2015-06-18

The Loveometer

Skiing
98%

Families
86%

Value for Money
55%

Restaurants
78%

Nightlife
79%

Overall

79.2%

In a Nutshell

The essentials are all in place: a vast off-piste playground, lots of scintillating pistes, and some superb ski schools.

Now all Val d’Isere needs to do is drop its prices – and get its fun-loving atmosphere back.

The Stats

Altitude: 1850m
Lifts: 136 in Espace Killy
Top lift: 3456m
Ski area: 300km of piste
Adult lift pass: 260€ for six days
Official Site | Ski Map | Webcam

Table of Contents ▼▲

Essential Advice for the Perfect Trip

Getting to know the area

A history of the resort

Annual winter events

Guide to the Mountain

Get your bearings

Solaise and the women’s downhill

Bellevarde and La Face

Le Fornet, the fifth area

Snow-cover is very reliable here

Beginners beware

The home runs can be hard work

Intermediates won’t want to ski anywhere else

Watch out for the colour coding

Take the Up-and-Over chair

Piste and off-piste experts come into their own

Starting the day

Snowboarders, skiers and racers unite

The off-piste can be sensational – so book a local guide

Weather reports and equipment rental

Where to Learn

The standard of ski and snowboard schools is top notch

Make sure you book a guide for the off-piste

Steadily improving for kids of all ages

Go with a family operator if you’re bringing the baby

Where to Stay

Location, location, location

Hottest hotels and chalets

Chalets close to the action

Chalets slightly removed from the centre

Good-value accommodation

Cheapest place to stay

Where to Eat

The top spots

Eating on the mountain

Two-in-one restaurant venues

Where to Party

Wine bars and hotels for cocktails

Live bands and late nights

Essential Advice for the Perfect Trip

Espace Killy is the name given to the combined ski area of Val d’Isere and Tignes after triple-Olympic-gold medalist Jean-Claude Killy, its greatest sporting hero. These two resorts separated by a high mountain ridge are of very individual character. The only feature they truly have in common is that together they provide snow-sure skiing from late November until May and immediate access to one of the greatest playgrounds in the Alps.

Just how snowy was proved in winter 2014-15, which had the worst start for snow-cover for a generation. While other resorts in France and elsewhere has a green Christmas, Val d’Isere was half-buried in oodles of white stuff. Admittedly it was assisted by Le Snow Factory, the largest artificial snowmaking machine in Europe. It can fill an Olympic-sized swimming-pool with snow in 30 minutes and cover a whole mountain in 50cm in under a week.

Yes, it’s posh. Yes, it’s expensive. But Val d’Isere (nor, indeed, Tignes) will never be swamped by a tidal wave of bling like Courchevel 1850 – because the skiing suits younger, stronger legs, and tougher, more phlegmatic people. Of course, that’s not to say that there’s an older generation of Val stalwarts who have had a go at monopolizing the off-piste here through a combination of technical skill and City buying power – and they are showing no signs of giving up.

The mountains here are for the most part high and steep – the village is situated at 1850m and the skiing goes up 3400m in Val and 3456m at the top of the Grande Motte in Tignes.  They’re the setting for some thrilling descents. Not all the terrain is like that – but enough of it is to set the tone. To really get the best this place you need to ski well, but that’s not to say that intermediates and even complete novices can’t enjoy themselves here.

Val d’Isere is home to 27,000 guest beds and some 30% of visitors are British, but it doesn’t feel overwhelmingly Anglo-Saxon. An eclectic group of French, Dutch, Scandinavians and other nationalities make up the rest. The resort is about two and a half hours’ drive from Geneva Airport.

Importantly there are eight different ways of feeding into the lift system and accommodation is spread along the narrow valley. The free train rouge is the ski bus that runs every few minutes during ski hours and at less frequent intervals late into the evening is more than a bus service – it’s a backbone of the lift system. It is the most efficient and reliable we have ever encountered.

Getting to know the area

First up, you need to understand the lie of the land. La Daille is the first settlement that you reach as you emerge from the series of tunnels and avalanche-protection galleries at the end of the steep 32km climb up from Bourg-St-Maurice.

The resort stretches from here for 5km through the centre of Val d’Isere and on across undeveloped avalanche ground to the hamlets of Le Laisinant and Le Fornet at the foot of the Col d’Iseran. The pass is closed in winter and so there is no through traffic. The centre itself is divided into a number of separate quartiers off either side of the main road. The pistes and lifts are only on the southern side of the valley – to the right of the access road.

