🇨🇦 Quebec, Canada
Café de la Traverse
📍 37, Rue Fontenelle, Quebec, G4X6R1
あなたの滞在 — Café de la Traverse
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財産 — Café de la Traverse
Café de la Traverse feels more like a friendly neighbourhood bistro with rooms than a hotel. The small lobby smells of fresh coffee and croissants, with a bicycle parked by the reception desk and a chalkboard listing daily specials. It suits independent travellers who want a simple, clean base in Old Quebec, not frills or a concierge. You're here for the location—steps from the Saint-Louis Forts and the Terrasse Dufferin—and the fact that the on-site café serves a proper breakfast without a buffet scrum.
Quebecの歴史
Founded by Samuel de Champlain in 1608, Quebec City is the oldest European settlement in North America north of Mexico, originally a fur-trading post. The walled Upper Town evolved around the Château Saint-Louis, seat of French and then British colonial power. After the 1759 Battle of the Plains of Abraham, the city became distinctly British in architecture and governance, but French language and Catholic traditions endured. Today its fortified core—a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1985—blends 17th-century stone buildings, Art Deco hotels and a buzzing Latin Quarter with student bars and craft breweries. The city identities itself fiercely as the cradle of French Canada, with a calendar built around winter carnival, summer festivals and a deep attachment to local food and music.
訪れるのに最適な時間
Quebec完全ガイド →最高の月
June to August are prime for warm weather, open-air terraces and manageable crowds—city stays lively but never overcrowded outside festival peaks.
ピーク/フェスティバル Surge
July is the absolute peak: the Festival d'Été de Québec (annual music festival) fills streets and parks with 300+ shows over 11 days. Hotel prices roughly double; book six months ahead. July also hosts the Grand Prix Cycliste and Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day (24 June) spilling into early July.
予算肩の季節
September and early October offer discounts of 30–40% on summer rates, with crisp, sunny days and brilliant fall foliage. Crowds thin after Labour Day, and you can still eat on patios through most of September.
天気&パッケージ
Quebec City in late June can swing from 28°C sunny to 12°C rainy in a single afternoon. Pack a waterproof shell and a midweight sweater in your daypack every single day.
LIVE CITY BRIEFING — Quebec
- The tramway project linking the city centre to Lévis has been cancelled; roadworks and bus lane changes may cause delays along Boulevard Laurier through summer 2026.
- Fortifications of Quebec National Historic Site completed a major interpretive upgrade in spring 2025—new guided walks and a digital app now cover the ramparts' military history.
- Rue Saint-Jean pedestrianisation extends further east in summer 2026, so expect more outdoor seating and slower traffic between the Porte Saint-Jean and the Cathedral.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Café de la Traverse, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the second floor, rear side (away from Rue Fontenelle). The lift is small but works – second floor is one flight up, quieter than the street-facing third floor and easier for luggage. Rear rooms overlook the inner courtyard, cutting traffic noise from the old city.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms. The side ramp entrance and lobby noise carry, plus Rue Fontenelle foot traffic is audible. Also avoid front-facing third-floor rooms: street noise (cafés, tour groups) peaks there and the lift stops right outside, so you hear doors and conversation.
Best views
Rooms on the upper rear (second or third floor) overlooking the inner courtyard give a view of old stone walls and greenery – not spectacular but calm. Front rooms see Rue Fontenelle and the Place d'Youville park beyond, which is pleasant but noisy.
Quietest floors
Second floor (floors 1 and 2 in European numbering – level above ground) – furthest from street and lift activity while still avoiding ground-level hum.
🔊 Noise notes
Rue Fontenelle is a narrow street in Vieux-Québec busy with pedestrians, tour groups and evening bar noise. The hotel’s side entrance with ramp faces a small lane – less traffic but occasional service vehicles. No on-site parking: garage under Place d'Youville adds a 2-minute walk over cobbles; no EV charging means hybrid/EV drivers need a nearby public charger.
Insider tips
Park at Place d'Youville garage (CAD 25/night) and enter the hotel via the side ramp to avoid the steep front step. Ask at check-in for a room key that works the side door – it’s quieter for late returns. The lift is tight: if your bags are bulky, ask for a ground-floor or second-floor room to skip the squeeze.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
ホテル施設 — Café de la Traverse
Free Wi-Fi throughout; speed around 15 Mbps; no login required
Small lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital access to Le Soleil via hotel tablet in lobby; no physical papers
Check-in 15:00–23:00; early bag-drop from 10:00 at no charge; late check-out until 12:00 for CAD 30 (subject to availability)
Free luggage room; ask at front desk
Step-free entrance via ramp at side door; lift to all floors but no specific accessible room adaptations
No on-site parking; public garage under Place d'Youville (2-minute walk) CAD 25 per night; no EV charging on site
税金、税金、預金
City / tourist tax: CAD 3.50 per person per night
Deposit & card hold: First night charged at booking; CAD 100 incidentals hold on credit card at check-in
Faith & Dietary 近く
- Church: Saint-Majorique (35 m · ~1 min walk)
地元のライフスタイル&レクリエーション
Gespeg Micmac interpretation site — 2.4 km · ~30 min walk
お金 & 通貨
Get a travel card →Canadian Dollar, CAD
Use ATMs for best rates; avoid airport and hotel exchange desks which charge poor rates and high fees.
