4463 Marine Ave Suite Bar, Powell River, BCV8A 2K3
Pub,
Powell River,BC Canada Westview Hotel Contact information, including address, telephone, email, website and area map Description: Enjoy gorgeous view of Malaspina and Georgia Strait. All units have great ocean view. New units, economic rate available. Centrally located close to all restaurants, shopping facilities, ferry terminal to Comox, sandy beaches, salmon fishing, golf courses, t.v., d.d. phone, kitchen. Westview Hotel Address 4463 Marine, Powell River, British Columbia Canada, V8A 2K2 Phone (604) 485-5025
Surround yourself with the natural beauty of the West Coast at the Beach Gardens Resort & Marina. Relax on your deck as eagles soar through the rustling pines while you watch the ocean for a glimpse of a passing pod of Orca whales. Enjoy the panoramic view of Malaspina Strait, the entrance to Desolation Sound.
DELUXE ROOM AMENITIES
- Located in our new, non-smoking 48-suite building
- Coffee maker, hairdryer, TV, as well as air conditioning, private decks with a fabulous ocean view, and high-speed internet
- Deluxe rooms with queen size beds
- Wheelchair accessible room
Located 100m from Westview ferry terminal, Marine Inn in Powell River offers guests a comfortable place to spend the night. Our facility includes an on-site restaurant and each guest room comes with a refrigerator, cable TV, desk, air conditioning, a coffee maker and free Wi-Fi. Retro Café offers guests American cuisine in a '50s themed setting. A 24-hour reception is offered at Inn Marine. Powell River Historical Museum is 5 minutes' walk away. Inland Lake Provincial Park is 13km away from this accommodation. Give us a call for more information or to book your next stay.
We eat here as locals on a regular basis. Service is average, but the food is pretty decent- great eggs Benny and super sausage. Portion sizes are average which is good if you don't want to overeat.Read more
The resort opened in 1997 and has since then , seen guests from all over the world come and enjoy our chalets in a wilderness setting.Each of our chalets are one of a kind from one bedroom to three bedrooms chalets and some with private hot tubs on the deck. Overlooking Okeover Inlet, the chalets are perched on a hill side surrounded by tall cedars and firs.Each chalet is constructed with native wood and local craftsmen have lent their talents to creating custom designs with a west coast flair. Many of the chalets reflect these talents in the intricate wood designs inlaid on the walls and floors
The oceanfront, 1905 Historic Lund Hotel is located at the tip of BC's beautiful Sunshine Coast, at the Gateway to the renowned Desolation Sound near Powell River. Since built by the Swedish Thulin brothers who founded Lund, the hotel has served as the heart of this quaint village. After falling into disrepair in the latter 1900's, the hotel was purchased by it's current owners in 1999 and has undergone an ongoing series of renovations. The hotel now features 31 renovated guest rooms that range from budget friendly units to lavish boutique style suites, all of which offer clean, bright decors and modern amenities. Our pub, restaurant and decks feature unobstructed ocean views and outstanding dining. We look forward to your visit. The area that is now Lund has been known to the Coast Salish peoples for thousands of years was a village site of the Sliammon people. The village of Klah ah men was home to dozens of families and a desirable location as it was accessible by land and sea so approaching visitors could be detected from afar. Further, both I hohs (Savary Island) and Tohk natch (Okeover Inlet), plentiful in shellfish, salmon and land mammals, were only short paddles away. Fresh water was ample as were Cedar trees, the main material source in the production of tools, shelter, clothing and more. Ceremonies, both spiritual and social in nature, were held at Klah ah men, and included dance, song, and recreational games that were a major part of Coast Salish culture. On July 2, 1792 two surveying crews from Captain George Vancouver's ships 'Chatham' and 'Discovery' came in contact with the Sliammon Nation for the first time. By 1876 the Canadian government had instituted the Federal Indian Act, which established a system of reservations to which Coast Salish peoples were relocated. Into the 1900's these lands were surveyed and sold, while aboriginal peoples, who were not entitled to purchase their traditional lands or enjoy the free land grants offered by the Government to immigrating settlers, were relocated to reservations. In 1889, Fred and Charlie Thulin arrived from Sweden, looking for a better life in the new land of opportunity. The brothers first set eyes upon the area that would later become Lund while sailing by on the side-wheeler tugboat Mermaid on their way to find employment logging in Pendrell Sound.