The Best Hostel In France (Is Going Off Tonight)

07/22/09  Print This Post Print This Post    10 Comments   Popular   Written by Tom Gates
    Share

What a flipping kitchen! Salmon dinner for under seven Euros? Score.

The guy in the TKA shirt lands his beer pong toss (“Take that mother…”) as the girl with curly hair is tongue-jamming her conquest, an Aussi guy who told me earlier that he was “gonna get that, mate.” A nineteen year old Canadian boy sits at the bar, downing shots of bottom-shelf rum.

He’s trying to keep up with the goopy-eyed girl from Portland who seems unable to discuss anything other than her boyfriend (“He totally lets me put eyeshadow on him.”). Somebody drops a glass. A pregnant pause. Then the whole place whoops as the party shifts into fifth gear.

The Villa Saint Exupery in Nice, France – recognized wordwide as classy dorm digs – is filled tonight with the same energy you’d feel at a Megadeth concert. This “relaxing” and “extraordinary” place is jammed with howling patrons who have a seemingly common purpose. Chaos.

It’s a real pity for the owners, who would probably be happier to have a clientele of calm, snifter-whiffing women in their thirties. There’s nothing that can disqualify soothing adjectives faster than a backpacker on the drink.

Still, there’s good reason that the hostel is sold out tonight – it does everything right. The staff is abundant, easily handling the 100+ residents in this converted monastery. They hand out maps and directions with less disdain than I’ve ever witnessed, answering the most routine questions with genuine smiles.

Forget your tampons? Rubbers? Pasta with sauce? No worries.

Two shuttle vans make nonstop runs to town and the airport. Laundry is washed and folded for five Euros. Vending machines sell anything that you could have forgotten back home, from shaving cream to condoms (mate).

Views of the Chapel which features an internet lab, an in-tune Piano and a rad fireplace.

A big, stainless steel kitchen gives plenty of room to move but few people make their own meals because the in-house chef (yes) is just so damned good. Eyes bulge at the heaping €6.50 dinner. On one occasion I was served roast veal with rosemary potatoes, ratatouille and green beans. The next night was some salmon concoction that looked straight a good episode of Top Chef. I caressed every piece of food with my fork before I ate it, just to make sure it was real and not some kind of too-long-on-the-road mirage.

The Chapel is the hostel’s star attraction. A massive room wrapped in a stained glass wall, it also features a balcony full of free, high-speed-charged computers. Strewn about are couches, a grand piano (in tune) and a wide-screen television. Outside of The Chapel are three sitting areas, one complete with a fireplace.

Instant Party and Disappearing Brownies

The bar is, as mentioned, quite alive. House beer and wine only relieve patrons of one Euro and late-night drinkers can always grab a brewskie from the vending machine. Plates of brick-sized brownies are also available at the bar, scarfed down as fast as they can be made. It’s the kind of room that is impossible to be lonely in.

The dorm rooms are a bit cramped, holding as many as thirteen beds. The designers realized that they weren’t going to win any prizes with the room space afforded to them, so they wisely opted to make the common areas so attractive that nobody would bother with beds, other than to sleep. Any complaints about the dorm rooms would seem common for most hostels – more showers, toilet paper, less inexperienced drinkers.

Chillout space? Check. A perfect place for a bottle of wine or a smoke.

The Villa Saint Exupery’s only downfall might not be its own doing. Reviews and articles about the hostel are so glowing that many people booking might not take into account that this is, after all, a playpen for backpackers.

Sadly, a dorm room is only as clean as its inhabitants.

It doesn’t matter how big the beds are – they’re still littered with empty peanut butter jars and Stephanie Meyer books.

The reviews give Saint Expupery a grand air – which it has in many ways – but no matter how you dress a hostel up, there’s still going to be the Australian dude slapping me on the back, talking about how he’ll get the girl who smells like Garniere Fructis.

A hostel is, still, just a hostel.

Community Connection:

Check out another one of our hostel raves, as well as our picks for best party hostels around the world. Our recent post about ’boutique hostels’ might also catch your eye, especially if you want to search for other hostels like Villa Saint Exupery.


    Share

About the Author

Tom Gates

Tom is a writer and a constant traveler, having spent most of the past two years wandering Earth with his Macbook. He is also pretending to be a third person right now and is obviously writing his own bio. He knows that you knew that, despite the deft maneuvering of pronouns.

10 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Tim Patterson replied on July 22, 2009

    What’s Garniere Fructis?

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
    • Kate Sedgwick replied to Tim Patterson on July 22, 2009

      Shampoo, my friend. Shampoo. And I imagine an American tourist in France would find its use especially appropriate.

      (Report comment)

      ↵ Reply
  • Ry Snow replied on July 22, 2009

    Gahahahaa! Reading articles like yours make me giddy with excitement for when I get to find places worth writing about.

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Mathieu Laprise replied on July 22, 2009

    I had the best time at this hostel. 1 euro for a beer in a vending machine. Magic

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
    • Hal replied to Mathieu Laprise on July 22, 2009

      For real. The only place I’ve run into vending machine beer was 21st Street Coop at UT Austin. And that was Steel Reserve (yowzah!).

      This is sick, Tom. I’m jealous.

      (Report comment)

      ↵ Reply
  • Michelle replied on July 22, 2009

    That’s awesome…not what I picture when I think “hostel” at all!

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Missy replied on December 17, 2009

    Well this is definitely going on my list of hostels to stay at. I stayed in a hotel in Nice that didn’t look half as nice as this place!

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Katherine replied on January 25, 2010

    I haven’t been to this hostel in almost 3 years!! But I can safely say it was a couple great nights! The converted Chapel was soo laid back. SO many auzzies. Im glad someone wrote about this and mentioned the staff!! they were so helpful!! I remember one of the staff members: Ollie!

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Katherine replied on January 25, 2010

    I forgot to mention it didnt look half this modern and clean when I was there. They must have done quite a bit of sprucing up.

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Samantha replied on April 1, 2010

    Lol at the Stephanie Meyer line..

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply

Leave a Comment

Get Matador in your inbox and around the web.

Sign up for our FREE weekly newsletter.


View full list of RSS feeds

Jump To Category:



Explore the Community



Popular Stories on Matador

A Traveler's Guide To The History Of Death

Learn how the changing face of death has varied across ... 

9 Ways To Customize Your Backpack

For slow travelers, it's very likely that you and your ... 

Notes on Backcountry Visa Renewal

Km 14. 7 - "Began limping due to increasing pain in lef... 

How to Ride the Tram in Amsterdam

Abbie Mood picks up some public transport skills during... 

10 Drink Recipes You Can Light On Fire

Put a shallow layer of 151-proof rum on top. Light the ... 

How to Read Your Writing Out Loud

JoshyWashington says: stop dreading reading your writin... 

Urban Homesteading: Turn Your City Home Into Country Living

Who says you can't have a farm in the backyard of your ... 

Beginner's Guide to Dumpster Diving

In some places, dumpster diving is a means of survival.... 

10 Quirkiest Travel Gear

... 

Experience the Art of Improv Travel

Travel is more about how you do it, not where you go. F... 



Focus





Editor Blogs