A history of the resort

Skiing didn’t really get underway here until Frederic Petri, a doctor from Alsace, explored the area in the 1920s with his Austrian ski instructor. The first ski-lift was built in the 1930s and a cable-car followed during WW2 – for the use of German troops who came here for R&R.

At the heart of the town, a lovely 17th-century church surrounded by some impressive old honey-coloured buildings are a reminder that Val existed as an Italian and then French community long before snow turned to tourist gold in these hills.

Jean-Claude Killy’s family also came from Alsace, but he grew up here. After his success at the Grenoble Olympics in 1968, international tourists began to arrive in increasing quantities.

Real change to the town came in the run-up to the 1992 Albertville Olympics. Val was the venue for the Blue Riband event, the Men’s Downhill. A new village of stone-built houses grew up around the church and the front de neige.  Some of the uglier architectural excesses of the 1960s were reclad. In the years that followed, mature trees were planted on both sides of the road in the village centre. What was once an ugly duckling of a resort has been slowly transformed into – if not a swan, then a very handsome drake.

During the season there’s a strictly enforced no-parking policy on the village streets. You either leave your car in an open area at La Daille or in one of the underground car parks. You won’t need it during your stay.

Annual winter events

Val is the setting for a number of events each winter. Most important is the Criterium de la Premiere Neige in mid-December, a racing ‘meet’ that has been held here since 1955.  It marks the starting point of the European phase of the Alpine World Cup after the men and women racers move to Europe from North America.

Apres-ski and nightlife have markedly improved over the years. By French standards it’s pretty lively by night, but it can’t compete with Austria.

Every resort has it negatives. Here at Welove2ski we are regularly exasperated by the cost of a decent meal or a round of drinks in Val d’Isere.  Our research shows that eating out here can be more expensive than in Verbier, perceived as a much more costly holiday base.

It’s a big place, so when you go make sure you arm yourself with all the information listed here.

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Guide to the Mountain

Photo: © Agence Nuts/OT Val d’Isere

In two words, it’s enormous and exciting. On offer are a mouthwatering 300km of pistes, and 10,000 hectares of off-piste. To put this in perspective that’s 24,710 acres – three times more than Whistler, the biggest area in North America. You can either buy a Val d’Isere-only pass, or opt for the more expensive Espace Killy pass, which includes all the lifts in Tignes as well.

Get your bearings

It’s a large and complicated ski area, so take a little time to study the map and work out where the best runs are concentrated for your standard and – most importantly – how the various sectors fit together. Here we confine ourselves mainly to the Val side of the mountains. See our Tignes Guide for the rest.

The skiing is split into five different areas that can be accessed from eight different points along or off the narrow valley road. First on arrival is La Daille, with the Funival underground funicular as well as a gondola. From the centre of town, a couple of minutes’ walk takes you on to the rond point des pistes, a snow-covered open arena where the ski schools meet each morning and lifts rise up the mountains at either end.

Solaise and the women’s downhill

Solaise at 2056m is the orginal Val ski area that was reached in the 1940s by cable-car. The renovated lift is still in use, but these days the high-speed Solaise Express chair is a more convenient means of reaching its 2560m summit. From here the giant network of lifts and pistes reaches out in all directions.

The demanding run back down is the FIS women’s downhill, built for the 2009 Olympics. When prepared for racing it’s wickedly difficult, with one jump so huge that they had realign the course because the women were flying so high that they were in danger of hitting the lift cable. We advise anyone who is not a confident intermediate to return to the valley at the end of the day by either of the two lifts.

Bellevarde and La Face

Bellevarde, at the other hand of the Rond Point, is Val’s piece de resistance. Its 2827m summit is reached by the Olympique jumbo gondola, or by the Funival from La Daille.  La Face, the black run back down the front, is not for the nervous. It was built as the Men’s Downhill for the 1992 Albertville Olympics and has rarely been raced since. It’s east-facing, so best skied early in the day before the snow softens and it gets chopped up.  Sharp edges are essential.

Of course, you don’t have to ski La Face at all. From the top there are lots of softer options that take you towards La Daille and Tignes, or back around the shoulder to Val itself.

Le Fornet. Photo: © OT Val d’Isere/Agence Nuts.

