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St. Christopher's Inn - Paris

Paris

11 of 29
Address
68-74 Quai de la Seine, Paris Île-de-France, France   Map
Price
Dorm beds from US$17.95. Private rooms from US$35.00/person. Price may vary by season - Check Current Prices by Date Here
Location/Contact
Details
St. Christopher's Inn - Paris Online Booking
Arrival Date:   Nights:  People: 
Their Description

Features

  • Free Breakfast
  • Lockers
  • Bar
  • Lounge / Common space
  • Food/Restaurant
  • Elevator/Lift
  • Travel information provided
  • Bike Rental
  • Nightclub
  • 24 Hour Free Hot Showers
 
The Hostelz.com Review
St. Christopher's Inn - Paris is easily the best hostel in Paris, and there are plenty to choose from. If you're set on staying in a hostel here, we'd pick this one.

The Location

To get to the hostel from CDG take the RER B in whatever direction it goes (the airport is the end of the line, so the train only goes in one direction) and get off at Gare du Nord. Keep your ticket to get out of the turnstiles. From there take the metro line 5 (orange) in the direction of Bobigny/ Pablo Picasso and get off at Laumière (you can use the same ticket you used for the RER). Follow the signs for exit #1 and when you get out at street level keep walking in the direction you're facing down Avenue Jean Jaurès. Turn left onto Rue de Crimée (look for the sign saying "Bassin de la Villette") and follow that until you cross over a little bridge and the hostel is right there on the left at 159, rue de Crimée.

The hostel is located toward the fringes of the city in the 19th arrondisement on Le Bassin de la Villette, right on the water. It's not too hard to get to considering Paris's excellent public transportation system. It's located pretty close to a few different metro lines and stations and there's a night bus that stops not too far away. There isn't much to see in the neighborhood itself, but the quality of the inside of the hostel more than makes up for that. The area surrounding the hostel isn't the nicest but it's also far from the worst, so exercise caution at night.

Rooms and Bathrooms

When you check into the hostel, be prepared to speak English -- not many of the staff are actually French or speak fluent French. The hostel uses electronic key card access for all the room doors and for the main door if you arrive after a certain time at night. The rooms themselves are very nice, clean, spacious, and modern -- this hostel is fairly new. The size of the rooms varies but in the dorms each bunk bed is in a separate compartment with a private light, outlet, and curtain to shut out the outside world. There are also under-the-bed, pull-out lockers, for which you must provide your own lock. The way the latch works, a tiny lock wouldn't fit and a padlock is difficult to close. The room also has a table and a few chairs, a sink, a mirror, and some hooks for hanging things to dry.

The bathrooms for the dorms are down the hall and there are separate facilities for men and women. The bathroom has three stalls, four showers, and four sinks. The bathrooms are clean by hostel standards but are by no means spotless. The showers are push button "in order to save money." In each separate shower stall is a compartment for changing and keeping clothes and towels with a bench and some hooks and then a compartment with the actual shower separated by a curtain.

Common Spaces

This hostel has several common rooms including a Belushi's bar/restaurant that is attended by locals and has some outdoor seating. In the basement there is another common room where guests can chill and drink and chat or whatever -- no outsiders allowed. Lastly, there is a café where people can get drinks, buy used books, or use the internet (for a price). The thing to note about the computers is that they can be used only for the internet and not for transferring pictures/Skype. Breakfast is included in the price of the bed and includes a baguette with jam or nutella and coffee, tea, hot chocolate, orange juice -- it is pretty standard. In terms of atmosphere the hostel is pretty social but it seems as if not many guests venture out on their own to bars or clubs but rather stay in house at the bar.

Summary

This hostel is the one to stay in within the actual city limits of Paris. Although it's not in the city center it's conveniently located by public transport. The staff all speak English so if you're looking to practice your language skills on someone who has to listen, this isn't the place -- they won't understand you. The elevator makes getting to the top floors with your pack a breeze especially considering this is Paris and you can fit in the elevator with your baggage at the same time. The bar closes sometime around 2 a.m. and on certain nights you might find live music or karaoke. If you're lucky and you're not packing a laptop for the free Wi-Fi, the staff might be nice and give you fifteen free minutes of internet use.

