Mission statement

To collect, preserve, and share history and culture associated with Louis Dupuy's Hotel de Paris, and serve as a catalyst for heritage tourism.
Please consider making a donation at www.hoteldeparismuseum.org.

Friday, April 3, 2026

A Contemplative Setting Deepens Emotional Connections

The West Courtyard at Louis Dupuy’s Hotel de Paris was used as a service area for butchering meat, and storing  cords of firewood and a pile of coal. 

Enclosed by stone walls built by Chinese laborers in the late 19th century, the West Courtyard at Hotel de Paris Museum is shielded from the hustle-and-bustle of the modern world.  This creates a calm area, a kind of palate cleanser, where visitors can sit and absorb history they learned on one of our self-guided tours.

The West Courtyard provides a reset—something grounding after moving through interior spaces.  Visitors can chat with companions, scroll through photos, or just sit in silence.


Hotel de Paris Museum is a member of the American Alliance of Museums (AAM), which advocates for museums to function as “community anchors” that provide spaces for rest, reflection, and emotional processing. 
Therefore, Hotel de Paris Museum has upgraded and reopened its West Courtyard as a quiet zone to help reduce sensory overload, and to facilitate and support visitor well-being and inclusion in a calm space.

Our West Courtyard enhances the visitor experience by providing a physical and psychological break from the museum’s dense Victorian interiors to a serene, open-air environment that allows self-reflection and healing.  For those seeking rest and reflection, it offers a “secret garden” atmosphere that contrasts with the detailed indoor tour.

After 1901, the courtyard transitioned from work to relaxation.  Photographs show members of the Burkholder Family enjoying the sun-drenched, private space.

In addition, our West Courtyard seating encourages visitors to slow down and connect more deeply with Louis Dupuy’s story of reinvention and second-chances.  According to AAM, 4 out of 5 museum-goers are looking for a place to sit, relax, and decompress; therefore, our courtyard delivers exactly that in a setting that feels intentional and restorative.  Framed by historic architecture and thoughtfully furnished, the space invites visitors to pause while touring, reflect on what they’ve experienced, or simply take a breath.


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