Le Fornet, the fifth area

Le Laisinant is the first hamlet you reach on the bus heading eastward out of the centre towards the Col d’Iseran. When the resort is at its busiest over New Year or February half-term, old Val hands head here to catch the Laisinant Express chair. From the top you can connect with runs in the direction of Solaise or with Le Fornet.

Le Fornet is the bus stop after Le Laisinant. Taking the cable-car from here is the first step on the long journey by gondola and chair up to the Pissaillas Glacier and Val’s highest lift beneath the Pointe du Montet. The glacier is open for skiing in June and July during the French summer holidays and winter continues here for 12 months of the year.

This sector houses a vast array of mainly intermediate pistes and some exciting off-piste opportunities. A shortish climb from the glacier takes you up to a ridge from where you can descend off-piste all the way down a giant powder bowl to the old village of Bonneval at the head of the Maurienne Valley. It’s good fun but, unless you fancy a three-hour taxi ride, the best way home is to fork out for a helicopter.

On of the beauties of Espace Killy is that the different sectors are extremely well linked. You can ski and work your way through the lifts system from Le Fornet all the way across and down to the lower Tignes village of Les Brevieres, with proper pistes all the way and very few paths.

Snow-cover is very reliable here

The Pissaillas and Grande Motte glaciers have sufficient height to ensure good ski conditions throughout the winter and this corner of the Alps is anyway one of the ‘wettest’.  If you want to book here for Christmas you don’t have to wait for the first winter falls before parting with your money.

But is the skiing actually any good? If you take Espace Killy as a whole, there’s an awful lot of experts who will give you an emphatic ‘yes’. Make no mistake: this is one of the great places to ski, not just in France but in the whole world. It’s made special not just by the extent of the terrain, but also by its nature. For advanced and expert skiers especially, there’s a scintillating array of runs on offer: swooping World Cup pistes, big open powder fields, tight little chutes and long off-piste itineraries.

Photo: © New Generation.

Beginners beware

You can learn here. Lots do. As is the case of St Anton, there are other easier places in which to progress through the early stages. The main nursery slope with a free chair-lift is on the front de neige in the village centre. It has some useful restaurants with sun terraces beside it for parents to sit in comfort while first turns are being achieved.  It’s not a bad slope at all, but the top few metres are a tough place indeed in which to initiate an early snowplough.  There is another beginner area at La Daille.

From these novices can progress to the gentle rollercoaster of Madeleine, reached in both directions by the Solaise Express or cable-car. But overall the trouble is that Val has a paucity of truly easy slopes. Their interpretation of colour grading here is different to elsewhere: for green read blue, for blue read red, for red read black, for black…read a whole hatch of butterflies in your stomach.

The home runs can be hard work

A lot of less experienced skiers come back from Val d’Isere with tales about icy pistes and crowded slopes. They’ll bemoan the number of speed merchants – both skiers and snowboarders – who shot past them, almost hitting them, and destroying their rhythm or causing them to crash. They’ll vow never to go back.

But they’re not actually talking about the whole of the ski area. What they’re describing are the home runs back into the resort. Without exception, these are hard work if you’ve only got two or three weeks of skiing under your belt – and they’re often packed at the end of the day. But these runs are wholly unrepresentative of the rest of the piste system, which is characterized elsewhere by broad, confidence-boosting blues and reds.

So how to avoid these confidence-crushing home runs? Simple: you ride the lifts back down into the valley. Ok, so it makes for a pathetic end to the skiing day. But so what? You’ll return to your chalet/apartment/hotel beaming after a great time on the slopes, rather than a quivering wreck.

Intermediates won’t want to ski anywhere else

To get the most out of Val d’Isere itself, you really need to be comfortable skiing steepish runs and hungry for the chance to get off-piste too (or not that bothered about the skiing and more interested in the luxury chalets).

Strong intermediates will love the challenge that each day brings. Here’s a sample day-out that will give you the chance to really see the kind of terrain Val has to offer before venturing further afield into all corners of Espace Killy:

Ok. You ready for this? Meet at the bottom of the Olympique gondola. Even at the busiest times you’ll load without more than a few minutes’ queue. At the top, clip into your bindings and head down Fontaine Froide, taking care not to crash into anyone else during the usually crowded first 10 metres. It’s an easy red. At the bottom turn left and follows the blue Santons run without straying onto the adjacent black.

Photo: A. Carlen/Flickr Creative Commons.

