
Groupon: Top Reasons to Stay at The 4-Star Chateaux Deer Valley
Located just a few steps from the Deer Valley Resort in Park City, Utah, The Chateaux Deer Valley is a French chateau -inspired, AAA Four-Diamond hotel in the heart of the Wasatch Mountains.
Comfy and chic guest rooms are equipped with stone fireplaces, cashmere throws, heated towel racks, flat-screen TVs, and jetted tubs.
In the summer, the nearby chairlifts whisk you up Deer Mountain, where you can mountain bike and hike down several trails. Warm weather also means alpine golf at several local courses.
At the on-site Cena Ristorante and Lounge, diners dig into Italian eats such as creminelli pepperoni pizza ($11), cheese raviolo and prociutto ($20), and chicken parmesan ($25). Choose options 2 or 3 for a $100 dining credit.
Guests can cool off in the courtyard pool or spend a breezy summer night in the hot tub.
Park City’s historic Main Street—lined with art galleries, boutiques, and independent restaurants—is just a five-minute shuttle ride away.
Park City, Utah: Historical Mining Town Turned Ski Mecca
Park City has humble roots as a mining town nestled in the Wasatch Range east of Salt Lake City—but in the past 30-odd years, the town has blossomed into an international skiing destination. That’s largely due to Park City Mountain Resort, a venue for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games halfpipe and alpine giant-slalom events. Each winter, the mountain is blanketed with an average of 365 inches of snow, which means plenty of fresh powder across 100-plus ski runs and three terrain parks. In the warmer months, you can weave through groves of trees on miles of hiking and mountain-biking trails. The Alpine Coaster, open year round, hurtles down the mountain at speeds of up to 30 miles per hour.
Back in town, Park City's former saloons and boarding houses have given way to more than 100 independent boutiques, 30 art galleries, and 50 restaurants along historical Main Street. For about 10 days each January, Park City glams it up Hollywood style as the host of the Sundance Film Festival. When Sundance isn’t in town, you can catch a play, concert, or comedy show at the circa-1929 Egyptian Theatre. The discovery of King Tut’s tomb in the early ’20s launched a nationwide fascination with ancient Egypt, and hundreds of Egyptian-revival theaters were built across the country. Today, Park City’s carefully preserved theater is one of only six of its kind remaining in the United States.
Located on the main drag, the 12,000-square-foot Park City Museum chronicles the town’s history with artifacts and interactive exhibits. In the eerie museum basement, you can check out the former territorial jail—nicknamed “the dungeon” for its dim lighting, stone walls, and rusted leg irons. In the space between cells, Wanted posters showcase the outlaws, murderers, and thieves who passed through the subterranean slammer.
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