Why a residential rooftop instead of a yacht or a palace hotel?

A residential rooftop suits couples who want palace-level privacy without committing to an overnight stay, a fixed menu, or capped guest and vendor numbers. We plan proposals on the Seine and on palace terraces too. All can be right. The question is what the evening needs to protect.

Booking the Shangri-La terrace, for one, means staying the night there. A private rooftop leaves that choice free, so she can wake up wherever she has dreamed of instead, whether that is the Bristol from Midnight in Paris, the George V, the Ritz, or a design hotel like the Saint James.

It also lifts the usual limits: no capped guest or vendor count, and the rooftop is often open when the marquee terraces are booked solid or simply impossible, the Peninsula’s Secret Table on New Year’s Eve for the fireworks among them.

The kitchen is the clearest example. With a private chef in Paris cooking only for the couple, nothing about the meal is fixed in advance.

We bring in our own chef, so the menu and pacing belong to the couple. Dinner follows the emotion instead of interrupting it.

Nadia Benfares Sidorenko
Senior Planner, Kiss Me in Paris (edited excerpt)

A palace restaurant keeps to its own menu and hours, and some close the kitchen at a set time. Here, the chef, the wine, and the champagne are ours to choose.

A yacht has its own appeal, but the boat moves, and some couples would rather not propose or dine on the water. Others could book any of it and simply prefer to put the budget into the evening rather than the room.

The private address also asks for a better cover. At the Peninsula, “let’s go up to L’Oiseau Blanc for a drink before dinner” can be enough. A residential rooftop needs a reason she believes.

The format proved itself fast: within months, a second couple booked the same rooftop and the same concept, this time with three at the table and a carpet of petals underfoot.

For the bookable version, with pricing and what it includes, our Eiffel Tower rooftop proposal package lays it out.

[ALL-INCLUSIVE CONCEPTS]

Different by design.
Consistent in execution.

Groom and twelve groomsmen in black tuxedos posed on the front steps of Château Saint-Martin-du-Tertre, flanked by stone lion sculptures, with the full 19th-century limestone façade and outdoor dinner setup behind them.
Twelve groomsmen, two stone lions, one 19th-century château. The outdoor dinner tables are already set behind them — guests hadn’t seen the setup yet when they passed through earlier in the day.

Speak to us.

    Aerial view of Château Saint-Martin-du-Tertre at golden hour, with 240 wedding guests on the gravel apron and outdoor dinner tables set in front of the lit limestone façade, Val-d'Oise, France.
    Dinner outdoors on the gravel apron, the château’s own pink-and-yellow façade wash already running. The decision to keep 240 guests outside for dinner was made on the first venue walkthrough.

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    Couple holding hands during the proposal speech on a Paris rooftop at night — live violinist performing to the side, red roses and gold candelabras surrounding them, Eiffel Tower beam visible in the background
    The speech — hands held, a violinist playing to the side, the Eiffel Tower behind them. He prepared this. It shows.

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