Watch out for the colour coding

Shortly, you’ll discover what we mean about the colour coding. As you head into a gully that’s a bit like a natural half-pipe you’ll be saying to yourself: “This has to be red!” No it ain’t, it’s just Val d’Isere”. There’s precious little room to pass – or be passed – and your rhythm gets interrupted if it’s crowded. So ski this first run of the day.

When the gully opens out you must stiffen the sinews and summon up the blood to schuss for the bottom and a brief uphill push to the bottom of the Solaise and a meander back to where you started.

Back up again and off towards the right. You are now about the ski a World Cup Men’s Downhill. Don’t worry, the first three-quarters present little problem provided you keep your speed in check. The OK is named after Henri Oreiller and Jean-Claude Killy who both knew their stuff at 70mph on 225cm planks.

A series of steep, utterly exhilarating pitches bring you down left and right to the Folie Douce, setting for apres-ski dancing later in the day if you still have the legs for it. Keep going. The last stages of the run can become confused by traffic creeping in from other runs. Keep leftish towards the end and watch out for extremely icy patches of artificial snow.  The final pitch, marked by flailing skiers less competent than you, requires commitment. At the bottom, beside the gondola, cross the bridge and catch the train rouge ski bus to Le Laisinant. Catch the chair and traverse left down to the bottom of the gondola. Time for a hot chocolate and a comfort stop at Le Signal, one of the best restaurants – self-service and gourmet – on the mountain.

Take the Up-and-Over chair

Refreshed, take the long gondola ride up the mountain and carry on to the top of the Pissaillas glacier.  From the top, race the long run all the way back to Le Signal and take the gondola back up. Filter right down blue Pont Abatte and board the Lessieres chair-lift. This is also known as the Up-and-Over. You don’t get off at the top – not unless you are a combination of complete idiot and someone prepared to lose their lift ticket for the rest of the week or season. The lift carries on down the far side.

You are now in the Solaise sector of the ski area. Follow gently down the blue Lessieres to the start of Piste L. This is one of our favourites runs that is not usually open at the beginning of the season because it requires deep snow cover.  Ski to the bottom and catch the bus back to the centre of Val. Alternatively, you can branch left before the end and push your way along a path. The bus is the better option.

Photo: © Skiworld.

Piste and off-piste experts come into their own

Whether on the groomed or in the powder, wise skiers make an early start here and the rond point des neiges by the Sun Bar and the two main lifts that access Solaise and Bellevarde are busy by 8.30am. Here’s a sampler itinerary for those who are confident of their turns on even the steeper pisted stuff.

Starting the day

First run of the day has to be La Face back down from the top of Bellevarde. Patrick Ortlieb of Austria was extremely rude about this men’s downhill course, designed by former Swiss racer Bernhard Russi, after the race at the 1992 Winter Olympics. He said it was too fast and too technically difficult and that it should never be raced again. Quite why he was complaining was uncertain – he’d just won a gold medal. But the course has been rarely raced since.

When not prepared for racing it’s a harsh black that needs considerable concentration – go on the left side towards the end, the snow is always better there.

Go back up the Olympique and ski Fontaine Froide to the start of the black Epaule du Charvet. This is one of those runs so extreme that it can only be groomed by a piste-basher attached to a cable and winch. It’s a long, grueling beast that quickly gets bumped up and half-way down you may well wonder why you are there. Ski back to the Rond Point and take the Solaise Express up the other side. At the top of the Madeleine Express turn off towards the Le Manchet Valley on to piste Arcelle.

Photo: © Progression Ski.

In powder conditions the off-piste to the left of the piste can be quite wonderful, although great care must be taken because of the avalanche risk. The piste is long and at a steady pitch that always seems to require a lot of energy, but the views are wonderful. Come back up on the lift and take the Glacier chair and the St Jacques Piste to the Cugnai chair for what is often a steep little mogul run.

Cruise gently down to the Dacha chair and the Germain Mattis run that flows away beneath it.  The initial path lulls you into a false sense of security, but it’s followed by much more demanding serpentine descent through the woods. Artificial snow-cover can make it very icy and you’ll need sharp edges.

Back down at the bottom again, take the Olympique once again and cruise all the way off to your right, watching for the farthest chair-lift in sight on your left. This is the high-speed Tommeuses six-pack that brings you up to Toviere at 2704m and the link to Tignes.  Face back down toward La Daille in the valley below and cut across onto the black Trolles run which takes you down to Tignes-Le-Lac.

