It was designed by architect Alexander Tilloch Galt Dunfort, who had designed Mary Dorothy Molson's opulent residence, now owned by the Montreal Urban Community. The lodge featured a specially equipped ski storage and waxing room, a living room with a fireplace, a kitchen and seven bedrooms with bunk beds for a total of 24 beds.
It was inaugurated in 1939, but the club didn't occupy it until a year later as it was used as a home for English refugees sent to Canada by their parents at the beginning of the war.
The lodge was entirely furnished by the Molsons with great attention to detail, with the club emblem above the fireplace and twenty-four toothbrushes on their stands in the bathroom. A three-year supply of coal was also provided.
The lodge became the heart of the club, its upkeep brought a sense of responsibility among the young women and, as Betty Kemp would say, an unfailing solidarity among them. Thirty-four years later, they were sadly forced to part with it. The building was destroyed by fire in the early 1990s. The club officially ceased operations in 1982, and in 1991, was inducted into the Laurentian Ski Hall of Fame.