The Sofitel Montreal faces Sherbrooke Street in the financial district of Montreal, Quebec, Canada, three blocks from the Museum of Fine Arts. A Metro subway station stands one block from the hotel.
Renoir restaurant prepares French/American style breakfasts, dishes such as lemongrass shrimp and duck confit with andouillette sausage for lunch, and dinner choices that range from tapenade crusted grouper to braised halibut with foie gras broth. Le Bar serves smoked salmon quesadillas as an innovative alternative to favorites such as burgers and club sandwiches. The Sofitel Montreal's two lobby computers provide complimentary high speed Internet access, although wireless Internet access is available for a fee. A 24 hour fitness center contains cardio machines, a Universal gym, free weights, a sauna and a massage room.
Property amenities include concierge services, a gift shop and airport transportation for a fee.
The hotel offers 258 guestrooms in a 17 story glass tower. Floor to ceiling windows provide views of Mount Royal Park or the city. Signature MyBeds include down/feather featherbeds atop mattresses that are draped with Egyptian cotton sheets and lightweight down comforters.
Terry cloth bathrobes and slippers provide lounging comfort, and Roger & Gallet toiletries, candles, and fresh orchids add gracious guestroom accents. Desks feature high speed Internet access, while televisions include high speed access via wireless keyboards. Bottled water is supplied during turndown service. Contemporary dΘcor is expressed with burgundy colored dressing stools/ottomans, and caramel toned wood furnishings with black accents. Large headboards come with directional reading lamps.
Marble bathrooms with black granite vanities contain glassed in stall showers, and deluxe rooms include bathtubs Renoir restaurant takes its name from the famous French painter. Initially, the owner of the hotel possessed Renoir's original painting, "Still Life with Melon and Peaches," but has since donated this masterwork to Montreal's Museum of Fine Arts.
A copy now rests on an easel at the restaurant's entrance.