The last pitch of this is steep – as in ‘steep’ – and half-way down you must schuss for the rebuilt gondola that brings you back onto Toviere. From here ski the black Rocs run and blue Creuses. You can then either cut across onto the OK or – if tired – cruise the Verte down to La Daille and catch the bus home.

A third alternative, of course, is to ride the gondola back and party the rest of the afternoon away at the Folie Douce. If you do this, make sure you hide your skis away in a spot where you – and no one else – can find them easily for the final run home.

Snowboarders, skiers and racers unite

They do this at the Oakley Valpark between Bellevarde and La Daille. You can reach it from the Funival and Olympique or by the Mont Blanc chair. It shares an area and a poma-lift with the permanent race-against-the-clock course here. It boasts a good range of rails and kickers for all standards.

Henry of Henry’s Avalanche digging an avalanche profile. Photo: © Welove2ski.

The off-piste can be sensational – so book a local guide

Most of the skiing is above the treeline, so your options are limited on foul weather days. If treelined pistes are what you’re after then check out somewhere like Les Arcs or the resorts of the Austrian Zillertal – or go to Colorado and ski Vail, Breckenridge or Aspen.

The freeriding is exceptional, but there’s a lot of competition for the powder, so you have to act quickly if you want to ride the easily accessible big stuff after a big storm. Do take care – this is a genuine high alpine area and, although understandably not widely publicised, skiers die here every year in avalanches.

So if you’re planning to go off-piste, read the daily MeteoFrance avalanche report, hire a guide, make sure you’ve got the right equipment, and go along to one of Henry’s Avalanche Talks – or join one of his safety courses. Henry is the local-based expert and he could save your life.

Weather reports and equipment rental

The best place to rent equipment in town is, in our opinion, Snowberry – run by Jock and Susan Dun, the former owners of Precision Ski and providing some the best gear in town at decent prices. Other options include Oxygene and Ski Republic.

Radio Val (96.1fm), broadcast from the Tourist Office in French, English, and German is not exactly cutting edge wireless. But it gives you the latest on the weather and the lifts in English, every half-hour from 8.10am to 10.10. Plans are afoot to run a full English service.

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Where to Learn

Photo: © YSE Ski.

One of the chief glories of Val d’Isere is the quality of its ski schools. There are 18 of them and several are staffed by British instructors.

Given the quality of the terrain and the fact that the pockets of the resort’s core clientele are deep, it’s no real surprise that many of the best ski instructors in the Alps work here. For the most part they make damn sure you’ll have a fantastic time whenever you book a ski lesson. This is one of the best places in the world for competent skiers to learn how to ski in all kinds of snow conditions, including bumps and powder.

The standard of ski and snowboard schools is top notch

Scottish-owned Progression Ski is very flexible, particularly good for both beginner and intermediate ski and snowboard instruction, and has a team of physiotherapists. The Val d’Isere branch of award-winning New Generation is another great British ski school with classes for all levels. TDC has all native English-speaking instructors and teaches skiing but not snowboarding.

Evolution 2 is an independent French school with an excellent reputation. The biggest ski and snowboard schools here are the ESF and Oxygene. Misty Fly is a snowboard school that now teaches skiing as well.  For groups on a budget (because tuition comes as part of an overall, ultra-cheap package) try UCPA.

Make sure you book a guide for the off-piste

For private lessons to hone technique, we recommend TDC and Mountain Masters which both have good reputations. Iski Val d’Isere is a group of French instructors and guides that specialises in off-piste, and Alpine Experience is another specialist off-piste school.

Former French racer Pat Zimmer (pal.zimmer@gmail.com) has been teaching here for 30 years and is still the best and safest powder guide in the business. Henry Off Piste is run by avalanche expert Henry Schniewind, who runs three-day powder courses for intermediates and above.

Another attraction for beginners is the high quality of instruction in Val d’Isere. On the whole, they’re a highly-motivated bunch – and there are quite a few Brits among them. Chances are you’ll be in good hands if you sign up with one of them.

Photo: © Agence Nuts/OT Val d’Isere

Steadily improving for kids of all ages

Val d’Isere is a good resort for older children and increasingly so for younger ones. In-resort activities have improved in recent years with the opening of the Centre Aquasportif. The 800-sq-metre aquatic centre has a 25m x 10m swimming-pool, 12m-high climbing wall, and a multi-sports hall.

