château | Château-Thierry | Château de Marly | Château de Chantilly | Château de Malmaison | Montebello | Château d'Hérouville | Château de Vincennes | Château Romer | Château Margaux | Château Gaillard | Château de Chaumont | Château Pape Clément | Château Laurier | Château La Tour Carnet | Château-Gontier | Château de Valençay | Château de Saint-Cloud | Château d'Écouen | Château d'Amboise | Château | Rennes-le-Château | Montebello, Quebec | Château Palmer | Château Lynch-Bages | Château Latour | Château La Mission Haut-Brion | Château Frontenac | Château d'Yquem | Château de Vizille |
In Canada, especially in English, château usually denotes a hotel, not a house, and applies only to the largest, most elaborate railway hotels built in the Canadian Railroad golden age, such as the Château Lake Louise, in Lake Louise, Alberta, the Château Laurier, in Ottawa, the Château Montebello, in Montebello, Quebec, and the most famous Château Frontenac, in Quebec City.
In Quebec, the organization holds two properties: One is the Papineau Chapel, a stone memorial chapel built in 1851 by Louis-Joseph Papineau, on the grounds of the Château Montebello in the town of Montebello.
In 1963, a group of prominent Canadians met for three days at the Seigneury Club in Montebello, Quebec.