Bar in Paris, France
Bar Nouveau
685ptsPre-Industrial vs. Post-Technological Duality

About Bar Nouveau
Ranked #18 on Top 500 Bars and #39 on the World's 50 Best Bars 2024, Bar Nouveau brings the Art Nouveau movement to life across two floors at 5 Rue des Haudriettes in the Marais. A six-cocktail menu split between pre-industrial and modern techniques mirrors the bar's two-level design philosophy. No reservations are taken, so arriving at the 3pm opening is the practical strategy for securing a seat.
Two Floors, Two Centuries: What Bar Nouveau Does Differently in Paris
The Marais has long operated as Paris's most design-conscious neighbourhood for drinking. Its bars tend toward either the theatrical or the conceptually serious, and the leading of them treat the space as an argument about aesthetics as much as a place to order a drink. Bar Nouveau, at 5 Rue des Haudriettes, belongs firmly to the second category. The ground floor announces its intentions immediately: a bright, airy reconstruction of what an Art Nouveau bar might have looked like 130 years ago, with custom light fixtures that echo the movement's characteristic embrace of organic, flowing forms. The centrepiece of the collection is a set of antique Bimini glasses, said to be the largest private collection in the world, displayed with the kind of curatorial care you'd expect from a design museum rather than a bar.
That detail matters beyond novelty. In a Paris cocktail scene that has spent the past decade moving away from theatrical gimmick toward technical rigour, Bar Nouveau occupies a distinct position: it uses design as a structural argument, not decoration. The aesthetic and the menu are genuinely connected, which is rarer than it sounds.
The Afternoon Advantage: Why the 3pm Opening Changes Everything
Bar Nouveau operates without reservations, which, in a space this small, concentrates timing into the single most important logistical variable. The bar opens at 3pm, and the gap between opening and the early-evening rush represents the most accessible window to experience it properly. Arriving at opening on a weekday afternoon means quieter ground-floor seating, better light for appreciating the Art Nouveau detail, and the unhurried pace that lets you work through the six-cocktail menu at your own speed.
The afternoon service has a character that evening drinking at the bar largely can't replicate. The upstairs room, with its airy brightness, suits the pre-industrial half of the cocktail programme particularly well in daylight hours. These are drinks built from techniques that predate the industrial production of ingredients: fermentation, infusion, and reduction methods that read differently when you can see what you're drinking clearly. The mood is closer to a serious wine bar or a specialty coffee house than to a late-night cocktail destination.
By early evening, particularly on weekends, the calculus shifts. The downstairs room, with its exposed brick walls and darker palette, comes into its own after dark. This level carries the bar's futurist complement to the upstairs: a menu built around modern technology and a design scheme that frames the relationship between nature and the post-technological world. The tonal split between the two floors is deliberate and coherent. If the ground floor looks backward with affection, the basement looks forward with measured curiosity. Evening drinkers willing to wait for a downstairs seat get a meaningfully different experience from afternoon visitors who plant themselves at the upstairs bar.
A Six-Cocktail Menu as Editorial Statement
Paris's cocktail bars have generally moved toward either large menus with broad accessibility or tight, technically focused lists aimed at a narrower audience. Bar Nouveau sits at the far end of the tight-list spectrum: six cocktails in total, divided between the two floors. The discipline of that number is worth noting. A six-drink menu is a statement of confidence. It says the bar is not trying to cover every preference; it is presenting a specific point of view and asking you to meet it there.
The upstairs offerings draw from pre-industrial technique and include modern interpretations of lesser-known French bistro classics, a category that most international cocktail bars have ignored almost entirely. French bistro drinking culture has its own historical vocabulary, and surfacing those references in a contemporary format is an editorial choice as much as a culinary one. The downstairs menu applies current technology to produce drinks with a different personality, though the exact divide is leading discovered in the bar rather than described in advance.
The programme as a whole reflects co-founders including Rémy Savage, who received the Industry Icon Award in 2021, alongside Sara and Hadrien Moudoulaud and Marc Puzzuoli. Savage's prior work has been associated with high-concept, technically precise cocktail programmes, and that background is legible in the menu's refusal to pad its offering with familiar crowd-pleasers.
Where Bar Nouveau Sits in Paris's Cocktail Tier
Paris now supports a recognisable tier of internationally ranked cocktail bars that operate at a different level of ambition from the city's wine-focused bistro bars and hotel lobby operations. Danico, tucked inside a restaurant on Rue Richer, approaches the category through a similar seriousness of programme. Candelaria in the Marais has built its reputation on Mexican spirits and a hidden-door format that predates the current wave of concept bars. Harry's Bar on Rue Daunou operates from a different frame entirely, its reputation built on history and the kind of institutional continuity that neither Bar Nouveau nor its contemporaries are trying to replicate. Buddha Bar represents the large-format, high-production end of Paris drinking, a peer set Bar Nouveau has no interest in competing with.
