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    Hotel in Jackson Hole, United States

    The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection

    625pts

    Town Square Mountain Modern

    The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection, Hotel in Jackson Hole

    About The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection

    On Jackson's historic town square, The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection holds a Michelin Key (2024) and rates from $462 per night across 96 rooms. The design bridges Western vernacular and contemporary mountain sensibility, with The Bistro running from a lobby dining room to a rooftop deck. It positions clearly between boutique independents and large resort properties in the Jackson Hole market.

    Where the Town Square Meets the Rockies

    Jackson's town square has anchored the town since the late nineteenth century, framed by its four elk-antler arches and ringed by the low-slung Western storefronts that define the original townsite. Hotels on or adjacent to that square occupy a specific position in the Jackson Hole market: walkable to everything, embedded in the historic core, and required to negotiate an architectural conversation between the old West and whatever modernity their operators bring to the table. The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection sits at 112 Center Street and takes that negotiation seriously. Its silhouette reads modern without dismissing the surrounding vernacular, and its material palette draws from the Rockies rather than importing something foreign. That balance is harder to achieve than it sounds in a town where authenticity is both a selling point and a point of local pride.

    The Autograph Collection, Marriott's independent-spirit tier, tends to attract properties where design and location carry more weight than brand consistency. Here, the collection's positioning holds: The Cloudveil is a hotel that would make sense on its own terms without the flag. Awarded a Michelin Key in 2024, it sits in a recognition tier that places it alongside a small cohort of American properties where design, service, and food programming have all reached a level worth distinguishing. That credential matters in Jackson Hole specifically, where the hotel market runs from mid-range chains near the airport to properties like Amangani and the Four Seasons Resort and Residences Jackson Hole at the upper end of the resort spectrum. The Cloudveil occupies a distinct position: urban-scaled, town-center, design-forward rather than wilderness-lodge in format.

    The Architecture and the Town Square Tradition

    To understand what The Cloudveil is doing architecturally, it helps to understand what Jackson's town square has historically demanded of the buildings around it. The square's character comes from low-scale Western commercial buildings, exposed timber, and a material honesty that resists the glassy modernism common to mountain resort developments elsewhere. Properties that have tried to ignore this context have generally fared poorly in local perception. The Cloudveil's approach, working with the silhouette of its surroundings while introducing contemporary crispness in its interiors, follows a more considered path. The mountain-lodge warmth inside is not pastiche; it coexists with state-of-the-art infrastructure, including a high-tech fitness center that speaks to the athletic profile of the town's visitor base. Jackson draws serious skiers, climbers, and backcountry travelers who expect their hotels to keep up with them physically as much as aesthetically.

    At 96 rooms, the hotel sits in a middle tier by Jackson Hole standards: larger than boutique independents like Hotel Jackson or the Rusty Parrot Lodge & Spa, considerably smaller than the large resort properties in Teton Village. That scale allows for a more coherent design atmosphere than a full-service resort typically manages while still offering the range of amenities that multi-night stays in a destination like this require. Rates from $462 per night place it in the premium segment of the town-center market, though well below the Teton Village resorts at peak ski season. For travelers whose priority is access to the town itself rather than ski-in/ski-out convenience, the value proposition is defensible.

    The Bistro: Two Formats, One Program

    Food programming in Jackson Hole's hotel sector has become a genuine point of differentiation. The town now has enough serious dining that a hotel restaurant cannot simply be a convenience option; it has to compete on its own terms. The Cloudveil's answer is The Bistro, which runs across two distinct spaces: a lobby-adjacent dining room and an open-air rooftop deck. The dual-format approach is common in hospitality markets where seasonal extremes demand flexibility. Jackson's winters and summers are not the same place, and a hotel that can offer a sheltered, warm dining room in January and an open rooftop with Grand Teton sightlines in July is serving two different guest experiences under one program. The Michelin Key recognition suggests the overall property execution, including its food and beverage component, meets a standard worth noting. For a broader sense of Jackson Hole's restaurant scene beyond hotel dining, our full Jackson Hole restaurants guide maps the independent options by neighborhood and format.

