Central Adirondack crossroads. Home of the Adirondack Experience museum and the Blue Mountain summit trail.
Blue Mountain Lake is, by geography, the dead center of the Adirondack Park. Stand at the public dock and you are equidistant from Lake George and Tupper Lake, from Lake Placid and Old Forge. The hamlet has a permanent population of well under two hundred. There is one general store, one real restaurant, one small lodging cluster, and one of the best regional museums in the United States.
The Adirondack Experience — formerly the Adirondack Museum, before the 2017 rebrand — sits on a hillside above the lake on twenty-three campus acres, with twenty-five buildings, a working blacksmith shop, the historic Marion River Carry steam locomotive, three log cabins moved from elsewhere in the Park, the Vanderbilt-era Bull Cottage, and one of the great American collections of Adirondack guideboats. It is the institution that defines the central Park's self-understanding. Visitors who come for an hour stay for half a day.
Blue Mountain itself, at 3,759 feet, is the regional summit. The trail is two miles each way, ends at a working fire tower, and gives the cleanest 360-degree view of the central Park anywhere. The Hedges, a Vanderbilt-cousin Great Camp on the lake's south shore, has run as a hotel since 1921 and is still operating. There is, in short, a startling amount of weight in this very small hamlet.
Blue Mountain Lake
open
Adirondack Experience open
seasonal
Archaeological Fieldwork Discovery Day
Jun 20
The Adirondack Experience
23-acre regional museum, founded 1957
Blue Mountain itself
3,759 ft · fire tower · 360° view
The Hedges
Vanderbilt-cousin Great Camp, hotel since 1921
Marion River Carry
Historic steam-rail portage between waters
Tirrell Pond
Quiet wilderness paddle, lean-to camping
29 directory entries across 5 chapters · 29 pinned on the map · 7 upcoming events · 4 Field Guides cover this region
Bloomingdale's meadery brings honey-forward brews to Blue Mountain Lake
Award-winning kitchen on Long Lake—walk in, no reservations required
Former city chef slinging serious hash in Indian Lake
A 121-acre museum campus exploring Adirondack culture, art, and wilderness
Year-round concerts, workshops, and galleries anchor Blue Mountain Lake's cultural life

A working retreat where writers and artists create beside the lake







Every published proprietor in the region, plotted on the map and filterable below.
More than 20 buildings across 121 acres hold interactive exhibitions on Adirondack life, from boat collections and photography archives to outdoor activities and a research library.
Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts is a vibrant hub for creativity in the Adirondacks, offering inspiring performances, gallery exhibits, workshops, and community events for all ages.

