The Top 12 Hotels Near Carrier Roasting
-
A modernist lodge in a town devoted to tradition, Field Guide swims upstream with saturated color and clean lines that feel both irreverent and at home among the peaks. The design proves that contemporary hospitality need not genuflect to New England convention.
-
A 1970s roadside lodge stripped to its bones and rebuilt with forest-green birch interiors, Bluebird Cady Hill sits steps from Cady Hill trails and minutes from Mt. Mansfield. The fifty-five rooms trade retro kitsch for deliberate design, offering the paradox of a place that feels both newly minted and quietly nostalgic.
-
On Cady Hill Forest's edge, AWOL Stowe courts the Instagram-minded with artisanal toast and tabletop s'mores, though its true character emerges after sunset when day-trippers fade. The cold plunge and liveliness of evening suggest a place more interested in indulgence than restraint.
-
A youthful outpost on wooded grounds outside town, this hotel hybrid of glamping and summer camp offers direct access to Stowe's Recreation Path alongside communal fire pits and a notably expansive outdoor pool. The all-day eatery anchors a property designed for guests who want mountain ease without sacrificing contemporary style.
-
A modernist ski lodge that reads like a sixties fever dream filtered through minimalist restraint, all clean lines and utilitarian charm. Tälta sits at the threshold of Stowe's seasons—as at home hosting fly fishers in summer as skiers in winter, with gear storage built into the walls and dogs welcome in certain rooms.
-
A newly built ski lodge in Stowe that foregoes the usual modern-resort shortcuts, favoring instead stone from local quarries and timber harvested nearby. The architecture suggests that proximity to the slopes need not mean indifference to craft.
-
Twin Farms spreads across 300 acres of Vermont forest and meadow, each of its 28 cottages dressed in its own visual language—fishing lodge, Moroccan palace, rustic retreat. The resort outfits guests for hiking, fly fishing, and cross-country skiing with the unhurried care of a place built for couples to disappear into the landscape.
-
A converted farmhouse and barn in Killington channels modern rusticity with genuine style, positioned equally for hiking season and ski runs. The country breakfast anchors days that stretch into evenings at Kent Bistro & Bar, where local sourcing shapes an unhurried menu.
-
A restored Victorian mansion on Willard Street houses fourteen idiosyncratic bedrooms, each one a collision of period molding and contemporary art that feels less like a hotel room than a curator's private study. Lark Hotels' restraint—no lobby theater, no forced grandeur—makes the intimacy feel earned rather than designed.
-
A modernist hotel steps back from the lakeshore with clean lines and city views, its stone-tiled rooms a deliberate break from New England's quilted past. The wood-fired kitchen turns out honest pizzas and lobster rolls while the surrounding block—dense with gastropubs and serious restaurants—asks whether a hotel needs to be destination unto itself.
-
Laurance Rockefeller's 1969 resort commands Woodstock's village green with the understated refinement of old money, its recent renovation preserving rather than reimagining its aristocratic bearing. The dining room serves as the hotel's anchor—a room of genuine formality where the cooking matches the surroundings' quiet confidence.
-
This rambling 19th-century inn in Woodstock Valley maintains its antique rooms and tavern bones while hosting three separate food ventures—a wood-fired pizza restaurant, weekend sushi pop-up, and country-store café—each operating on its own schedule. The place feels less like a unified resort than a village unto itself, which is precisely the point.