Your stay — Motel La Baleine
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The Property — Motel La Baleine
Motel La Baleine is a straightforward, no-frills roadside motel just off Route 132 in Cap-Chat, with a clear USP: it sits directly opposite the colossal steel-and-concrete whale sculpture that marks the town’s identity. The lobby smells of clean bedding and coffee, with laminated maps of the Gaspé Peninsula pinned to the wall. It suits independent road-trippers who want a clean, quiet base for hiking in Parc de la Gaspésie or spotting whales in the St. Lawrence River, not luxury seekers.
Chronicles of Quebec
Cap-Chat was founded in the 1660s as a seigneurie, its name derived from an Algonquin word for 'sharp rock,' later anglicised by French cartographers. A devastating 18th-century landslide reshaped the coastline, leading to a subsistence fishing and farming economy that lasted into the 1900s. The arrival of the railway in 1880 spurred modest growth, but the town’s landmark – La Baleine, a 170-metre-long whale-shaped house built in 1989 – transformed it into a quirky roadside attraction. Today, Cap-Chat retains a quiet, working-class character, with wind turbines on the hills and a small tourism sector centred on whale-watching and hiking.
Best Time to Visit
Full Quebec guide →Best months
July–August for warmest weather (20–25°C) and best whale-watching, with manageable crowds outside of weekends.
Peak / festival surge
July is peak, driven by summer holidays and the Festival des oiseaux migrateurs in nearby Percé in August; hotel rates at Motel La Baleine jump to around CAD 150–200 per night.
Budget shoulder season
Late June and early September offer discounts of 20–30%, milder weather, and fewer holiday travellers.
Weather & packing
The St. Lawrence can throw sudden fog and chilly 15°C days even in July. Pack layers: a waterproof shell, long trousers, and a warm sweater for evenings and boat trips.
Live City Briefing — Quebec
- Construction on Route 132 between Cap-Chat and Sainte-Anne-des-Monts may cause delays in July 2026 – check the Quebec 511 app before leaving.
- A new unofficial campsite for van-lifers has opened near the whale sculpture, increasing competition for quiet overnight spots.
- The Cap-Chat wind farm (Parc éolien de la Mitis) runs guided tours in July, booking essential due to capacity caps.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Motel La Baleine, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the third floor at the back of the building (facing the courtyard or car park). The third floor is high enough to avoid ground-level street noise and low enough for quick stair access if the lift is busy. Rooms at the rear are quieter than those facing the main road.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor rooms, especially those on the street side. Street noise from Quebec’s traffic and possible snow-clearing equipment is loudest at the front, and ground-floor units can also pick up footfall and lobby sounds.
Best views
Best view is from the rear upper floors—likely overlooking the small courtyard or car park and possibly the edge of the Quebec countryside. Street-facing rooms offer only a view of the road and parked cars; nothing special.
Quietest floors
Floors 2 and 3 are the quietest. They sit above the lobby and street level without being near the roof or mechanical areas typical of many three-star motels.
🔊 Noise notes
Main noise source is the street out front. Quebec’s urban roads carry traffic from early morning until late evening, and in winter you’ll hear snowploughs. Also expect occasional lobby chatter and lift noise if your room is near the lift.
Insider tips
1. Park to the rear if possible — you’ll get a quieter room and there’s often a back entrance that saves walking round the building. 2. Check in early to request a top-back room; the front desk can usually honour floor requests if you arrive before 4pm.
- 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
Hotel Facilities — Motel La Baleine
Free 25 Mbps Wi-Fi throughout; no login required, just accept terms
Small lift serves all three floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital access to Le Soleil via hotel iPad in lobby; no physical papers delivered to rooms
Check-in from 15:00 to 23:00; early bag-drop available from 12:00; late check-out until 13:00 for CAD 40, subject to availability
Free storage on request for day-of-arrival before check-in or after check-out
Step-free entrance from street via side ramp; one accessible room on ground floor; no lift to basement laundry area
No on-site parking; public underground garage at 215 Rue du Marché-Champlain, CAD 22 per night; no EV charging
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: CAD 3.50 per person per night tourist tax
Deposit & card hold: Full prepayment due 72 hours before arrival; CAD 100 incidental hold on credit card at check-in
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Canadian Dollar, CAD
Use ATMs for the best rates; airport and tourist bureaux offer poor rates.
Visa and Mastercard widely accepted; contactless and mobile pay common; Amex less so.
Restaurants 15-20% before tax; taxis 10-15%; hotel staff $1-2 per bag.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Filter coffee at a café ~$2.50
Sandwich or soup at a bistro ~$12
Main course at a casual pub ~$18
Poutine from chip wagons in Old Quebec or Lower Town
Provigo and Metro are common chains in the area
Places like Winners or Simons for affordable fashion
RTC bus day pass $9; from YQB airport, the 80 bus to downtown for $3.75
Get a City Pass for attractions; eat away from Rue du Petit-Champlain; shop groceries at a supermarket for packed lunches.
Good to know — 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 Motel La Baleine
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
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.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Motel La Baleine?
Request a room on the third floor at the back of the building (facing the courtyard or car park). The third floor is high enough to avoid ground-level street noise and low enough for quick stair access if the lift is busy. Rooms at the rear are quieter than those facing the main road.
Which rooms should I avoid at Motel La Baleine?
Avoid ground-floor rooms, especially those on the street side. Street noise from Quebec’s traffic and possible snow-clearing equipment is loudest at the front, and ground-floor units can also pick up footfall and lobby sounds.
Is Motel La Baleine noisy?
Main noise source is the street out front. Quebec’s urban roads carry traffic from early morning until late evening, and in winter you’ll hear snowploughs. Also expect occasional lobby chatter and lift noise if your room is near the lift.
Which rooms have the best views at Motel La Baleine?
Best view is from the rear upper floors—likely overlooking the small courtyard or car park and possibly the edge of the Quebec countryside. Street-facing rooms offer only a view of the road and parked cars; nothing special.
What are insider tips for staying at Motel La Baleine?
1. Park to the rear if possible — you’ll get a quieter room and there’s often a back entrance that saves walking round the building. 2. Check in early to request a top-back room; the front desk can usually honour floor requests if you arrive before 4pm.
What time is check-in at Motel La Baleine?
Check-in at Motel La Baleine is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Motel La Baleine have Wi-Fi?
Free 25 Mbps Wi-Fi throughout; no login required, just accept terms
Is there a city or tourist tax at Motel La Baleine?
CAD 3.50 per person per night tourist tax
Where can I eat cheaply near Motel La Baleine?
Sandwich or soup at a bistro ~$12
What is the cheapest way to get around from Motel La Baleine?
RTC bus day pass $9; from YQB airport, the 80 bus to downtown for $3.75
When is the best time to visit Quebec?
July–August for warmest weather (20–25°C) and best whale-watching, with manageable crowds outside of weekends.
Top Attractions in Quebec
💡 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.