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    Bar in Paris, France

    The Cambridge Public House

    855pts

    Anglo-French Pub Precision

    The Cambridge Public House, Bar in Paris

    About The Cambridge Public House

    Founded in 2019, The Cambridge Public House in Paris's 3rd arrondissement sits at #14 in Top 500 Bars (2025) and #19 in World's 50 Best Bars (2024). It holds the world's first B Corp certification for a bar, and runs a hybrid model: Guinness on tap, natural wines, and precisely crafted cocktails, all within a deliberate Anglo-French framework on Rue de Poitou.

    Where the English Pub Format Meets French Cocktail Rigour

    Rue de Poitou runs through the Haut-Marais, a stretch of the 3rd arrondissement where concept-driven retail sits alongside food and drink addresses that take their craft seriously. At number 8, The Cambridge Public House occupies that territory literally and philosophically. The room reads as a pub — warm, communal, built around the bar itself — but the precision behind what arrives in the glass puts it squarely in a peer set that includes the most recognised cocktail programmes in Europe.

    The pub format is not an aesthetic shortcut here. Across global bar culture, the English public house model carries a specific social contract: everyone is welcome, the counter belongs to the room, and the atmosphere is shaped by the people in it rather than imposed from above. Co-founded in 2019 by Hyacinthe Lescoët, one of the more prominent figures in Paris's bartending scene, The Cambridge was designed to activate that contract in a city that has historically preferred more structured, theatrical drinking environments. The result is a bar that feels genuinely easy to be in while running a programme ranked #14 in the Top 500 Bars (2025) and #19 in the World's 50 Best Bars (2024).

    The Anglo-French Divide, Resolved at the Bar

    Paris's leading cocktail bars have generally moved in one of two directions over the past decade: towards high-concept, reservations-only formats with tight menus and prescribed experiences, or towards democratic neighbourhood addresses where the drinks are secondary to the room. The Cambridge refuses that split. Its drinks list acknowledges both sides of the Channel without making the comparison feel forced.

    The Pimm's reinterpretation , currently built on Alsatian wine, St. Germain, and gin , is the clearest expression of this dual register. It takes a drink that sits at the centre of English summer drinking culture and reconstructs it using French regional ingredients, producing something that earns a place on the permanent menu because it works, not because it tells a tidy story. Cigarette After Sex has been on the list since opening in 2019, which in a city where menus rotate frequently is itself a form of editorial confidence. The Guinness is poured with the care the format demands.

    The food side of the programme follows the same logic. Bar snacks lean British in form , meat and vegetable pies, sausage rolls , but are built using French ingredients. This is a practical statement as much as a cultural one: sourcing locally while holding to a format associated with another culinary tradition. In Paris, where the orthodoxies around French produce run deep, it is a considered position.

    Sustainability as Operational Architecture, Not Decoration

    Bar sustainability has become a visible conversation across the global drinks industry, with venues making varying degrees of commitment to waste reduction, ethical sourcing, and supply chain transparency. The Cambridge has pursued this more formally than almost any peer. In 2023, it became the first bar in the world to achieve B Corp certification, a third-party accreditation that evaluates social and environmental performance against a standard rigorous enough that most hospitality businesses do not attempt it.

    The bar documents its commitments in an annual Environmental, Social and Governance report, which is publicly available and tracks specific metrics rather than offering general intention. It has also launched Shaken Leaf, a website directed at sharing knowledge about sustainable hospitality practice more broadly. These are structural commitments, not positioning exercises, and they place The Cambridge in a different category from bars that use sustainability language without institutional accountability.

    Within the Paris bar scene, this positions The Cambridge as a reference point for operators asking how to run a high-volume, community-facing bar without externalising environmental costs. Peer addresses in the city , Candelaria, Danico, Bar Nouveau, Buddha Bar , each occupy different points on the spectrum between craft precision and atmospheric hospitality. The Cambridge occupies both ends simultaneously while carrying a governance framework none of them have formalised.