— Exclusive Hostelz.com Review
July 2009


Ratings & Comments

3.1 Average from 7 Ratings

This is an open forum, and unlike other hostel guide websites we don't censor out the negative comments.
We can't validate the legitimacy of comments posted on this site—so take what you read here with a grain of salt.
Comment by Amanda, USA
August 2009
3 Very new
It is a new facility and well thought out with the curtains for each bunk and reading light. The guests were not very considerate. I stayed on the all female floor and some girl brought a guy to the room and talked with all the lights on until about 4 a.m. (glad it wasn't anything more). Breakfast was good and the reception was helpful, even if they were not very friendly.
Comment by Joo, Brasil
May 2009
2 Won't stay again.
Pros, Beds have individual curtains and a reading lamp. The metal drawers under the beds are noisy but spacious -- make sure you bring a big padlock, otherwise it won't fit. Free breakfast was honest -- baguettes, jam, nutella, orange juice, and Président beurre, the best butter in the whole world. It's kinda close to the metro station (not that close though) and I really didn't feel unsecure walking around the neighbourhood. Internet at the cafe is not so expensive. Cons, disgusting bathrooms; lots of uneducated teenagers (there was a girl in my room who came late at night completely drunk, made a lot of noise, woke everybody up and threw up on her bed for the grand finale); but what made me mad was the totally unhelpful staff -- I arrived at 8 o'clock in the morning and was told that check in time was 2 p.m., so I left my backpack at the storage room. when I came back at 2, the room was so full of luggage you couldn't see the floor beneath it. I asked for a staff guy for help and the only thing he did was say "I cant't do anything, you'll have to step on the luggage until you reach your backpack at the end of the room." Oh yeah, thank you very much.
Comment by Tina, Canadian
May 2009
4 Big, professional. watch out for the old parisians cruising the bar!
It was a nice hostel. the people obviously know how to run a hostel. There were lockers in the rooms, but they made a lot of noise and you had to pull them out all the way to open them. the power outlets were in the bed space so you could be sure no one would run off with your charger as they'd have to bypass you while you were sleeping. curtains were good. I didn't like how the windows didn't open a lot, because with that many people there, especially when it gets hot it can smell, which was the case on more than one occasion. Breakfast was very basic, baguettes with choice of butter or jellies (yuck). Baguettes were yummy though, but the breakfast wasn't nutritionally substantial. But hey, it was free. I found two instances of lack of cleanliness/hygiene -- the bathroom showers were pretty gross and it looked like women would put there hair everywhere. Also they smelled like urine, which is pretty gross when you're trying to have a shower; there were snots/boogers/whatever crusted all over the wall of my bed! It was so gross! I just ignored it. I didn't want to make a big deal about it though and the cleaning staff should notice these things and do something. Also, women, you may want to be aware that strange, creepy old guys come into the youth hostel bar to cruise on young women. Some are extra creepy and some are nice, but still. older Parisian men (white, Arab, Indian alike) come into the hostel bar. Be careful. Business travelers too. Older men in general. I heard from other hostel stayers that this place had a reputation for that. something to keep in mind. Also, these weirdos come in during the morning to scheme on the free breakfast too. People who work here were kinda distant and cold.. no warm and fuzzy feeling. I'd recommend it but with reservation. Overall a good place though. The Wi-Fi is pretty annoying though, you have to keep logging in through the browser because you get disconnected all the time. These people know what they're doing but they just need to do it better than they're doing it. It has the potential to be the best hostel I've stayed at but they need to work on some things.
Comment by Peter, CAN
February 2009
3 Too Big
So big and in that kind of area located, that they have an unfriendly looking security guard standing between entrance and reception. 6bed ensuite sucks because of cheap IKEA beds already falling apart and half the lockers are not usable. Don't look under those IKEA beds, you might get a dirt allergy. Normal dorms ok, but the curtains closed make most young guests feel that they can make noice all night in the dorm. The only reason St. Christophers can be called a hostel is because they offer dorms. No kitchen, no washing machines. Just 15 minutes free internet not enough. The big restaurant and bar area is visited by locals, which gives the hostel a bad taste. Everybody can walk in and around. No point in needing a key card on the staircase doors when one can use the elevator entering the floors with no card needed. Open restaurant and bar should be only for travelers. If backpackers want to mix up with locals, they go out to bars etc. Bathrooms reminde more on YHA standards. The whole place likes to appear as a luxus hostel but disappoints in most ways. St. Christopher could do better. There are nicer and more cosy places around, cheaper and including more for the price a traveler pays
Comment by Giovanna (Bologna), Italy
January 2009
1 Sketchy area. Avoid this ghetto. Scary.
It was the only hostel available for this night. Have stayed a night there, then left. The location is sketchy in the middle of ghetto. People who live in this area can't afford a rent in Paris. They know there are tourists in and around the hostel. They were always around begging for money or trying to sold their drugs. The building looks like a jail -- modern, huge, too many floors, too many stairs. I got lost twice in the long corridors. It was expensive. And scary. Really. I do not understand how it is allowed to build a hostel that welcomes tourists in this horrible area. Avoid this hostel.
Comment by Oscar Medina, Mexico
May 2008
5 Greatness
The hostel was one of the greatest places i have stayed at during my years of vacations. The rooms were neat, the showers were cleaned daily, and the staff were super friendly! The hostel is near to main line stations so getting around is very easy. The bar was awesome with its nightly yagerbombs and then the lounge! oh the lounge was supreme, especially after hours, there was tons of people, and everyone was having a great time! the location is great along with the views. highly recommend this hostel, the price is good and the security is prime!
Comment by Marge Sambol, Canadian
April 2008
4 New and clean
This is the first hostel I've stayed at and it was a good experience. The hostel only opened a couple of months ago so it is in very good shape. The room was clean and functional -- just a bed, two chairs, a sink, and a table. We stayed in a private room and it was worth it because we are private people, but if you want to meet people there's plenty of opportunity in the chill room in the basement and the Internet room. The location is ok. The Metro stops just up the street, but it does take a solid half hour to get to any of the sites. However, the Paris subway system is very efficient and easy to understand. We never waited more than three minutes for a train. The attached bar tends to get crowded when there is a football game on -- just about every night -- so plan to eat elsewhere if you want a later meal. The food is simple but good and the prices are reasonable. The service is good. The only con to the place is the smell of the canal next door, but if smells bother you Paris probably isn't your city. The staff were friendly and helpful, although they did give us some incorrect advice. We were directed to a post office up the street to change our travelers cheques and after waiting in line the clerk told us they don't do that. Oh well, c'est la vie. There's security guards at the door of the hostel so you always feel safe, but we never saw any signs of trouble in the neighbourhood. Generally it was quiet at night so we were able to sleep well. Overall, I'd recommend this hostel for a good, clean place to stay where you choose your level of interaction with others -- from reserved to party.
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