Ten different ski and snowboard schools run courses for children, but we especially recommend Evolution2 and Oxygène. Progression Ski is also fast becoming one of the top schools for kids.

Go with a family operator if you’re bringing the baby

A number of British tour operators run their own childcare here, including Mark Warner, Esprit, Scott Dunn, and VIP. There’s also a Club Med with its own programme of ski instruction and guiding. If you’re new to skiing and deciding where to stay, it’s worth checking these out rather than trying to organise it all yourself. For those not staying with an operator offering its own childcare, then the children’s section on YSE.co.uk has some excellent tips and recommendations.

Le Village des Enfants cares for children from 18 months with a mix of play and ski lessons. Le Petit Poucet collects and delivers children from three years from wherever they are staying. British-run Jelly and Ice Cream offers the full range of private nanny services and babysitting. The other private services are Little Chicks Childcare and T4 Nannies.

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Where to Stay

Photo: © Agence Nuts/OT Val d’Isere

Most of British visitors opt for chalets or apartments here and they come in all variations of size, quality and price. The choice of hotels is small by comparison, ranging from the cheap and cheerful British-run chalet-hotel to five-star luxury at a formidable price. The other option is to book a self-catered apartment. Take a look at Erna Low, Ski Collection, Pierre & Vacances, Lagrange and PowderBeds. Val d’Isere Agence and Mountain Rooms and Chalets are local letting agencies with lots of privately-owned apartments on their books.

Location, location, location

Location is pretty important. Access to the piste is straightforward from every part of Val d’Isere. But this is a big, diverse and very linear ski resort – some districts are a long way from the best bars, shops and nightclubs. La Daille is a popular bed base and Le Fornet and Le Laisinant less so, but both can only be reached on the way home by bus or taxi unless you are into serious late-night road walking. If you’re taking lessons it helps in the morning to be within easy reach of the ski school meeting places on the snow at Rond Point des Pistes.

Hottest hotels and chalets

These tend to be in or close to the central area – roughly defined as the stretch between the tourist office and bus station roundabouts and anywhere within a three-minute walk of Dick’s Tea Bar.

Until the early years of this century the hotels here had been thought of as quite staid and unexciting…that was until Les Barmes de l’Ours came along. This is where to stay if you’re rich and famous or simply if you want to be tucked away from the hustle and bustle. It has a wonderful spa and a Michelin-starred restaurant.

Le Savoie Hotel & Spa is the location for cutting-edge elegance and has a good spa with a swimming-pool right in the centre of town, as well as housing the Grain de Sel restaurant. Third of the (relative) newbies is four-star Hotel Avenue Lodge which, in our opinion, is the most stylish hotel in the resort with its black slate floors, black leather and cowhide chairs – and there’s also an in-house Killy pro shop, hairdresser, gym, beauty salon, spa and indoor swimming-pool.

The old  Hotel le Brussel’s, which is in a wonderful position right on the piste, has been popular with families since the 1950s. Until recent years it remained slightly old fashioned, but today it is a spruced-up four-star hotel with comfortable bedrooms.

Another traditional hotel is Le Blizzard, which is a mainstay of the resort. It is a good base for people with money to burn who want to be in the thick of things. There’s a nice cosy bar (a good rendezvous point if you want a quiet chat – rather having to shout – over your drinks) and an excellent restaurant, but some of the bedrooms are on the small side.

Hotel Christiania has a long-established following among British clients but, unlike most French hotels, makes it clear that pets are not welcome. Hotel Tsanteleina is a traditional hotel with wood-clad interiors – there are some good family rooms with separate bunk ‘cabin’ areas. Slightly cheaper than most is three-star La Savoyarde in the centre of town.

A room in Aspen Lodge. Photo: © VIP Ski.

Chalets close to the action

Lhotse, with its vast living space, glamorous swimming-pool and spa, and fabulous position up from the Tourist Office roundabout is almost, but not quite, the swankiest chalet in town.  That prize for goes to its neighbouring stablemate Marco Polo, with an Oriental theme and all the required toys, including a pool covered in gold leaf.

We are particularly fond of VIP’s Aspen Lodge which is in an excellent position on the main street, has spacious interiors and a contemporary look. The Farmhouse is squirrelled away in the heart of the old village; it’s a bit quirky in its layout but super-cool in style.

Val d’Isere specialist YSE Ski has 20 chalets in the resort, including the four-person Chalet Squaw Valley in the smart residence of the same name. Their other chalets come in all shapes and sizes, including convenient Les Chardons for up to 48 people.

