lovely shaded terrasse enveloped by the sound of the cicadas (cigales)… plus, you get attentive, smiling service! Mathieu and Sébastien serve an appetising traditional Provence-inspired menu, as well as a daily special that is great value for money. The delicious dishes are carefully crafted with no messing around. The aim is to keep things simple, flavoursome and generous, while using selected regional ingredients: vegetables and olive oil from the village, lamb from the Alpilles, fish from the B15.3km
  • Le Bistrot du Brau A gorgeous bastide tucked away in the refreshing shade of a Provençal oak grove, chirping cicadas, the gentle lapping of water in the pool, a menu of traditional cuisine supervised by chef Christopher Hache (whose MICHLIN-starred Maison Hache is next door) and fresh local ingredients: Mollégès escargots with parsley butter; Mt Ventoux pork belly confit and medley of carrots; "tartelette" with lemon sorbet. The scene is set for an irresistible culinary interlude on the patio dotted with wrought-iron tables or in the all-white dining area furnished in black.16.7km
  • Le Jas La Roque-d'Anthéron's church is home to one of the world's best-known piano festivals. Hailing from the village, chef Émeric Corbon, who worked for Michel Kayser and Édouard Loubet, came up with the idea of opening this restaurant just a few metres from the church, in a converted dry-stone sheepfold (a jas in the Provençal dialect). Beneath the centuries-old vaults or out on the terrace, diners tuck into refined, elaborate cuisine with clear Provençal influences: bouchée à la reine, lamb sweetbreads, crayfish, quenelles and sauce financière; cannon of lamb from the Alpilles, smoked with thyme 19.0km

Includes Michelin / Black Pearl / guide picks (reference quality, no prices); data from Overture, Michelin Guide and others.

Attractions nearby

  • Temple romain de Château-Bas temple9.1km
  • La Barben Castle French fortified castle, ancestral home of the noble Forbin la Barben family8.8km
  • Roquepertuse human settlement18.5km
  • Chaîne des Côtes mountain range16.2km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

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