    Seasonal Timing and the Jackson Hole Visitor Pattern

    Jackson Hole operates on two distinct peak seasons with a shoulder period between them, and the right time to stay at a town-center property like The Cloudveil differs significantly from the calculus that governs the ski resorts. Winter peak runs from late December through late March, when Teton Village fills first and town-center hotels become a secondary allocation for visitors who prioritize skiing over location. Summer peak, roughly July through September, reverses that dynamic: Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone drive the visitor volume, and proximity to the town square matters far more than proximity to a ski lift. The rooftop deck at The Bistro becomes a functional asset during those months rather than a seasonal curiosity. Shoulder seasons in May and October offer lower rates and fewer crowds, though some outdoor infrastructure in the park operates on reduced schedules. For mountain properties in the broader American West with similar seasonal logic, properties like Sage Lodge in Pray and Alpine Falls Ranch in Superior follow comparable patterns.

    Where It Sits in the Jackson Hole Hotel Market

    The Jackson Hole premium hotel market has stratified clearly over the past decade. At one end, ultra-luxury wilderness properties like Amangani and the Four Seasons compete on views, ski access, and comprehensive resort services. At the other, design-led independents like Faraway Jackson Hole and Hotel Jackson have built followings on atmosphere and local rootedness. The Cloudveil occupies a third position: it has the design ambition of the boutique independents and the infrastructure depth of a larger branded property, without the full-resort scale of the Teton Village options. That makes it a sensible choice for visitors traveling primarily for the town and park rather than for ski access, and for those who want an in-room experience that goes beyond the functional without paying for amenities they won't use. The Autograph Collection flag adds booking infrastructure and loyalty-point integration for travelers who operate within the Marriott ecosystem, which is neither a drawback nor a particular selling point depending on your priorities.

    For context on what the Michelin Key designation signals relative to the broader American hotel market, consider how it has been awarded to properties across very different formats and price points: urban flagships like The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, resort properties like Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside, and smaller destination stays like Troutbeck in Amenia. The common thread is a level of intentionality in design, service, and food programming that rises above category average. In Jackson Hole's context, where the category average is already high, that distinction carries weight.

    Planning Your Stay

    Rates start at $462 per night for 96 rooms across the property. The hotel sits at 112 Center Street, directly on the town square, within walking distance of the main dining and retail corridor. For ski season stays, advance booking of three months or more is standard practice across all premium Jackson Hole properties; summer travel to coincide with peak national park season in July and August warrants similar lead time. The Bistro's rooftop deck functions as a genuine draw during the warmer months and is worth factoring into room-selection timing. The town square location means the hotel serves equally well as a base for day trips to Grand Teton and Yellowstone as it does for ski access via the tram at Teton Village, roughly a twenty-minute drive west.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What room should I choose at The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection?

    The hotel holds 96 rooms across its contemporary mountain format, with rates from $462 per night. Given its Michelin Key recognition and design emphasis, rooms on upper floors will tend to deliver the strongest combination of mountain-view sightlines and separation from town-square activity. If The Bistro's rooftop deck is a priority, proximity to the elevating connection between dining spaces matters less than at a larger resort. For those focused on ski season, the town-center location means all rooms serve as equivalent bases for Teton Village access by vehicle or shuttle.

    Why do people go to The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection?

    The Cloudveil draws two distinct visitor types. The first are travelers prioritizing Jackson town itself: the square, the restaurants, the galleries, and the park access from the south entrance, for whom a walkable, design-led property at the center of things makes practical sense. The second are guests who have weighed the Jackson Hole hotel market, found the Teton Village resorts either overscaled or focused too narrowly on ski infrastructure, and want premium accommodation without a full-resort surround. At $462 per night with a 2024 Michelin Key and town-square placement, the positioning holds for both groups. The Autograph Collection flag adds loyalty integration for Marriott travelers, though the property reads as a coherent standalone without it.

    How far ahead should I plan for The Cloudveil, Autograph Collection?

    Jackson Hole's premium hotel inventory compresses significantly during peak winter (late December through March) and peak summer (July through September). For either window, booking three months ahead is the practical baseline across the market at this price point. The Cloudveil's 96-room scale means it is not as capacity-constrained as smaller boutique properties in the town, but Michelin Key properties in destination markets consistently book ahead of the broader category. Shoulder season travel in May or October offers more availability and lower rates, though some park and outdoor programming operates on reduced schedules. For comparable planning logic at other recognized American properties, the booking windows at Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, Amangiri in Canyon Point, and Kona Village in Kailua Kona follow similar patterns.

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