The La Place center point is approximately 5 miles north of Waterford Nuclear and 8 miles east of Whitney Plantation.
LaPlace is a small census-designated place, rather than a town or city. Therefore, it doesn't experience the dramatic tourist spikes of larger centers like New Orleans or Baton Rouge. However, as many travelers stay in LaPlace en route to these destinations, you will find LaPlace a little busier during Mardi Gras. Expect to pay more for hotels during this peak period.
If you don't care about Mardi Gras, you'll find LaPlace at its best from March to May. The weather is comfortably cool and the hotels reasonably priced. Summer and fall have the most affordable hotel rates, but the hot, humid conditions and threat of hurricanes are enough to turn most visitors off Louisiana travel during these months.
You may be eligible for discounts on the regular room rate when you stay at these La Place hotels.
Quality Inn LaPlace offers great discounts to AAA and CAA auto club members, seniors and AARP members, and government and military personnel. You'll also receive a discount if you're traveling in a group needing 10 or more rooms. The rooms are comfortable and well appointed, with premium bedding, high-quality showers, and creature comforts such as coffee makers and flat-screen TVs to help you feel at home. Business travelers appreciate the on-site business center while leisure tourists love the seasonal outdoor pool. Browse the free weekday newspaper as you enjoy your complimentary hot breakfast each morning.
Hampton Inn LaPlace also has special rates for AAA auto club members, AARP and CARP members, and government military employees. The rooms are charming, with wooden furniture and plush white comforters. You'll appreciate the microwave and minifridge, along with the flat-screen TV and free Wi-Fi providing several entertainment options. Take a dip in the kidney-shaped outdoor pool, or simply chill out with a book on one of the lounges surrounding it. Hampton Inn LaPlace also has a fitness center, a business center, and a free self-service breakfast buffet.
The following LaPlace hotels pride themselves on offering guests real value for money. While their prices aren't the lowest in the city, they're worth every cent.
Holiday Inn Express & Suites LaPlace is one of LaPlace's newest hotels. Therefore, it's a great choice for people who prefer modern accommodation. Its rooms are compact but packed with features such as 32-inch HDTVs, free wired and wireless internet, massaging showerheads, work desks, minifridges, and alarm clocks with iPod docking stations. The paved, outdoor pool area features chairs and tables with umbrellas. It's a fantastic place to kick back whether you want a dip or not. There's also a fitness center and a guest laundry on site. The free Express Start breakfast provides the perfect morning pick-me-up.
As it's made for long vacations, Suburban Extended Stay LaPlace has many of the features other hotels don't. Think in-room kitchens with appliances; cooking implements, cutlery, and dishes in each room; a guest laundry; and in some rooms, sofa sleepers. There are coffee makers in all rooms, but if you're too lazy to brew your own, you can get a free caffeine fix in the lobby. The hotel also has an outdoor pool and a picnic area, a business center, and a small, on-site gym.
In the 1970s, Louisiana's governor Edwin Edwards dubbed LaPlace the “Official Andouille Capital of the World.” The area's reputation as the best place to enjoy these distinctive French smoked pork sausages has stuck, so you really should try at least one while you're in town.
Local restaurants are the best place to track down some of this legendary sausage. Wayne Jacob's Smokehouse uses Andouille in many of its Cajun and Creole dishes in chicken and Andouille gumbo, Andouille chips, red beans with Andouille, as well as pork, sausage, and Andouille jambalaya. The food is so good that many regular customers say they travel from far and wide to taste the smokehouse's Andouille sausage delicacies. If you've got cooking facilities at your hotel, you'll be pleased to discover you can also buy some Andouille sausage, fresh from the smokehouse, to take back to your room.
You'll also find Andouille sausage at TNT Seafood Restaurant and Bar. While it's not the star of the show as it is at Wayne Jacob's Smokehouse, it's worth trying TNT Seafood's famous chicken Andouille gumbo. Order it in a cup, or if you just can't get enough, go large with a bowl.
If you're really keen on Andouille, make sure you travel in October. LaPlace has held its Andouille Festival during this fall month every year since 1972. The three-day celebration at Thomas F. Daley Memorial Park includes plenty of fun events such as a Dang Douille Eating Contest, an Andouille Gumbo Cook-Off, a 5-mile Andouille Run, live music, and plenty of opportunities to eat the famous smoked sausage.
LaPlace may be small, but its unique features make it more than just a convenient stopover between New Orleans and Baton Rouge. Take the time to linger a little longer and you'll discover LaPlace has a charm all its own.
Below are reviews of the city of La Place, LA from an actual visitor's perspective.
We loved the scenery!
Great area!
Cuisine choices. Staff was friendly.
Belle Terre Country Club.