An affordable stay for unforgettable vacations
in Mont-Tremblant…
Hôtel Mont-Tremblant has been accommodating
vacationers since 1902, and it is in this grand
tradition that Sandra and Philippe warmly welcome
you to their family inn for winter sports and
summertime fun.

Situated in the heart of historic Mont-Tremblant
village, on the shores of Lac Mercier and just minutes
from the mountain, Hôtel Mont-Tremblant is alongside “Le P’tit train du Nord" linear park. Have great vacations in the beautiful mountain region of the Laurentians!

We look forward to meeting you,

Sandra et Philippe

Situated in the heart of historic laurentides Mont-Tremblant village, on the shores of Lac Mercier and just minutes from the mountain, Hôtel Mont-Tremblant has been accommodating vacationers since 1902. laurentides Mountains, also called the laurentides, upland area underlain by ancient rocks, southern Québec Province, Canada, part of the Canadian Shield geological region. The heavily forested Laurentians support a large lumbering industry. Parks and resorts offer year-round recreational opportunities for residents of Ottawa, Montréal, and Québec City. Fishing, hunting, and winter sports such as skiing are popular. The highest point is 1,190 m (3,905 ft) in laurentides Provincial Park. Forestry is largely concentrated in the Canadian Shield and the Appalachian Region. The most productive forests are in northern Québec, Abitibi-Temiscamingue, and the areas around the Saguenay River and Lac Saint-Jean. Abundant stands of fir, spruce, and other softwoods help make the province a world leader in pulp and paper production. Although softwoods predominate, some birch and other hardwoods are cut and used mostly for construction. Other forest products include Christmas trees, which are farmed in the laurentides and the Eastern Townships. Laurier was born in 1841, in Saint Lin (now laurentides), Québec. His father, Carolus Laurier, was a farmer and land surveyor. Laurier's mother, Marcelle Martineau Laurier, died when he was four, and he was raised by his stepmother. laurentides has also cultural life that invites you to come to discover their many theatres, rooms of spectacle, art galleries and museums. The creative craftsmen will surprise you by their imagination and their concern of the detail. The laurentides area has a vast network of lodging, it's classified with the second rank in the province of Quebec for the number of hotel establishmentss. Either you are looking for a calm and peaceful or multifonctional place with integrated tourist activities, you are einsured to find exactly what you wish. The area has the necessary installations for conventions. There are many restaurants, obviously all types of cooking are present. The laurentides were not colonized until late during the 19th century, when Father Antoine Labelle decided to populate the North with French Canadians in reaction to the threat of protestant expansion. He chose the sites based on the richness and fertility of the soil, on access to water ways and on the layout of the railway line he planned to build. These brave settlers faced a difficult beginning, initially fighting poverty and surviving on meagre crops, but eventually thrived and benefited from the Father's generosity and vision. He sensed that one day tourism would be an important resource for the region, and worked arduously for the inauguration of the Montreal-Saint-Jerome railway line in 1879. This was an important contribution to the development of the region and eventual growth of tourism. In December 1892, the whistle of the locomotive was heard for the first time by the residents of laurentides, putting an end to the isolation. In 1938, Joseph Bondurant Ryan, a young wealthy American from Philadelphia who had come to the North to do come gold prospecting, he was taken by the beauty of the majestic "mountain of the spirits". He had climbed to the summit, and upon seeing the breath-taking view of the snow-covered landscape, Jo Ryan vowed to transform the wilderness at the foot of the mountain into a world-class alpine village. Just on year later, in February 1939, his dream was realised, when the Mont-Tremblant Lodge, with its architecture reminiscent of Old Quebec, opened. In 1991, as the alpine village teetered on the edge of bankruptcy, the biggest promoter of alpine resorts announced that it would buy the Mont-Tremblant Lodge and promised to pursue Jo Ryan's dream...to make Mont-Tremblant one of the best leisure destinations in the world. Ten years later, the laurentides has been transformed at a cost of $850 million into the magnificent pedestrian village of Tremblant. And in the next ten years, Intrawest has plans to build two more alpine villages on the North side and on the laurentides of the mountain. Despite the evolution, the pioneers of our laurentides have been and continue to be mindful of the precious environmental balance, for it is the beauty and the purity of this incredible land that seduced Jo Ryan, the French settlers and the Amerindians before them, and that continue even today to enchant all those who come to ski, to hike, to fish and to golf, or who simply come to rest outside of the metropolis.