Chalets slightly removed from the centre

Slightly away from the village centre is Eagle’s Nest, which was the first of Val’s uber-chalets. It is perched on a crag in the exclusive enclave of Les Carats above the centre and is still one of the most coveted properties in town. It has been completely renovated for the 2015-16 season.

Nearby Chalet Montana with its pool and piste-side position is a very serious rival indeed. Both Scott Dunn and Consensio have a string of enticing properties. Chalet Husky sleeps 14 people, has a fabulous wellness area, large pool an indoor climbing wall. Hip Hideouts has eight luxury chalets sleeping 8 to 18 people each; the company’s owners live in the resort.

Slightly further away in a ski-in-ski-out position above the town, Le Chardon Mountain Lodges is a collection of five top-of-the range chalets. Their Flagship Le Chardon has the finest views in the resort up the beautiful and deserted Le Manchet valley.

La Face is a comfortable chalet for six that is part of a complex of six mid-range chalets built and owned by Le Ski. The company now also has Angelique and La Vieille Maison, two unusual mountain homes on the ‘smart’ side of La Daille. Chalet Santons Solaise doesn’t have a fancy interior, but it’s well-positioned close to Dick’s and the High Street, yet it is only a hop and ski from the lifts.

An increasing number of chalethotels – hotels that are run for the season entirely by tour operator staff on the same principle as a chalet – are becoming an increasingly popular, cheaper option. Inghams has Chalet du Montet at Le Fornet. Mark Warner has for years operated Chalethotel Moris above the popular pub of the same name. Ski Total has Champ Avalins and Alpine Elements La Gelinotte – both at La Daille.

The Ducs de Savoie is in the resort centre and run by Esprit as a hotel for families with small children. Crystal has six chalets and a wide choice of hotels and apartments.  Consider also the whole fleet of other operators here that includes Powder White, Neilson, and Skiworld.

Les Chardons chef at work. Photo: © YSE.

Good-value accommodation

Pierre & Vacances Residence La Daille houses no-nonsense crash pads for those who want low-budget accommodation within easy reach of main mountain access.

Good news – you don’t have to spend a fortune to stay in the middle of Val d’Isere. Pierre & Vacances has a refurbished apartment block just behind the roundabout in the middle of town. The Residence Les Chalets de Solaise is more expensive than its sister properties out in La Daille, but it’s a steal by the standards of most town-centre properties. If you want cheap digs close to the bars and clubs – as well as quick-ish access to the lifts, this is the place to target.

Cheapest place to stay

The lowest-cost place in the entire resort is in fact fairly central, 400m beyond the Tourist Office roundabout in the direction of Le Fornet. Okay, now you need to have no illusions about what you’re getting into here. UCPA is the best low budget option in the Alps. Accommodation is in dorms, and included in the price is your ski hire, lift pass, tuition and full-board accommodation. All you’ll need to pay for is your drinks. In Val especially there’s a very mixed, international crowd, and the food is as good as you’ll find in many mid-market catered chalets.

SnowDrone is a transfer company actually based in the resort. It offers sensibly-priced shared as well as private transfers from and to Geneva – and their vehicles have wifi. Others recommended include Europetransfer, Alpine Cab, and Taxi Val d’Is.

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Where to Eat

Photo: © John Yates-Smith/YSE Ski.

For a ski resort of such international calibre, Val d’Isere seems starved of truly great restaurants in town. Maybe it’s all those excellent half-board chalets? Don’t despair, though – you just need to know where to look. Dinner out is never a cheap business in any Alpine ski resort and Val is no exception. We like Le Lodge, next to Dick’s, which has classic fare – everything from pasta and steaks to inescapable cheese dishes – at moderately sensible middle-range prices. La Casserole  (+33 479 41 15 71) is pretty big on fondues and is in the same vein, with prices that don’t require you to take out a second mortgage.

Sur La Montagne is – despite the name – on the main street. It is extremely popular with locals who spend their euros wisely on a night-out. We particularly like La Baraque, which used to be Les Canyons. This restaurant next to the Galerie des Cimes has been taken over by a popular local restaurateur and given a full makeover. It serves carefully prepared food at non-ridiculous prices.