Bar Nouveau's rankings place it in a specific and small cohort: #18 on the Top 500 Bars list (2025) and #39 on the World's 50 Best Bars (2024). Those positions confirm it as a top-tier destination within the international cocktail circuit, not merely within the city. For context, very few Paris bars appear in the World's 50 Best at all; occupying a spot there at #39 positions Bar Nouveau within a peer set that operates globally rather than locally.
Beyond Paris, the bar connects to a broader French cocktail conversation. Bars like Papa Doble in Montpellier, Bar Casa Bordeaux, Coté vin in Toulouse, and La Maison M. in Lyon each anchor their respective cities' serious drinking scenes, while Bar Nouveau functions as something closer to a national reference point. Internationally, the bar belongs to the same conversation as Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Au Brasseur in Strasbourg and Le Café de la Fontaine in La Turbie, bars that have built reputations outside the obvious circuit through specificity of concept.
A Google rating of 4.7 across 452 reviews adds a further data point: the bar's critical standing is matched by consistent visitor satisfaction, which is not always the case for bars operating at this level of conceptual ambition.
Practical Details and Planning
| Detail | Bar Nouveau | Danico | Candelaria | Harry's Bar |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reservations | None taken | Recommended | Walk-in (hidden back bar) | Walk-in |
| Opening | From 3pm | Evening service | Evening service | Afternoon/evening |
| Format | Two-floor concept bar | Bar within restaurant | Taqueria with cocktail bar | Classic American bar |
| Menu size | Six cocktails (split by floor) | Curated rotating list | Spirits-focused, longer list | Classic and signature cocktails |
| International ranking | #39 World's 50 Best (2024) | Not ranked | Ranked, lower tier | Not ranked |
The address is 5 Rue des Haudriettes, 75003 Paris, in the 3rd arrondissement. No reservations are accepted, and the bar's size means that arriving at or near the 3pm opening is the only reliable way to guarantee entry without a wait. November, the bar's seasonal peak month for searches, sees higher tourist traffic in the Marais generally; weekday afternoons in autumn are the lowest-friction window. For a full picture of where Bar Nouveau sits in the city's drinking and dining options, see our full Paris restaurants guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the leading thing to order at Bar Nouveau?
The cocktail menu runs to six drinks total, split between the upstairs and downstairs floors, so the question is less about a single standout and more about which floor suits your visit. The upstairs menu draws on pre-industrial technique and includes modern takes on French bistro classics, a category rarely seen on Paris cocktail menus. The downstairs list applies contemporary technology to a different set of references. Both menus are short enough that working through the floor you're seated on is a reasonable approach. Bar Nouveau's #18 ranking on the Top 500 Bars list (2025) and #39 on the World's 50 Best Bars (2024) suggest that most of what arrives at the table justifies the trip on its own terms.
What's Bar Nouveau leading at?
Conceptual coherence between space and programme. Most high-concept bars treat design and drinks as parallel tracks; Bar Nouveau runs them through the same argument. The two-floor structure physically separates a pre-industrial cocktail sensibility from a technology-forward one, and the design of each level reinforces that divide rather than simply decorating around it. That structural discipline, combined with back-to-back international rankings (#39 World's 50 Best Bars 2024, #18 Top 500 Bars 2025), places it among the most purposeful drinking spaces in Paris.
Can I walk in to Bar Nouveau?
Yes, walk-ins are the only option since the bar does not take reservations. The practical implication in a space this size is that timing determines access. The bar opens at 3pm, and arriving at or near opening is the most reliable strategy for securing a seat without a wait. If you arrive in the early evening on a weekend, expect to queue. The bar's ranking and reputation mean demand reliably exceeds capacity during peak hours.
Who is Bar Nouveau leading for?
Visitors with a specific interest in cocktail culture at the international circuit level, and anyone for whom design is as much a draw as the drinks themselves. The bar's Art Nouveau collection, particularly the antique Bimini glass display, gives it a reference value that extends beyond the menu. It is not a generalist destination for casual drinking; the six-cocktail menu and no-reservation format make most sense to visitors who have sought it out deliberately. Its World's 50 Best and Top 500 Bars rankings make it a natural stop for anyone building a serious Paris drinking itinerary.
What is the significance of Bar Nouveau's Art Nouveau glass collection?
The bar is home to the largest known private collection of antique Bimini glasses, which anchors the Art Nouveau concept in something beyond surface decoration. Bimini glass, produced in small Viennese workshops during the Art Nouveau period, is rarely found in volume anywhere outside specialist collections. In a Paris bar setting, the display functions as both curatorial statement and physical proof of the founders' commitment to the movement. Co-founder Rémy Savage, who received the Industry Icon Award in 2021, has spoken publicly about the arts as central to the bar's identity, and the glass collection is the most concrete expression of that alignment.
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