Home >  Hotels >  Alberta >  Hinton 

Super 8 Motel - Hinton, Alberta

284 Smith Street
Hinton, AB T7V 2A1
Nightly Rates (101.15 - 101.15)   1 Star

Arrival Date
Departure Date
Adults
Children


Property Description
In recognition of the standards of excellence achieved, maintained and practised by the housekeeping staff and management, the Super 8 Motel in Hinton recently received the 2008 Housekeeping Award from Alberta Tourism, Parks, Recreation and Culture. 'The motel is in Hinton, a community located near Jasper, nestled in the Eastern Slopes of the Rocky Mountains beside the Athabasca River.

Super 8 Motel


Amenities
  • Continental Breakfast

  • Complimentary Continental Breakfast

  • Free Parking

  • Ice Machine

  • Internet Access – Complimentary

  • High speed internet access

  • Wireless Internet Access

  • Jacuzzi

  • Guest Laundromat

  • Pets Allowed

  • Pets Allowed

  • Heated Pool

  • Indoor Pool

  • Bus Parking

  • Outdoor Parking

  • Recreational Vehicle Parking

  • Truck Parking

  • Sofa Bed

  • Satellite TV


  • Miscellaneous Information
  • Canadian Dollars is the native currency. 

  • Check in time is 3:00 PM 

  • Check out time is 11:00 AM 

  • Opened in  1998 

  • 0  rooms. 

  • 0  suites. 

  • 2  floors. 


  • Directions
    Business district, Expressway

    Restaurant Information
    Ranchers  Royal Garden 

  • Jasper National Park

  • Jasper Townsite


  • Related Alberta Content

    Alberta is a nature-lover’s paradise, enriched by wide open spaces and stunning sunsets. In terms of nature, the province is most renowned for the glorious peaks of the Rocky Mountains and the beauty of its parks, epitomised by Canada’s fist national park, Banff.

    Alberta also has vast plains, but it is the mountainous Rockies where travelers will find their jaw continually dropping. Whether driving along the Icefields Parkway or hiking through a forested park, you will be constantly amazed by this awesome alpine wilderness of woodland, mountains and lakes. If anything exemplifies
    ’picture-postcard’, it is this.

    Even in Alberta’s cities there is plenty of green space, including Canada’s largest historical park, Fort Edmonton Park. Also in Edmonton and other towns is the lingering of traditional prairie attitudes. This may be because Alberta folk love to hark back to the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897. The discovery of oil in the Edmonton area in 1947 assured the city of its future, making it one of Canada’s fastest-growing metropolitan areas. This love affair with the past reaches its apogee in the annual ‘Klondike Days’ extravaganza each July, when Edmontonians relive the Gold Rush days.

    Most people consider Alberta’s true ’gold’ to be its stunning scenery, however. And that makes Alberta one very rich province indeed.

    Geography
    Alberta is the most westerly of the ‘prairie and plains’ provinces, bordered to the west by British Columbia and the Rockies, to the southeast by the badlands and prairie, while in the north, along the border with the Northwest Territories, there is a wilderness of forests, lakes and rivers. Mount Columbia on the western Rocky Mountains border is the highest point, rising to 3,747m (12,293ft). Alberta also has permanent icefields, covering 340 sq km (122 sq miles). They release meltwaters which supply the Mackenzie River flowing into the Arctic Ocean, and the Saskatchewan River flowing into Hudson Bay.


       The Columbus World Travel Guide has been published for 26 years and is sold in over 90 countries worldwide.
  • Overview
  • Where to Go
  • Activities
  • Country Information
  • Weather
  • Travel Tips
  • Food
  • Shopping
  • Events
  • Travel Photos
  • Hotels
  •    Word Travels is a comprehensive travel guide covering hundreds of cities and holiday resorts in more than 125 countries.
  • Information
  • Climate
  • Destinations
  • Airports
  • Attractions
  • Resorts
  • Travel Photos
  • Hotels






  • Why iExplore? About Us iExplore Blog Advertise Site Map Privacy Policy Travel Agents Contact Us