Other hits in town include Le 1789, which specialises in grilled meat cooked on an open fire; Le Perdrix Blanche majors in seafood and pizzas on its eclectic menu. La Taverne d’Alsace, below the three-star Hotel Kandahar, services an extraordinary number of ex-pat Alsatians (like Jean-Claude Killy) who live in Val, along with rest of us who can’t survive for long without choucroûte, foie gras and other regional dishes.

The top spots

At the very top of the tree we favour La Grande Ourse, which is in the perfect position on the edge of the nursery slopes and convenient for the town as well. It’s been a Val gastro rendezvous since 1936 and in its present incarnation it is most probably the best restaurant in town for ambience and cuisine combined. No, it’s not cheap but it is less expensive than its Michelin-starred rival, La Table de l’Ours in the five-star Hotel Les Barmes de l’Ours. Hell, there’s a lot of bears around here as well as loads of sleekly rich Parisiens! It’s a wee bit stuffy and formal, but the food is divine. The atmosphere is more Big City than ski resort  – just make sure you have sufficient funds to pay the bill.

Other hotel restaurants to consider for a sophisticated and relaxed night out are Le Blizzard and Le Grain de Sel in Le Savoie Hotel.

Non-hotel restaurants include L’Atelier Edmond, which now has two Michelin stars. Yes, it’s wildly expensive but there’s also a reasonably-priced bistro with two- and three-course budget menus. La Baraque (+33 479 06 18 19) is the local’s favourite. The standard of food and welcome is the highest in the resort.

Spag bol at the Fruitiere.

Eating on the mountain

Top of the list on the Val d’Isere side of the mountain is Le Signal. Situated at the top of Le Fornet cable-car, the combination of fresh local cuisine, bright decoration and a warm welcome makes it very hard to beat. Brigitte also runs a self-service here that is not cavernous but cosy – it even has a log fire.

A handful of other establishments stand out, too. La Peau de Vache (+33 479 06 11 20) is a relative newcomer that has risen through the ranks to the point where some now consider this to be the best mountain eatery. It’s half way down La Face and can be reached by the Boulevard Express chair. Giant gourmet burgers are the house speciality.

One is the little Edelweiss restaurant on the Mangard blue run, which slopes down from Le Fornet cable-car. It’s rustic with a log fire and you can eat carefully prepared, unpretentious dishes in pleasant surroundings. Another is family-friendly Le Trifollet (+33 479 41 96 99) on the piste immediately above La Daille. We particularly recommend Les Tufs, located on the piste at La Daille, beside the Funival funicular station. It’s a popular venue for off-piste skiers and their guides in need of serious sustenance after their morning’s exertion.

One of the more recent offerings is La Cascade, at the foot of the glacier above Le Fornet. It has what local resident, John Yeats Smith describes as: “Surprisingly good food at shockingly good prices. The whole meal came to less than the wine alone would have cost in most of Val d’Isere’s mountain restaurants”.  Les Marmottes (+33 479 06 05 08), next to the terrain park between Bellevarde and La Daille, is another excellent-value ‘self’.

Two-in-one restaurant venues

We also like La Tete de Solaise, at the top of the Solaise chair-lift and cable-car and La Folie Douce at the top station of the La Daille gondola. What’s great about both is that they house two restaurants: in the case of La Tete de Solaise, The large self-service has been replaced by a busy brasserie to the chagrin to those skiers who preferred the cheaper option. It also houses a fine gourmet restaurant inside a glass-walled extension. Owner Jean-Claude is hands-on and the standard is extremely high.

Similarly, waiter-service La Fruitiere adjoining La Folie Douce has great food served imaginatively in the surroundings of a distressed savoyard dairy (which it is named after). Try also here the giant air-conditioned wine and cheese cellar in the basement here parties share a huge table.

This setup so much allows parents with teenagers to enjoy a gourmet lunch whilst younger members of the group munch on steak hache next door. Money is saved and everybody gets a meal to suit their taste.

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Where to Party

Photo: Folie Douce.

We hope someone takes the initiative about pricing here soon, before Val d’Isere loses its mojo. The apres-ski is not bad by French standards, and there are certainly a lot of bars – but it’s not on the same level as St Anton, Ischgl, Verbier or Zermatt, and the clubbing is not all it’s cracked up to be. Dick’s Tea Bar has pretty much got the monopoly for late-night partying among the Brits, with Le Graal its only serious rival.

Most of the early partying happens in the famous Folie Douce at the top of La Daille gondola, which has opened more branches in Val Thorens, Meribel and <a href="http://welove2ski.com/alpe-dhuez/where-to

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