Mountain Hospitality, Climate Change & the New Alpine Season
By Moriya Rockman — Founder & CEO, Smiling House | Triangle Luxury
The New Mountain Season: What Our Guests Are Discovering — and What It Means for How We Travel
At Smiling House, we have a privileged view of how luxury travel to mountain destinations is changing.
We are in direct contact with guests across our global portfolio — including one of the most curated ski property collections in the industry, spanning the Swiss Alps, the French and Austrian mountains, the Rockies, and beyond. We work alongside property managers who know their destinations intimately. And we listen, carefully, to what guests tell us about what they are looking for.
What they are telling us is this: the mountain is no longer seasonal.

From Ski Collection to Mountain Collection
The properties we describe as our ski collection are ski properties in the sense that they are located in ski destinations, surrounded by ski infrastructure, and perfectly placed for winter mountain sports. But the guests who book them are increasingly arriving outside the traditional ski window — in March for a music festival, in July for a hiking week, in September for a cultural event that happens to take place in a place they would otherwise only visit in February.
This shift is not accidental. It is the result of a deliberate and impressive transformation happening across the world’s great mountain destinations.
In Gstaad — where we manage properties under our Gstaad Chalet brand — Caprices Festival, one of Europe’s most celebrated electronic music events, has just announced that it is making the valley its permanent home, with two weekends of world-class programming on the mountain above Eggli each March. In Whistler, the World Ski and Snowboard Festival bridges winter and spring with a week of music, film, sport and culture. In Vail, the Taste of Vail culinary festival draws a food and wine audience in April that has little overlap with the February skiing crowd. In Verbier, summer mountain festivals and world-class cycling events keep the valley alive long after the lifts stop turning.

A New Guest Profile — and a New Kind of Stay
The guest who comes to a mountain destination for a festival or cultural event is a distinct and fascinating traveller. They are typically sophisticated, curious, and deeply appreciative of authenticity. They are not following the crowd — they have found something specific, something that resonates with who they are, in a place they might never otherwise have discovered.
Many of them, we find, become some of the most loyal guests we have. They arrive for Caprices and discover Gstaad. They come back in February with their family. They return in summer with friends. A single cultural event becomes the beginning of a long relationship with a destination.
For property owners, this is significant. A chalet that welcomes guests in March for a music festival, in July for summer hiking, and in January for skiing is not just better utilised — it is more deeply embedded in the life of the place. It becomes a home in the truest sense of the word.

What We Are Building at Smiling House
Our role has always been to connect extraordinary guests with extraordinary properties. What is changing is the breadth of that connection — the ability to pair the right guest with the right destination at the right moment of the year, across every season.
We are expanding our editorial and curation work to reflect the full annual calendar of our mountain destinations: the events, the festivals, the natural highlights, the cultural moments that make each place extraordinary beyond its ski season. We are working with our property owners to ensure their homes are ready to welcome guests in every season, and with our local partners to ensure those guests experience the destination at its deepest and most authentic.

Because the mountain, at its best, is not a winter experience.
It is a year-round one.
And the guests who understand that tend to be the ones who love it most.
Smiling House is a global luxury accommodation platform operating across 55 countries, with a curated ski and mountain property collection spanning Europe, the Americas, and beyond. Gstaad Chalet is our portfolio of private properties in Gstaad, Switzerland.













