A railway baron's 1880 mansion in the Golden Square Mile. Ninety rooms, a Tiffany glass dome, and the most genuine old-world setting in Montreal.
"A railway baron's 1880 mansion grafted onto a glass tower. Ninety rooms, a member's club bar under a Tiffany dome, and the most genuine old-world setting in the city. Stay here once and Montreal's other hotels feel disposable."
Le Mount Stephen begins with a building most Montreal hotels could not begin to match. The original house at 1440 Drummond Street was completed in 1880 for Lord George Stephen, the Aberdeenshire-born financier who co-founded the Canadian Pacific Railway and bound the new Dominion together with steel rails. Built from imported sandstone in a Renaissance Revival style, with mahogany panelling, Italian marble fireplaces, hand-tooled English ceilings, and a Tiffany stained-glass dome that still floods the great staircase with coloured light, the mansion served for a century as the Mount Stephen Club — the most exclusive private members' room in Canada.
The hotel reopened in 2017 after a six-year, hundred-million-dollar restoration that married the heritage mansion to a discreet eleven-storey glass tower behind it. The result is a property of two distinct moods. The mansion houses the public rooms — the bar, the restaurant, a handful of suites with original woodwork — while the tower contains the bulk of the ninety guest rooms, designed by Lemay + Toby Chu in a quiet, contemporary register. The transition between the two — historic stone to modern glass — is handled with such care that most guests cross it without noticing.
Bar George, on the mansion's ground floor, is the defining room. Named for Stephen himself, it occupies what was once the principal drawing room and library, with the original hearth, panelling, and stained-glass restored. The kitchen serves a refined British-Canadian menu — Cumbria lamb, Quebec foie gras, a proper Sunday roast — while the bar list runs deep into the rare Scotch and small-batch rye. It is one of the few hotel restaurants in Montreal where locals book ahead months in advance. The Tiffany dome above the staircase is best viewed from the bar's far corner with a Negroni in hand at dusk.
The Atelier Spa, two floors below ground, is small by international standards — five treatment rooms, a hammam, an indoor lap pool, a Finnish sauna — but the calibre of the therapists and the quietness of the space make it the most restorative spa in central Montreal. The fitness centre is properly equipped. Guests can request late check-out and lingering hammam access on arrival; the staff understand that Montreal's winters reward this kind of slowness. A small business library and a reading lounge in the original house round out the public spaces.
Le Mount Stephen sits on Drummond Street in the heart of the Golden Square Mile — once home to the families that owned seventy percent of Canada's wealth, today the cluster of nineteenth-century mansions, university buildings, and quiet gardens at the foot of Mount Royal. The Museum of Fine Arts is three blocks away. Sherbrooke Street's couture houses are a one-block walk. McGill's wrought-iron gates close out the quarter at its eastern edge. With only ninety rooms, the hotel never feels crowded; staff recognise returning guests by name within a day. For couples seeking a Montreal stay that feels considered rather than corporate, Le Mount Stephen is the obvious answer.
For an anniversary in Montreal, Le Mount Stephen is the hotel that makes the city feel like the right setting rather than an interchangeable backdrop. Reserve a Mansion Suite with original woodwork, dinner at Bar George under the Tiffany dome, and a couples' hammam treatment the morning after. The hotel keeps a quiet guest-history file and remembers preferences from previous visits. For a milestone year — tenth, twenty-fifth — the staff will arrange a private viewing of the original Stephen library on request.
Le Mount Stephen suits the honeymoon couple who has already done Paris and is looking for something quieter, more northerly, more wooded. The room of choice is a tower Premier Suite for the Mount Royal view at sunrise, with first dinner at Bar George and a long second morning in the Atelier Spa. The concierge will arrange a private tour of the Notre-Dame Basilica before the public hour, a winter sleigh ride on the mountain, or a tasting at a Eastern Townships vineyard within ninety minutes of the city.
The hotel works unusually well for the solo traveller seeking a few days of quiet writing, reading, or recovery. The reading lounge in the original mansion is open to guests at all hours and is rarely occupied before noon. Bar George serves a proper single diner with the same care as a couple. Order the Sunday roast at the bar with a glass of claret, walk Mount Royal in the morning, and use the spa in the afternoon. Few hotels make solitude feel this dignified.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
Le Mount Stephen has the heritage, the dining room, and the spa to mark a milestone year without resorting to anything obvious. Begin with the right hotel; let the city do the rest.
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