    Where It Sits in the Paris Bar Conversation

    Paris has long had a cocktail culture, but the city's reputation in global bar rankings has strengthened considerably in the years since venues like Candelaria demonstrated that a relaxed, accessible format could sit alongside rigorous technique. The Cambridge enters that conversation from a distinct angle: it is the only venue in the city that packages the pub model as its primary identity while sustaining the kind of drinks programme that earns consecutive placements in the World's 50 Best Bars (ranked #38 in 2023, #19 in 2024). That upward trajectory over two years is the kind of movement that signals a programme gaining rather than consolidating ground.

    France's bar scene beyond Paris also carries addresses worth tracking. Papa Doble in Montpellier, Au Brasseur in Strasbourg, Bar Casa Bordeaux in Bordeaux, Côté Vin in Toulouse, La Maison M. in Lyon, and Le Café de la Fontaine in La Turbie represent the breadth of what French bar culture produces outside the capital. For context on international comparison, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu offers a useful counterpoint on how a bar achieves global ranking from a geographically peripheral position. For everything else happening in the city's dining and drinking rooms, see our full Paris guide.

    Planning Your Visit

    The Cambridge is at 8 Rue de Poitou in the 3rd arrondissement, within walking distance of the Marais's core concentration of bars and restaurants. It carries a 4.8 Google rating across 943 reviews, a score that reflects the consistency of the experience across a high visit volume rather than a curated sample.

    How The Cambridge Compares to Key Paris Bar Peers

    VenueFormatGlobal Ranking (2024)Walk-In Friendly
    The Cambridge Public HousePub-hybrid / cocktail barWorld's 50 Best #19Yes
    CandelariaTaqueria / mezcal barRanked, Top 50 Europe tierYes (queue likely)
    DanicoClassic cocktail, hotel adjacentRanked, recognition tierYes
    Bar NouveauContemporary cocktailRecognition tierYes
    Buddha BarLarge-format loungeNot rankedYes (reservation advised)

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What cocktail do people recommend at The Cambridge Public House?

    The Pimm's reinterpretation draws consistent attention: it uses Alsatian wine, St. Germain, and gin to rebuild a canonical English drink using French regional ingredients, and it has remained on the menu since the bar opened in 2019. Cigarette After Sex is the other perennial, present since opening night and regularly cited by visitors. Both represent the bar's Anglo-French approach in concrete form, and both appear in the context of a programme ranked #14 in Top 500 Bars (2025).

    Why do people go to The Cambridge Public House?

    Bar delivers something Paris does not have in abundance: a genuinely pub-like atmosphere running alongside a cocktail programme with consecutive World's 50 Best Bars placements (#38 in 2023, #19 in 2024). For visitors who want recognised drink quality without a formal, reservation-dependent experience, it fills a gap in the city's offer. It also holds the world's first B Corp certification for a bar, which draws visitors specifically interested in how hospitality venues can operate responsibly at scale.

    Can I walk in to The Cambridge Public House?

    Pub format is designed for walk-in traffic, and the venue's communal model actively supports unplanned visits. That said, its World's 50 Best Bars ranking (#19 in 2024) means the room fills quickly on weekend evenings and during peak Paris visitor periods in October and November. Arriving earlier in the evening on weeknights gives a more comfortable experience. No booking information is listed on a dedicated website, so arriving in person remains the standard approach.

    What kind of traveller is The Cambridge Public House a good fit for?

    If you want a ranked cocktail bar without the formality that usually accompanies that tier in Paris, The Cambridge is the obvious address. The pub model means you can arrive without ceremony, drink a pint of Guinness, and stay for a craft cocktail , or reverse the order. It is also a practical choice for visitors using the Marais as a base who want a serious drinks address that does not require advance planning. Travellers with an interest in sustainability practice in hospitality will find an operation with more formal documentation and accountability than virtually any peer bar in the city.

    Is The Cambridge Public House the only B Corp certified bar in Paris?

    It is not just the only B Corp certified bar in Paris , it is the first bar in the world to have achieved that certification. B Corp accreditation requires meeting standards across environmental impact, social responsibility, and governance transparency, and The Cambridge publishes an annual ESG report to document its progress against those metrics. It has also launched Shaken Leaf, a public resource on sustainable practices in the hospitality sector, extending its role beyond a single venue into something closer to an industry reference point.

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