Apartment-style suites above the cobblestone shops. Studio to two-bedroom with kitchens. The village at your door.
"Apartments above the village shops — the cobblestones at your door, the gondola a five-minute walk."
Tour des Voyageurs is the address most Tremblant regulars eventually settle on once they have done a couple of seasons at the Westin and Fairmont. The two towers — Voyageurs I and II — sit on Chemin du Curé-Deslauriers, directly above the run of restaurants, ski-rental shops and après-ski bars that line the cobblestone main street of the pedestrian village. From the front door of either tower, the hum of the village is one floor down; the gondola base is a five-minute walk through the cobbles. There is no shuttle and no car involved at any point. The quoted address is 169 Chemin du Curé-Deslauriers, Mont-Tremblant, QC J8E 1J2.
The two towers between them hold roughly 190 condo-style suites configured from compact studios up to two-bedroom apartments. Every unit is privately owned and managed by Station Mont Tremblant under a single rental programme, which means the inventory is consistent at the structural level — full kitchens, dishwashers, washer-dryers in most categories, gas fireplaces and, in many of the higher floors, balconies looking out over either the village or the mountain. The interiors vary suite by suite depending on the owner: some are recently renovated, others are honest mid-2000s ski-condo. Booking through the resort's central reservations rather than a third-party site gives the front desk room to place a guest in a refreshed unit.
The trade-off versus Lodge de la Montagne — the other apartment-style option in the village — is straightforward and worth thinking about before booking. Lodge de la Montagne sits closer to the gondola base by a couple of minutes, but it is set back from the cobblestone shopping street; Tour des Voyageurs trades the slightly longer walk to the lifts for a much shorter walk to the bars, the bakery, and the boutiques. For a group whose evenings will outnumber their early starts, Voyageurs is the better address. For a hard-charging ski week with first-chair ambitions every morning, Lodge de la Montagne edges it.
Shared amenities are sensibly scoped: a heated outdoor pool open year-round, a hot tub, a small fitness room and an underground car park. There is no on-site restaurant or formal lobby bar, and that is largely the point — guests eat and drink in the village, which is exactly the appeal. Front-desk staff are bilingual, helpful with ski-pass collection and rental bookings, and fluent in handling the slightly chaotic check-in patterns of large family groups.
The economics are why groups of four to six tend to book here for ski weeks. A two-bedroom suite at CAD $260–550 per night sleeps six adults comfortably, includes a kitchen that handles breakfast and the inevitable late-night raid, and works out per-head at roughly half what equivalent rooms cost at the Westin or the Fairmont. For a bachelor or bachelorette weekend that wants the apartment-share atmosphere rather than four separate hotel rooms, for a family of five, or for an anniversary couple who would rather cook one meal at home and walk fifty steps to dinner the next night, this is the right shape of stay. It is not luxury in the Quintessence sense — but it is honest about what it is, and it is exactly where the village lives.
For a family of four-to-six, a two-bedroom suite at Tour des Voyageurs is the most economical good answer in the village. Full kitchen handles breakfast and snacks; the cobblestone pedestrian street is one floor below for evening dinners and ice-cream walks; the gondola is a five-minute boot-walk. Children can be sent down to the heated outdoor pool while parents finish a coffee. Request a refreshed unit and a higher floor with a mountain-side balcony.
A two-bedroom apartment at the centre of the bar strip is the right shape for a bachelor or bachelorette weekend in Tremblant. Six friends share one suite rather than scattering across four hotel rooms; the kitchen handles the morning recovery; the village's bars and restaurants are quite literally the floor below. Cheaper per head than the Westin and considerably more sociable. Hot tub access on the cold walk back from dinner is the obvious closer.
For an anniversary couple who would rather have an apartment than a hotel room — cook one dinner in, walk fifty steps to a restaurant the next night, take a coffee onto the balcony at sunrise — a one-bedroom suite at Tour des Voyageurs is the quietly romantic choice. Request a unit on a high floor with a mountain-facing balcony and a gas fireplace. For a more theatrical anniversary, Hôtel Quintessence on the lake is the better address.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
A two-bedroom apartment at Tour des Voyageurs sleeps six, sits above the cobblestone village, and works out per-head at roughly half the cost of the Westin or Fairmont. Compare it against the rest of our Mont-Tremblant ranking.
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