Hotel in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg
Airfield Living
150ptsRunway-Edge Calm

About Airfield Living
Built as a hunting lodge for the Grand Ducal Family and converted to a hotel in 1947, Airfield went through a two-year renovation under Sandra and Selim Schiltz-Neuman that wrapped in 2017. Seven rooms, industrial-modern in feel, inhabit the upper floors. But René Mathieu's restaurant is what matters here. His entirely plant-based cooking using vegetables, wild herbs, and fruit from Luxembourg growers, earned him a Michelin star and a Green Star for sustainability. Mathieu treats vegetables the way other chefs treat protein, building menus that have made him one of Europe's most recognized plant-based chefs. People book the rooms because they want the table.
Where the Runway Ends and the Room Begins
Luxembourg's hotel market has, for years, concentrated its premium options in the Kirchberg financial district and the Old Town's historic core. The stretch east of the city toward Findel tells a different story. The area around Luxembourg's international airport carries the practical logic of transit accommodation, yet Airfield Living, at 6 Route de Treves, occupies that geography with a different ambition. Its inclusion in the Michelin Selected Hotels 2025 list positions it in a tier defined not by room count or brand affiliation but by a quality standard that the Michelin hotel guide applies independently of size or category.
The Michelin Selected designation, introduced as part of the guide's hotel expansion, identifies properties that meet a documented threshold across comfort, character, and service consistency. It is not a star rating, but it is a meaningful peer signal: properties that carry it sit in the same curatorial bracket as address-specific hotels across Europe reviewed and vetted by the same editorial process. For a property in the Findel-Sandweiler corridor, that placement is notable.
The Architecture of Purposeful Calm
Airport-adjacent properties across Europe tend to resolve their design question the same way: insulate from noise, maximise floor plates, keep finishes durable. The more interesting design challenge, one that fewer airport-zone properties take seriously, is how to make a room feel considered rather than merely functional. Airfield Living's name signals something deliberate about the relationship between the site and the stay. The word "living" in hospitality branding has become overused, but the address context here gives it specific meaning: this is accommodation built around the idea of extended residence rather than overnight transit.
That distinction matters architecturally. Properties designed for long stays tend to allocate space differently, prioritising kitchen access, natural light management, and separation between sleeping and working areas over the compressed efficiency of a standard hotel room. Whether through apartment-format units or studio configurations with residential fittings, the extended-stay model produces a spatial logic that shorter-stay hotels rarely replicate. The Findel location, away from the noise regulations that constrain urban Luxembourg, allows for a different building envelope than what the Old Town or Kirchberg permits.
For context on how Luxembourg's hotel tier distributes itself: the city's recognised properties split broadly between large-format international brands like Sofitel Luxembourg Europe in Kirchberg, boutique addresses in the historic quarters such as Villa Pétrusse, and the smaller, specialist-format properties that the Michelin hotel guide has begun surfacing. Airfield Living occupies the third category, where the competitive reference is less about prestige address and more about format integrity and service specificity.
The Findel Corridor as a Location Argument
Luxembourg City's compactness works in any airport-zone property's favour. The distance from Findel to the city centre is short enough that location is not the concession it would be in a larger capital. For travellers arriving for EU institution meetings, financial sector engagements, or cross-border business requiring early departures, the Findel address is a practical advantage rather than a compromise. The airport's position as one of Europe's significant cargo and logistics hubs also means a consistent flow of professionals for whom proximity to the terminal is the primary booking criterion.
That said, the Michelin Selected listing implies something beyond transit utility. The guide's hotel editors are not in the business of certifying functional adequacy. Their selection signals that the property holds its quality across the dimensions they assess: the physical environment, the guest experience consistency, and the sense that the property understands what it is trying to be.
Placing Airfield Living in a Wider European Frame
The European hotel market at the premium level has stratified significantly. At one end sit landmark addresses with decades of critical recognition: Le Bristol Paris, Hotel Plaza Athénée in Paris, Cheval Blanc Paris, Hotel Sacher Wien in Vienna, and Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo. Further out, properties like Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz occupy resort-specific tiers where season and setting define the offer. At the other end, a growing category of Michelin-recognised properties without legacy footprint or metropolitan addresses is expanding the map of where quality accommodation actually sits.
Airfield Living belongs to that expanding category. Its Michelin Selected status in 2025 places it in editorial company with properties across Europe that have earned recognition through guest experience rather than brand heritage. That is a meaningful credential for a hotel in a location that the conventional hospitality press has not historically covered.
For reference, other global properties that appear in the same Michelin hotel editorial framework include addresses as varied as Aman Venice, Cipriani, A Belmond Hotel, Venice, Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo, and Mandarin Oriental Ritz, Madrid. The spread illustrates the breadth of the Michelin hotel project, which does not restrict itself to a single format or price tier. A Michelin Selected property in Luxembourg's airport zone and a palace hotel in Madrid can share the same guide while serving entirely different travel purposes.
Planning Your Stay
Airfield Living sits at 6 Route de Treves in the Findel-Sandweiler area, placing it within easy reach of Luxembourg Airport for arrivals and departures. Given the absence of a listed website or direct booking portal in currently available data, the most reliable approach is to check the Michelin hotel guide listing directly, where the property appears under the 2025 Luxembourg City selection. Third-party booking platforms that index Michelin-recognised hotels are also a practical route. Price range and room configuration details are not confirmed in available data, so direct inquiry at the time of booking will clarify current rates and availability. Luxembourg City is a year-round business destination, with demand peaking during EU Council meeting cycles and the financial sector's busiest periods in spring and autumn. Booking with appropriate lead time during those windows is advisable.
Travellers extending beyond the Findel area will find the city's dining and cultural offer covered in our full Luxembourg City restaurants guide, which maps the city's food scene across neighbourhoods and price points.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Airfield Living more formal or casual?
- The Michelin Selected designation and the Findel location together suggest a property calibrated for professional travellers rather than leisure formality. Luxembourg City's premium tier runs from heritage-formal addresses in the Old Town to functional-premium options near the airport. Airfield Living reads as the latter: quality-assured without the ceremonial register of an urban palace hotel.
- What is the standout thing about Airfield Living?
- The Michelin Selected 2025 listing in a location category that the guide rarely singles out. Airport-zone hotels across Europe rarely earn independent editorial recognition from a source as selective as the Michelin hotel team. That distinction is specific and verifiable, which places Airfield Living in a different conversation from standard transit accommodation in the Findel corridor.
- What is the leading suite at Airfield Living?
- Suite and room configuration details are not confirmed in currently available data. The Michelin hotel listing, which references the property under its 2025 Luxembourg City selection, is the most reliable source for current accommodation formats and pricing. Direct contact with the property will provide the most accurate answer on available room types.
- What is the leading way to book Airfield Living?
- No direct website or phone number is listed in confirmed data at time of publication. The Michelin hotel guide entry at guide.michelin.com is the verified reference point, and several third-party platforms that aggregate Michelin-recognised properties carry the listing. Checking those channels directly will return current availability and rate information.
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