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Manoir Montmorency

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Just above the Parc de la Chute-Montmorency Cable Car's upper station, the Manoir Montmorency has an information counter, an interpretation center about the falls and Parc de la Chute-Montmorency, a shop and a terrace restaurant (open for lunch 11am to 3:30pm May to October and Sunday brunch year-round). The manor house is a faithful copy dating from 1994 of a summer home built in the late 18th century by Canada’s governor at the time, Sir Frederick Haldimand.


ÀÏ°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±¼Ç¼'s must-see attractions

Nearby ²Ï³Üé²ú±ð³¦ attractions

1. Parc de la Chute-Montmorency

0.11 MILES

The main draw at this national park 15km northeast of ²Ï³Üé²ú±ð³¦ City is the 83m-high Montmorency Falls. Entrance to the park is free, but parking ($7.25 to …

2. Montmorency Falls

0.22 MILES

This waterfall in Parc de la Chute-Montmorency is very close to the ²Ï³Üé²ú±ð³¦ City–side foot of the Pont de l'ÃŽle crossing over to the ÃŽle d’Orléans. It's…

4. Église St-Pierre

3.63 MILES

Built in 1719, this is the oldest church on the Île d'Orléans; it was declared a historical monument in 1954. Mass is no longer celebrated here, but it is…

5. Isle de Bacchus

3.93 MILES

A tour and tasting at this winery should be on your agenda, and there's a gîte (B&B) if you can't drag yourself away from the red, white and rosé. Call…

6. Fort No 1

5.1 MILES

Between 1865 and 1872, the British built three forts on the south shore to protect ²Ï³Üé²ú±ð³¦ against an American invasion that never materialized. One, known…

8. La Forge à Pique-Assaut

5.6 MILES

Artisan blacksmith Guy Bel makes star railings and decorative objects at this économusée (workshop). There's a store attached.