AC Hotel New Orleans French Quarter

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221 Carondelet Street New Orleans, LA 70130

Need dates

  • 07/08/202409/05/2024

Ratings

AAA
3

Awards

Booking.com Traveler Review Awards 2021 Trip Advisor's Travelers’ Choice Award 2020

Amenities

Room features and guest services

  • Calls (local)
  • Calls (toll-free)
  • Internet access
  • Laundry service
  • Luggage storage
  • Voicemail box

Facilities

  • Onsite catering
  • Onsite gift shop
  • Onsite restaurant
  • Pet friendly
  • Wheelchair accessible

Business services

  • AV capabilities
  • Business center

AV capabilities

  • AV equipment

Recreational activities

  • Health club

Venue accessibility

  • Airport shuttle
  • Bus
  • Taxi
  • Train

Distance from airport

  • 14.8 mi. from venue

Parking

  • Valet parking$46.00 / day

AC Hotel New Orleans French Quarter Meeting Space

Total meeting space4,630 sq. ft.
Meeting rooms6
Largest room1,901 sq. ft.
Second largest room828 sq. ft.
Filters

Guest Rooms

Total guest rooms219
Tax rate10.2%
Occupancy rate16.2%

Local Attractions

French Quarter

Recreation
2 blocks away
The French Quarter is the city’s historic heart dating back to 1718. It is famous for its vibrant nightlife and colorful buildings with cast-iron balconies. Crowd-pleasing Bourbon Street features jazz clubs, Cajun eateries and raucous bars serving potent cocktails. Quieter streets lead to the French Market, with gourmet food and local crafts, and to Jackson Square where street performers entertain in front of soaring St. Louis Cathedral.
100 Bourbon street
New Orleans, LA, US 70112

Mercedes-Benz SuperDome

Recreation
1 mi. away
The Mercedes-Benz Superdome, often referred to simply as the Superdome, is a domed sports and exhibition stadium located in the Central Business District of New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
1500 Sugar Bowl Dr.
New Orleans, LA, US 70112

Bourbon Street

Nightlife
5 minutes away
Noisy. Raucous. Nocturnal. For many New Orleans visitors, Bourbon Street embodies the life of a party town. The street is lit by neon lights, throbbing with music and decorated by beads and balconies. Named for a royal family in France and not the amber-colored alcohol, Bourbon Street has become a place for revelry of all sorts. With its windows and doors flung open to the wandering crowds, it should be no surprise that the famed sidewalk strolling libation known as the “go cup” was invented on Bourbon Street, according to Tulane University historian Richard Campanella. Many things change in New Orleans, but the color and excitement of Bourbon Street never falters.

National World War II Museum

Museum
1 mi. away
The National WWII Museum, formerly known as The National D-Day Museum, is a military history museum located in the Central Business District of New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, on Andrew Higgins Drive between Camp Street and Magazine Street.
945 Magazine Street
New Orleans, LA, US 70130

Jackson Square

Historical landmark
1 mi. away
Jackson Square is a historic park in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1960, for its central role in the city's history, and as the site where in 1803 Louisiana was made United States territory pursuant to the Louisiana Purchase.
701 Decatur street
New Orleans, LA, US 70130

Audubon Aquarium of the Americas

Museum
7 blocks away
Looming large against the Mississippi River is the extraordinary Audubon Aquarium of the Americas, one of the top museums of its kind in America. Here the visitor finds 15,000 sea life creatures, representing nearly 600 species, living happily in a state-of-the-art facility. The world-renown Audubon Aquarium is home to fish and sea life of all kinds - and visitors can get up close, eye-to-eye if you please, with some of the most fascinating creatures of the ocean. The Caribbean Reef tunnel, for example, is 30 feet long and allows the visitor a view of the Caribbean sea life viewed only by divers. The new Seahorses Gallery showcases these beautiful creatures as they swim gracefully between the grasses in their home and glide through the water.
1 Canal st.
New Orleans, LA, US 70130

Café Du Monde

Historical landmark
1 mi. away
A traditional coffee shop in the New Orleans French Market dating back to 1862. Its menu consists of dark roasted Coffee and Chicory, Beignets, White and Chocolate Milk, and fresh squeezed Orange Juice.
800 Decatur street
New Orleans, LA, US 70130

Magazine Street

Shopping
3 mi. away
Stretching six miles parallel to the Mississippi River from Canal Street to Audubon Park, Magazine Street travels from the Central Business District and the Warehouse Arts District through the Garden District and Uptown. this retail street’s stores offer a delightful antidote to the typical mall experience. Clusters of shops are interspersed with charming homes, and a mix of renovated warehouses and shops selling housewares, pottery, period furniture, clothing, books, glass, toys, china, soaps and jewelry. Magazine Street is the ideal spot for a leisurely walk-about, with plenty of coffee shops, cafes and restaurants to provide a pit stop and refreshment to the tired shopper.

More

Meeting spaces providing integrated technologies, collaborative layouts and ergonomic seating. Dynamic Outdoor atrium that is great for private receptions in a unique outdoor setting with conversational modern seating. First floor Media Salon is great for groups of 10 or less and is equipped with state of the art technology and view of the downtown Central Business District. Our AC Kitchen is flexible space that can be used for private engagements ideal for dining events.

Cancellation Policy

24 Hours

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