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    Hotel in Telluride, United States

    Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection

    1,295pts

    Ski-In Mountain Village Basecamp

    Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection, Hotel in Telluride

    About Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection

    Sitting ski-in, ski-out in Telluride's Mountain Village, the Madeline Hotel & Residences is part of the Auberge Resorts Collection and earned a Michelin Key in 2024. Across 94 guest rooms, 43 residences, two restaurants, and a year-round outdoor pool deck with San Juan Mountain views, the property positions itself as a serious year-round base for Colorado high-country travel. Rates begin at $489 per night in low season.

    Where Mountain Village Meets Considered Service

    Step off the gondola at Telluride's Mountain Village and the Madeline Hotel & Residences announces itself through restraint rather than spectacle. The palette is earthen: warm ochres, muted grays, and the kind of textured stone that references the San Juan Mountains without imitating them. Skis clip into racks a few paces from the lobby. The lift is visible from the entrance. This is not incidental — the entire property is arranged around the logic of a guest who wants to move between wilderness and warmth with as little friction as possible.

    Telluride has made a quiet ascent over the past decade. What was once positioned as a more offbeat alternative to Aspen or Vail has developed its own tier of serious luxury infrastructure, and the Madeline sits at the upper end of that shift. Part of the Auberge Resorts Collection — the group behind Auberge du Soleil in Napa , it carries the collection's signature emphasis on place-specific design and staff culture. Where other Auberge properties, such as Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort in Kailua Kona or Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, lean into their respective landscapes as a primary identity, the Madeline does the same with Colorado high-country specificity.

    A Service Model Built Around the Mountain Day

    The editorial angle that leading defines the Madeline is not its room count or its acreage , it is the way service is structured around the guest's physical rhythm. Staff culture at ski-country properties tends to bifurcate between two failure modes: overly formal, which reads as imported from an urban grand hotel and sits awkwardly in mountain boots, or aggressively casual, which serves skiers but loses guests seeking considered hospitality. The Madeline occupies the more disciplined middle ground.

    La Liste's 2026 Leading Hotels ranking awarded the property 92.5 points, and voter commentary from that evaluation is instructive: one family has returned for a decade and notes that the guest experience has continued to improve year over year. That kind of long-horizon loyalty is a meaningful signal. It suggests a staff culture oriented toward recognition and continuity , the kind where a returning guest's ski boot size is remembered, where a post-ski treatment is recommended rather than merely offered. The property earned a Michelin Key in 2024, a credential that, in the hospitality context, reflects consistency of experience alongside physical quality.

    Anticipatory service at mountain properties is a more specific discipline than at urban hotels. Recovery matters here as much as arrival: what a guest needs at 4pm after six hours on Telluride's steeper runs differs sharply from what they need at check-in. The Madeline's spa programming reflects this. Post-ski treatments include deep-targeted pressure work with arnica-infused anti-inflammatory oil and hot river stone massage aimed at overworked muscles. These are not generalist spa offerings reskinned for a ski address , they address the specific physiological toll of high-altitude alpine activity. For comparison, properties like Canyon Ranch Tucson in Tucson build their identity almost entirely around therapeutic programming; at the Madeline, that expertise is woven into a broader mountain-stay proposition rather than positioned as the lead offer.

    Spaces: Rooms, Residences, and What Sits Between

    The property runs 94 guest rooms and 43 residences across configurations from two to four bedrooms. That residential tier is significant in the Mountain Village context, where multi-generational family travel and group ski trips are a regular pattern rather than an exception. The residences carry the amenities of the hotel , spa access, dining, the Alpine Swim Club , without sacrificing the kitchen and living space that a week-long mountain trip often requires. Other Telluride properties, including Camel's Garden Hotel & Condominiums and Lumière with Inspirato, also offer condo-format accommodation, but the Madeline's hotel-grade service layer is what differentiates the residence product from a direct vacation rental.

    Room design follows the same earthen reference palette as the public spaces, with contemporary finishes rather than the rusticated-log aesthetic that defines older mountain properties in the region. The San Juan Mountain views carry their own authority , the outdoor pool deck, open year-round, frames sunsets against the Rocky Mountain ridgeline in a way that no interior amenity can replicate.

    Dining at the Madeline: Two Rooms, One Philosophy

    Mountain resort dining in Colorado has historically defaulted to one of two modes: the grand steakhouse built for expense-account skiing, or the casual après-ski bar where cuisine is secondary to crowd and temperature. The Madeline operates two distinct rooms that together suggest a third approach. Timber Room is the property's social center, the kind of space designed for long tables and shared plates after a day outdoors, serving casual modern mountain cuisine sourced from Western Slope farms. Black Iron Kitchen & Bar takes a somewhat more focused position, with the Executive Chef drawing on the same local agricultural sourcing for what the property describes as hearty, rustic cooking shaped by seasonal availability. Both rooms lean on Western Slope produce as an explicit anchor , a grounding in regional specificity that separates them from generic mountain resort menus. For a broader view of where these dining rooms sit in Telluride's food scene, see our full Telluride restaurants guide.