Credit and debit cards accepted almost everywhere, including contactless and mobile pay; carry some cash for small rural shops.
Restaurants: 15–20% pre-tax; taxis: 10–15%; hotel staff: $2–5 per bag or per night for housekeeping.
食事、ショッピング、旅行 予算
Cheap car hire →Drip coffee from a convenience store or local cafe around $2.00.
A sandwich or soup from a supermarket deli counter for about $8–10.
A main course at a family-style restaurant or pub for $15–20.
Food trucks and market stalls appear in summer at local parks and squares; poutine and hot dogs are staples.
Metro and IGA are the common budget supermarkets in this area.
Winners and Giant Tiger offer discounted brand-name clothing and basics.
Local bus fare is about $3.75 per ride; no day pass cheaper than that. From Montreal airport, take the 747 bus downtown ($10) then a regional bus to the area.
Buy groceries at Metro or IGA for meals; use public transit instead of taxis; look for free outdoor festivals in summer.
知るのがいい — Quebec
Type A/B · 120V
safe
$1 ≈ C$1.42 · CAD
Emergency Contacts
QuebecWhere to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Quebec, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Café de la Traverse
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →回り回る
Jean Lesage International Airport (YQB) → Chauveau Ouest & St-Louis
💡 Get off at St-Louis & Chauveau Ouest, then walk 6 minutes. Exact change required; buy a reloadable RFID card at the airport kiosk for easier transfers.
Gare du Palais (train station) → Auberge La Goéliche
💡 This express bus runs along Boulevard Charest then up Henri-IV. Sit on the left side for river views near the end. Off-peak runs can be 10 min late.
Montreal Central Station → Gare du Palais, Québec City
💡 Buy economy tickets 14 days ahead for the best price. From Gare du Palais, catch RTC #801 or take a 20-min Uber to the hotel.
Jean Lesage International Airport (YQB) → Auberge La Goéliche
💡 Book a flat-rate taxi through the airport's official booth to avoid surge pricing. Tipping 10–15% is standard.
よくある質問
What are the best rooms at Café de la Traverse?
Request a room on the second floor, rear side (away from Rue Fontenelle). The lift is small but works – second floor is one flight up, quieter than the street-facing third floor and easier for luggage. Rear rooms overlook the inner courtyard, cutting traffic noise from the old city.
Which rooms should I avoid at Café de la Traverse?
Avoid ground-floor rooms. The side ramp entrance and lobby noise carry, plus Rue Fontenelle foot traffic is audible. Also avoid front-facing third-floor rooms: street noise (cafés, tour groups) peaks there and the lift stops right outside, so you hear doors and conversation.
Is Café de la Traverse noisy?
Rue Fontenelle is a narrow street in Vieux-Québec busy with pedestrians, tour groups and evening bar noise. The hotel’s side entrance with ramp faces a small lane – less traffic but occasional service vehicles. No on-site parking: garage under Place d'Youville adds a 2-minute walk over cobbles; no EV charging means hybrid/EV drivers need a nearby public charger.
Which rooms have the best views at Café de la Traverse?
Rooms on the upper rear (second or third floor) overlooking the inner courtyard give a view of old stone walls and greenery – not spectacular but calm. Front rooms see Rue Fontenelle and the Place d'Youville park beyond, which is pleasant but noisy.
What are insider tips for staying at Café de la Traverse?
Park at Place d'Youville garage (CAD 25/night) and enter the hotel via the side ramp to avoid the steep front step. Ask at check-in for a room key that works the side door – it’s quieter for late returns. The lift is tight: if your bags are bulky, ask for a ground-floor or second-floor room to skip the squeeze.
What time is check-in at Café de la Traverse?
Check-in at Café de la Traverse is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Café de la Traverse have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi throughout; speed around 15 Mbps; no login required
Is there a city or tourist tax at Café de la Traverse?
CAD 3.50 per person per night
Where can I eat cheaply near Café de la Traverse?
A sandwich or soup from a supermarket deli counter for about $8–10.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Café de la Traverse?
Local bus fare is about $3.75 per ride; no day pass cheaper than that. From Montreal airport, take the 747 bus downtown ($10) then a regional bus to the area.
When is the best time to visit Quebec?
June to August are prime for warm weather, open-air terraces and manageable crowds—city stays lively but never overcrowded outside festival peaks.
Quebecのトップ観光スポット
💡 Come at dusk for the free sound-and-light show on the square's buildings (projected on walls, May–October, starts at 9:00 PM).
💡 Visit on a free Sunday but get there by 10:00—queue forms fast. The permanent First Peoples exhibition is top-notch.
💡 Skip the main tourist drag on Rue Saint-Jean—cut into the side alleys like Rue des Jardins for quieter spots and cheaper cafes.
💡 Go early morning to avoid crowds and see the mist over the St. Lawrence. Free guided tours run in summer but you need to book online.
💡 Take the 800 bus from downtown (€3.50) instead of a tour. Walk down the staircase on the east side—less crowded and better photos. Free to enter the park.