Bar in Paris, France
CRAVAN Paris 16e
100ptsResidential-Register Cocktails

About CRAVAN Paris 16e
CRAVAN occupies a corner address in the 16th arrondissement that sits well outside Paris's cocktail-bar circuit by geography but not by reputation. The bar draws a neighbourhood crowd that expects quality without performance, placing it in a quieter tier of serious drinking than the theatrics found in the Marais or Saint-Germain. For those who know where to look in the 16th, it functions as a reliable anchor point.
Drinking in the 16th: A Different Register
Paris's cocktail scene has consolidated around a handful of arrondissements. The Marais and Oberkampf attract the trend-first crowd; Saint-Germain and the 1st draw the hotel-bar spend. The 16th arrondissement operates on a different register entirely, one shaped by residential density, old-money restraint, and a preference for consistency over novelty. Bars that survive here do so by serving a neighbourhood rather than a tourist circuit, and that constraint tends to produce a more considered product than venues built around footfall and Instagram adjacency.
CRAVAN, at 17 Rue Jean de la Fontaine, sits inside that dynamic. The address places it in Auteuil, a sub-quarter of the 16th defined by Haussmann-era facades, proximity to the Bois de Boulogne, and a residential calm that makes it feel further from central Paris than the Metro journey actually is. The street itself carries a quiet authority, and the bar's presence on it reflects the neighbourhood's expectation that things should simply work well without announcing themselves.
What the 16th Demands of Its Bars
Bars in the residential arrondissements of Paris face a different pressure than those in destination neighbourhoods. Without passing tourist trade, a bar at this address lives or dies on repeat custom from people who know the city well and have calibrated expectations. That dynamic filters out shortcuts. The clientele in Auteuil is not easily impressed by provenance storytelling or elaborate garnish work if the underlying drink is poorly balanced. What it rewards is precision and consistency, the kind of bar behaviour that earns a seat at the local rather than a one-time visit from out-of-towners.
This matters for how CRAVAN positions itself relative to peers across the city. Bars like Danico and Candelaria operate in the thick of Paris's cocktail-destination circuit, where the bar is itself the draw and the address is a known point on a drinks itinerary. Buddha Bar plays a different game entirely, selling spectacle alongside the drink. CRAVAN's address removes it from that competition and places it in a peer set defined less by scene and more by the quality of what ends up in the glass. For a certain kind of drinker, that trade is entirely worthwhile.
Sourcing and the Logic of the Glass
The broader shift in serious cocktail bars across France over the past decade has been toward ingredient accountability, an insistence that what goes into a drink should be traceable with the same rigour applied to a restaurant plate. The leading practitioners in Paris, Lyon, and Bordeaux have moved away from generic back-bar construction toward programs built around specific distillates, house-made components, and seasonal availability. La Maison M. in Lyon and Bar Casa Bordeaux in Bordeaux both reflect this trend toward drinks built from identifiable, sourced ingredients rather than generic category pours.
In the 16th, the sourcing argument carries a particular weight. Auteuil's proximity to some of the city's better food markets and its historical association with serious domestic cooking create an expectation that quality extends to what you drink. A bar at this address that treated its spirits as interchangeable commodities would read as out of step with the neighbourhood's assumptions about ingredients. The logic that applies to the kitchen applies, increasingly, behind the bar: where something comes from and how it was made matters to the end result.
This framing also connects CRAVAN to a French bar tradition that predates the recent craft cocktail wave. Classic Parisian bars in bourgeois neighbourhoods have long operated with a degree of ingredient seriousness that didn't require a contemporary vocabulary to justify it. The preference for quality cognac, aged Calvados, and carefully kept Champagne in residential bar programs is a structural habit of the 16th that CRAVAN works within rather than against.
The Neighbourhood After Dark
Auteuil after dark is not a destination in the way that the Marais or Pigalle functions at night. The bars and restaurants that work here do so by holding a consistent standard across an evening rather than peaking during a fashionable late window. This shapes the rhythm of a visit to CRAVAN. It is a bar for an evening rather than a stop on a crawl, a place where the pace is set by conversation and by what's in the glass rather than by DJ sets or curated atmospherics.
For visitors staying in or passing through the 16th, this is a more useful characteristic than it might initially appear. Paris's better-known bar destinations, including Bar Nouveau, require a degree of planning and, in some cases, early arrival to secure space. A bar that functions as a genuine neighbourhood anchor in the 16th operates without that friction, offering a lower-stakes but no less serious drinking experience. The comparison to Papa Doble in Montpellier or Le Café de la Fontaine in La Turbie is instructive: bars that serve residential communities in French cities rather than tourist circuits tend to operate with a different, often more reliable, sense of hospitality. The same pattern holds at Coté vin in Toulouse and Au Brasseur in Strasbourg, both of which anchor their respective neighbourhoods without chasing a wider destination audience.
For international reference, the closest model may be something like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu: a serious drinks program in a city where the bar is not the obvious first stop on a visitor's itinerary, but exactly where those in the know end up.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 17 Rue Jean de la Fontaine, 75016 Paris, France
- Neighbourhood: Auteuil, 16th arrondissement
- Nearest Metro: Jasmin (Line 9), approximately 3-5 minutes on foot
- Phone: Not listed
- Website: Not listed
- Booking: Contact venue directly to confirm walk-in policy; no online reservation data available
- Price range: Not confirmed; the 16th arrondissement residential bar tier typically sits mid-to-upper range
- Hours: Not listed; verify before visiting
For broader context on drinking and dining in Paris, see our full Paris restaurants guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the must-try cocktail at CRAVAN Paris 16e?
Specific menu details for CRAVAN are not publicly documented in any source we can verify, so naming a single cocktail would mean guessing. What the bar's address and neighbourhood context suggest is a program built around classic technique and quality base spirits rather than trend-driven formats. The drinks likely to reward attention are those where the sourcing of the spirit is the point, not a garnish or elaborate presentation built around it.
Why do people go to CRAVAN Paris 16e?
The 16th arrondissement does not produce the kind of bar traffic that flows through the Marais or Saint-Germain, which means bars that attract a consistent following here do so on the quality of the experience rather than the address. CRAVAN draws a neighbourhood clientele that has calibrated expectations and returns when those expectations are met. For visitors, the draw is a serious, low-friction drinking experience that operates outside the city's more crowded destination-bar circuit.
Do they take walk-ins at CRAVAN Paris 16e?
No reservation data or booking policy is publicly available for CRAVAN. In the 16th arrondissement, neighbourhood bars of this type typically accommodate walk-ins, particularly outside peak evening hours, though this cannot be confirmed without contacting the venue directly. Given the absence of a listed phone number or website in current records, arriving in person or checking via local directory services before visiting is the practical approach.
Is CRAVAN Paris 16e suitable for visitors who aren't staying in the 16th arrondissement?
The bar is a deliberate detour rather than an incidental stop, given that the 16th sits outside the central arrondissements where most visitors base themselves. The Jasmin Metro stop on Line 9 connects it to the city's core in under fifteen minutes, making the journey manageable as a standalone evening rather than a stop on a multi-bar route. The trade-off is a quieter, more residential atmosphere than the city's busier cocktail addresses.
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