    Year-Round Access to the San Juans

    The ski-in, ski-out positioning is the property's most legible credential in winter , the Madeline sits at Mountain Village, which places it halfway up the slope from Telluride proper, with lift access at the leading and the complimentary gondola a few steps from the entrance for the descent to town. The gondola connection to Telluride's historic downtown, where the New Sheridan Hotel and the New Sheridan Historic Bar anchor the Victorian-era streetscape, takes minutes rather than a car trip. The Hotel Telluride and The Inn at Lost Creek occupy different positions in the Mountain Village tier, the former more budget-accessible, the latter more boutique in scale.

    In summer, the same Mountain Village location gives direct access to hiking trails and the Colorado backcountry. Fly fishing, mountain biking, and the Telluride Film Festival , held in the town below , represent the off-season case for the property. That the Madeline presents itself explicitly as a year-round destination, not simply a ski hotel, reflects both the diversification of Telluride's visitor profile and the Auberge Collection's general preference for properties that hold value across seasons. Properties in similarly scenically anchored settings , Sage Lodge in Pray in Montana's Paradise Valley, or Amangiri in Canyon Point in southern Utah , operate the same seasonal multiplicity, converting the natural setting into a year-round argument rather than a single-season play.

    Getting There and Booking

    Telluride Regional Airport (TEX) is ten minutes from the property; Montrose Regional Airport (MTJ), served by connections through Denver International Airport (DEN), sits approximately 80 minutes away. Rates begin at $489 per night during low season and reach $1,259 per night at peak. Reservations require direct engagement with the Auberge customer service team to confirm , the property collects additional guest preference information before finalizing bookings, which is consistent with the service-personalization model described above. The 110-room total, split between the 94-room hotel and 43 residences, means the property operates at a scale large enough for conference and event use , 7,300 square feet of event space is available , while remaining intimate enough for the individualized staff-to-guest attention the Michelin Key and La Liste recognition suggest.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the signature room at Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection?
    The residential tier , two, three, and four-bedroom residences , represents the property's most distinctive accommodation format. These units carry full hotel amenities including spa access and the Alpine Swim Club, while offering the kitchen and living space suited to multi-night mountain stays. Room design throughout reflects the earthen palette of the surrounding San Juan Mountains, and the contemporary finish places it clearly in the upper tier of Telluride's Mountain Village options. Rates are available on request, with hotel rooms beginning at $489 per night in low season.
    What's the main draw of Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection?
    The ski-in, ski-out position in Telluride's Mountain Village is the primary logistical draw, with lift access and the complimentary gondola both within steps of the entrance. The Michelin Key (2024) and La Liste Leading Hotels recognition (92.5 points, 2026) add credibility to the service standard, which one returning voter describes as consistently improving across a decade of visits. The Auberge Resorts Collection affiliation places it alongside properties like Auberge du Soleil in Napa in terms of collection-level positioning.
    What's the leading way to book Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection?
    The property does not publish direct online booking; reservations are confirmed through the Auberge Resorts customer service team, which collects preference information before finalizing stays. This is consistent with the personalization-first service model the property operates. Rates begin at $489 per night in low season and $1,259 per night during peak. EP Club members can contact our reservations team for assistance coordinating access.
    Is Madeline Hotel & Residences, Auberge Resorts Collection better for first-timers or repeat visitors?
    The property's structure rewards both, but differently. First-time visitors benefit from the gondola access to Telluride's historic downtown, the breadth of on-site programming, and the two-restaurant setup. Repeat visitors , and La Liste voter evidence suggests a meaningful repeat-guest base , benefit from a staff culture oriented around recognition and continuity. The Michelin Key and La Liste credentials are most meaningfully read as evidence of consistent, improving service over time, which is where return visits capture the most value.
    Does the Madeline Hotel work as a summer destination, or is it primarily a ski property?
    The property is explicitly positioned as year-round, with direct trail access from Mountain Village for hiking, mountain biking, and access to the Colorado backcountry in summer months. The Alpine Swim Club outdoor pool operates year-round, and the gondola connection to Telluride town , which hosts the Telluride Film Festival each summer , makes the Mountain Village location workable outside ski season. Spa programming, two restaurants, and the full residential amenity set remain available regardless of season.

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