On the shore of the world's most photographed lake. The Lakeview Lounge is why people honeymoon in the Canadian Rockies.
"The lakeside chateau every Canadian Rockies brochure ever printed — turquoise-water vistas from the Lakeview Lounge that still close the deal."
The Chateau's lineage goes back to 1890, when the Canadian Pacific Railway pushed a single-storey log chalet onto the eastern shore of Lake Louise to give well-heeled passengers a reason to step off the train. Fires and renovations followed, the chalet became a chateau, and the chateau grew into the 539-room building that has stood here, broadly in its present form, since the 1920s. More than a century later it remains the defining hotel of the Canadian Rockies — the postcard image, the brochure cover, the reason couples fly to Calgary in the first place.
The 539 rooms split sharply into two camps: lakeview and courtyard. Lakeview rooms — facing west across the turquoise water to the Victoria Glacier — command a substantial premium and are worth every dollar of it. The view from a lakeview room at 7am, before the day-trip buses arrive, is among the most reliable luxuries in Canadian travel. Courtyard rooms (sometimes called mountainview) are quieter, often slightly more spacious, and a sensible choice for travellers who plan to be outside all day. Suites are generously sized and traditionally furnished; this is not a property pretending to be modern, and that is part of the appeal.
The Lakeview Lounge is the property's most photographed room and rightly so. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame the lake and glacier directly; afternoon tea is served daily and books out weeks ahead in summer. It is the moment most guests remember: a pot of loose-leaf, a tier of finger sandwiches and pastries, and the same view that has anchored a thousand wedding proposals. Reserve before you arrive — walk-ins on a clear July afternoon are essentially impossible.
Dining beyond tea is anchored by the Walter Wilcox Dining Room (named for the explorer who reached the lake in 1882) for white-tablecloth Rockies cuisine, the Fairview Bar for a properly mixed Old Fashioned in front of the windows, and the Poppy Brasserie for the breakfast buffet that fuels the day's hike. The Lake Louise Ski Resort sits a short shuttle ride away — among the largest ski areas in North America — making the chateau a credible winter address as well as a summer one. Be aware that the road to nearby Moraine Lake closes seasonally (typically mid-October to late May); the chateau's concierge can advise on shuttle bookings during peak summer access.
Honeymoons here are an all-time experience for the right couple. The combination of lakeview room, private canoe at sunrise, afternoon tea at the Lakeview Lounge, and dinner at Walter Wilcox produces a set of memories that travel writing cannot improve on. The chateau is busy — 539 rooms means crowds at peak hours and a check-in line in July — but the lake itself, walked early or paddled at first light, is as quiet and as beautiful as anywhere on earth. Service is warm, Canadian, slightly less choreographed than at a European five-star, and entirely sufficient for the setting.
Book a lakeview room, request a high floor, and arrive a day early to catch the morning before the day-trippers do. The standard honeymoon at the Chateau writes itself: sunrise canoe across the still glacier water, afternoon tea at the Lakeview Lounge, dinner at Walter Wilcox, the lakeshore walk after dark with the mountains lit by moon. Brief the concierge — they have packaged hundreds of these. This is one of the most memorable honeymoons in North America.
For couples returning to mark a milestone, the Chateau's fixed view — the same lake, the same glacier, the same afternoon-tea ritual — does the romantic work without effort. Request the same lakeview room you stayed in last time; the front desk will try. A private canoe at sunrise followed by a champagne breakfast on the lawn is the most photographed anniversary gesture in Alberta. September, when the larches turn gold, is the connoisseur's anniversary month.
The Chateau is built for multigenerational holidays. Connecting rooms, kid-friendly menus, on-site canoe rental, the Mountain Activity Programme for children, ski-in proximity in winter, and a setting that produces awed silence in eight-year-olds and grandparents alike. Courtyard rooms are the value play for a family of four; a lakeview suite with a connecting room is the splurge. The lawn games, the lakeshore walk and the afternoon hot chocolate are reasons children remember this trip for thirty years.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
The Chateau has been the brochure cover of the Rockies for over a century. Start with the right hotel, then let the lake do the rest.
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