Blue Mountain Center is a working community of writers, artists, and activists set in the heart of the Adirondacks, the largest state park in the continental U.S.
Blue Mountain offers a rewarding fire tower hike in the Central Adirondacks, featuring sweeping views and historical significance, with a world-class museum located at its base.
Trail to the Blue Mountain summit fire tower, 4 miles round trip and 1,560 feet of ascent, off Route 30 in Blue Mountain Lake. One of the better fire tower hikes in the central Adirondacks.
Blue Mountain Lake Boat Livery offers a wide range of boat rentals, including outboards, pontoons, kayaks, canoes, and paddleboards. They also provide scenic boat tours on vintage wooden launches and facilitate access to island camping on…
Blue Mountain Lake Inn is a historic 1880s Victorian boarding house offering bed and breakfast lodging and whole house rentals in Blue Mountain Lake, NY, providing hospitality for guests exploring the Adirondack Park.
The Route 28N parking and trailhead for Blue Mountain, 4 miles round trip to the 3,759-foot summit fire tower. The Adirondack Experience museum sits at the base of the mountain.
Blueberry Hill Motel offers a variety of rooms and a cabin in Long Lake, NY, centrally located in the Adirondack Park. Guests have access to private beachfront facilities at its sister property, Sandy Point, just one mile away.
Brookside Hops & Hoagies is a casual, family-friendly shop in Long Lake, founded in 2023, offering craft beers and hoagies made with fresh ingredients and Boars Head deli meats. It operates Wednesday through Sunday from 11 AM to 7 PM.
Castle Rock is a 2,480ft peak offering a rewarding hike in the Adirondacks. The trailhead and parking area are found at the end of Maple Lodge Road, near the Minnowbrook Conference Center in Blue Mountain Lake, NY.
Chef Darrell’s Mountain Diner: the best Diner in Indian Lake, NY. Order directly online today for takeout or delivery. Save money, support local business!
Donnelly's Sunset Point offers 11 Adirondack-style rental options, including cabins and a house, spread across 4 acres with 750 feet of waterfront on Long Lake. It provides a basecamp for kayaking, fishing, swimming, and enjoying beautiful…
A historic family-owned resort on Blue Mountain Lake's north shore, open mid-June through mid-October, with eight lodge rooms, four motel units, nine cottages, and breakfast and dinner included.
Hex and Hop is a craft brewery and meadery located in Bloomingdale, New York. They offer full-flavored, high-quality craft beer and mead, made with fresh, locally sourced ingredients, emphasizing community and craft.
Four lakeview cottages (one, two, and three bedrooms) plus a two-story lake house sleeping eight, on the wooded shore of Long Lake a mile south of the hamlet. Open May through November.
Originally Kamp Kill Kare, built in 1898 by William West Durant for Lt. Gov. Timothy Woodruff. One-thousand acres, a private 500-acre lake, sixteen bedrooms, all-inclusive — booked as an exclusive buyout for groups up to 35.
Long Lake Diner & Owl's Head Pub has been proudly serving food, beverages, and memories since 2004.
Long View Lodge Restaurant on Long Lake offers a full-service dining experience with an award-winning chef. Known for its quality ingredients and an ever-changing menu in a warm, inviting Adirondack setting, no reservations are necessary.
Syracuse University-owned conference center on twenty-eight acres of Blue Mountain Lake shoreline. Ten bedrooms in the main lodge, five fireplaces, and a 24-foot cathedral-ceilinged Great Room. Designed for small creative-thinking retreats.
Mt. Sabattis Recreation Area offers over 4.3km (2.67mi) of trails for hiking and other activities within the Long Lake and Raquette Lake region.
Paddler's Rest Lakefront Cabins and Motel in Long Lake, NY, offers a range of accommodations including motel rooms, cabins, and a historic home. Guests enjoy lakeside views, a private sand beach, and complimentary canoes and kayaks, all wi…
Castle Rock is a rewarding Adirondack hike situated at 2,480ft in Blue Mountain Lake, NY. The trailhead and parking are located at the end of Maple Lodge Road, next to the Minnowbrook Conference Center, just south of the Adirondack Museum.
Seasonal coffee shop inside the 1895 schoolhouse that houses Blue Mountain Designs. Espresso, locally roasted coffee, loose-leaf tea, baked goods, avocado toast, sandwiches, and soups. May through October.
Steamboat Landing is a comfortable lakeside lodge in Blue Mountain Lake, Adirondack Park, offering renovated accommodations with scenic views and peaceful stays from June to October.
Small-town general store on NY-30 in Blue Mountain Lake, originally a 1900s service station, now a fuel and supply stop with daily fresh-baked goods and a coffee counter.
An Adirondack Great Camp on Blue Mountain Lake, 12 acres with 1,600 feet of waterfront, 30-plus lodging options, full-service dining, and seasonal recreation. National Register listed.

The Painted Chair Store, located in Indian Lake, NY, specializes in custom painted furniture and unique designs. They are currently preparing for the 2025 season.

A complete planning guide: difficulty by peak, common combo days, seasonal realities, and a sortable, filterable table of every summit.

A trip designed for the whole family — toddlers to teens — that everyone will actually enjoy. Family resorts, beaches, easy hikes, rainy-day saves, and a sortable atlas of every kid-friendly thing in the Park.

Camps, cabins, and lakefront — what to know about Park-region real estate, financing a second home, taxes and STAR, lakefront vs. mountain vs. in-town, and the surprises a generalist agent won't flag.