
Tucked just behind the main square, yet minutes away from the beaches and the port of Saint Tropez, the newly-renovated Byblos offers a lavender-scented oasis in the heart of this famous Riviera village. Its gorgeous multi-coloured façade emulates a little Mediterranean hamlet while all around this, the region’s famous soft light filters through the iron balustrades, century-old olive trees and giant bougainvillea that grace its network of patios and terraces.
In-keeping with its village feel, each of the bright and airy rooms and suites has its own personality and charm, with warm fabrics and blond wood furnishings imparting tranquillity and elegance, reflective of fine Provençale living.
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Filed under: Saint Tropez
Article tags: Hotels in Saint Tropez

Hey Guys! I am a litte worried i will be bored all the way….
my friend, who was supposed to join me just cancelled, so i will be all by myself in St. Tropez in August. So if there is a nice party, get together or whatever please let me know. I´d be glad for any suggestion!
Comments from our Guests:
1) You poor soul… being there is so boring. My best advice is to go somewhere else, or find some great small worlders who can keep you company. St Tropez is not a friendly place when you are all alone all day and night… Good luck…
2) If someone stays in saint-tropez, you won’t be alone for a lng time…
I can propose to be you personnal and private guide, and brain and body guard in that terrible jungle.
I’ll know how to protect you, have fun, and make you discover beauties from french riviera…. Read more »
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Filed under: Saint Tropez

Northward from Place Gambetta, Avenue Borriglione runs to the populous quarter of St. Maurice, to the west of which is the quarter St. Barthélemy, with a church and monastery founded on the site of a church destroyed by the Turks in 1543.
An inscription under the sundial asserts that “The passing hour wounds us the final one kills us.”
The spot can easily be reached by way of Boulevard Auguste Raynaud, which runs northward from the centre of Boulevard Joseph Garnier. At the top of the boulevard one bears to the left and almost at once to the right. The burial-ground, now only used by families having tombs in it, is the last resting-place of many aristocratic Nicois.
At No. 73 Avenue St. Barthélemy is the Musée du Vieux Logis. Farther north is the St. Syivestre quarter.
The Boulevard Carabacel, to which lead all the thorough-fares running eastward from the Avenue de la Victoire, lies on the south side of elevated Carabacel, one of the most bracing parts of Nice, and favoured by those loving a quiet life. The boulevard is continued northward by the Avenue Désambrois, from which rises the Boulevard de Cimiez, affording fine views and having at its upper end a Statue of Queen Victoria.
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Filed under: Côte d'Azur
Article tags: A, Alternative Places, Hotels in Nice