Times Colonist

Once-closed inn, manor house rented to families

- MORGAN LOWRIE

SAINT-FELIX-DE-KINGSEY, Que. — When Nathalie Gagnon and her partner bought a closed-down inn in Quebec last year, they had no intention of reopening it under the traditiona­l model.

Instead, the couple decided to list the entire 17-bedroom, eight-bathroom hotel — complete with pool, sauna, kitchen, game room and hot tub — online on a short-term rental website.

Gagnon and her husband already owned a smaller property they rented out on a home and cottage rental website, and decided the concept might work for their “Au Domaine William Wentworth” inn.

“Traditiona­l doesn’t work as well right now,” Gagnon said in a recent interview in the establishm­ent, which borders a river in Saint-Félix-de-Kingsey, about halfway between Montreal and Quebec City.

“There are too many places offering the same services.”

For groups of 36 or more, Gagnon and her partner throw in an adjacent five-bedroom, two-bath Victorian manor home built in the late 19th century by Wentworth, a British loyalist who settled in the area.

Massages and other wellness services are available, but only by request.

The property is listed beginning at $1,495 per night.

While short-term rental websites have been around for decades, the runaway popularity of sites like Airbnb has led to an expansion in the kinds of properties that are offered for rent, according to one hospitalit­y industry expert.

“You’re going to see more and more people who have extra space that’s unused find ways to try to rent it … from sailing boats to old warehouses to tree forts,” said Chris Gibbs, a professor at Ryerson University’s school of Hospitalit­y and Tourism Management.

He said the change may also be driven by a shift in customer preference toward unique, personaliz­ed experience­s rather than a simple hotel stay.

“When it comes to food, people want bolder flavours, more variety,” he said. “When it comes to accommodat­ion, they want different experience­s too, like the ability to sleep in a tent, or a Winnebago.”

A representa­tive of the company that lists Gagnon’s property agreed.

“Families don’t live together in the same place anymore,” said Camille Dumas.

“Families prefer to meet somewhere and rent a place to themselves [rather than] rooms in an inn.”

A quick glance around several shortterm rental websites shows no shortage of unique accommodat­ion experience­s, be it a lighthouse in Prince Edward Island, a treehouse in British Columbia or a houseboat in Ontario — the latter available on getmyboat.com, which has been described as “Airbnb for boats.”

In exchange for a fee, short-term rental platforms generally handle all the booking and advertisin­g costs, saving property owners the expense of investing in technology, Gibbs said.

And, while finding a whole inn to rent is still a rarity, he points out an increasing number of three-and-four-bedroom luxury homes are being listed.

Gagnon’s inn was built as a health- and wellness-themed facility in the mid-1990s by Quebec TV personalit­y Claire Lamarche, but closed in 2011 due to declining customer demand.

Thus far, Gagnon says “Au domaine William Wentworth” has been a success and is booked for every weekend until November.

“I guess we were crazy,” Gagnon said of the decision to purchase the property.

“But, sometimes in life, opportunit­ies come up and you have to decide whether you’re getting on the train.”

 ??  ?? Nathalie Gagnon in front of her historic chalet in Saint-Félix-de-Kingsey, Quebec, which she rents out along with a 17-bedroom, eight-bathroom hotel, catering to families who want to vacation together.
Nathalie Gagnon in front of her historic chalet in Saint-Félix-de-Kingsey, Quebec, which she rents out along with a 17-bedroom, eight-bathroom hotel, catering to families who want to vacation together.

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