A private beach on Lac Ouimet, timber-frame suites with kitchens, and a free shuttle to the lifts. The lake-side alternative to the village base.
"Tremblant's lake-and-timber alternative to the gondola crowd — a beach on Lac Ouimet and a free shuttle to the lifts."
Le Grand Lodge sits on the southern shore of Lac Ouimet, six kilometres from the Tremblant pedestrian village and the gondola base. That distance is the entire argument for the property. Where Fairmont, Westin, and the village condos offer ski-in convenience and stone-clad pedestrian streets, Le Grand Lodge offers something rarer in Tremblant: a private sand beach, a quiet hardwood shoreline, and a building that looks and behaves like a Laurentian lodge rather than a resort. For families and couples who treat the mountain as one part of the holiday rather than the whole point, this trade is the right one.
The architecture is the genuine article. Le Grand Lodge is a timber-frame structure — visible beams, post-and-beam construction, fieldstone fireplaces in the public rooms — and one of the larger such buildings in eastern Canada. The lobby is the kind of room where parents can leave kids to play board games while they take a coffee by the fire. The 112 suites continue the language: warm wood interiors, rustic-modern furnishings, and balconies or patios that face the lake or the surrounding forest. Lake-view suites are worth the upgrade in any season; in summer, the morning light on Lac Ouimet justifies the early breakfast.
The format is suites, not rooms, and almost every accommodation includes a kitchenette or full kitchen. This is the structural reason Le Grand Lodge works for families and longer stays: parents who don't want to negotiate the village restaurant scene every night with two children can shop locally, cook in, and use the dining room for the nights that matter. One- and two-bedroom configurations sleep four to six comfortably. The property is among Tremblant's better-value addresses in the CAD $250–650 range, and the per-night cost falls considerably across week-long stays compared to comparable village hotels.
The amenity set is built around the lake. The private beach on Lac Ouimet is the headline asset — sand, lifeguards in summer, kayaks and paddleboards available, swimming docks, and a calm cove that suits children. An indoor pool, hot tub, sauna, and the Spa du Village treatment menu carry the wellness side through the off-season and the colder months. Tennis courts, a fitness centre, and direct access to the Petit Train du Nord linear park — Quebec's 200-kilometre rail-trail — round out the active programme. In winter, snowshoes and cross-country skis can be picked up at the door.
The free shuttle to the ski village is the practical hinge of the property's positioning. Skiers ride twenty minutes to the gondola base and twenty minutes back — long enough to feel like a real day trip, short enough that nobody loses ski time. For non-skiers and parents who prefer lake mornings to lift queues, the shuttle means the rest of the family can ski while the lake stays available. This is what makes Le Grand Lodge Tremblant's value-luxury anchor: the mountain remains accessible, the lake remains the home base, and the price reflects neither premium.
The strongest occasion fit on the property. Two-bedroom suites with kitchens, a private sand beach for summer, an indoor pool and hot tub for winter, and a free shuttle that takes the older kids to the lifts while younger ones stay lake-side. Self-catering breakfasts cut the cost of a week-long stay considerably, and the lobby is built for board-game evenings by the fire.
The Spa du Village treatment menu, the indoor pool, the sauna, and direct access to the Petit Train du Nord trail combine into a credible mid-tier wellness stay. The lake itself is the real therapy: sunrise paddleboards in summer, snowshoe loops in winter, and a quiet shoreline that does what a spa room cannot. Book a lake-view suite and a full spa half-day.
Quieter than the village hotels, walkable to a 200-kilometre trail, and priced for a multi-night stay without the village premium. Solo travellers get a kitchen, a balcony, the lake at the door, and a shuttle if they want a day on the mountain. The lodge atmosphere is sociable without being intrusive — a fire, a bar, and a dining room you can read in alone.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
Le Grand Lodge gives you a kitchen, a beach, and a free shuttle to the lifts. The structural answer to "where do we put the kids" in Mont-Tremblant.
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