Planifier Votre Visite
Plan Your
Visit
Three itineraries for three different reasons to come. Where to eat, where to stay, how to get here, and a town map. Everything you need, on one page.
Pourquoi Grand Coteau
Why You
Should Come
Because the magnolias hit you before the sign does, coming in the back way.
Because the only Vatican-recognized miracle site in the United States sits on the second floor of a school that has been running since 1821. You visit by calling ahead.
Because St. Charles Borromeo has been at the center of town since 1819 and the Jesuits have kept the doors open since 1837. The bell tower is rare enough that architects photograph it from the road.
Because Our Lady of the Oaks will take you in for a retreat if you need one. They have been doing this since 1938.
Because the pie is real and so is the Legislature that made it official in 2014.
Because 70 buildings in this town are on the National Register and somebody still cuts the grass around every one of them.
L'Année à Grand Coteau
What's On
A town of 776 people has no business throwing this many festivals. Grand Coteau does it anyway. Here is the whole calendar.
Creole
Culture Day
Town Hall Park · Annual
Boucherie at sunrise. Kouri-Vini bingo. Genealogy station. Live Zydeco into the evening. A day-long celebration of Louisiana Creole identity, language, and food. Grand Coteau is its permanent home.
creolecultureday.org →Sweet Dough
Pie Festival
231 Burleigh Lane · 9 AM – 3 PM
Grand Coteau was named Sweet Dough Pie Capital by the 2014 Louisiana Legislature. 100+ vendors, live music, a public pie contest. Proceeds benefit the Grand Coteau Cultural Foundation. Call (337) 331-6352 for vendor info.
Festival Page →Lâche Pas
Boucherie
Buzzard's Prairie · E. MLK Jr. Dr.
Three days. One hog. A Louisiana tradition lived out right. Texas Monthly covered it. Anthony Bourdain came to film it. Camping encouraged. Kids welcome. All meals included in the ticket.
boucherielachepas.com →Festival
of Words
Thensted Center · 268 Church Street
Two days of readings, workshops, open mic, and Drive-By Poetry — where St. Landry students perform featured authors' work in the streets. Running since 2008. Non-profit.
festivalofwords.org →Grand
Noël
Downtown Grand Coteau
The town's community Christmas celebration. Tree lighting, local vendors, music in the street. Old-school small-town holiday with the whole parish turning out.
Details via Town HallChristmas
at Coteau
Academy of the Sacred Heart
Thirty-plus years running. 90 regional vendors. Gumbo Cook-Off with the best gumbo chefs in Acadiana. Breakfast with Santa. Preview Party Thursday night. Proceeds support the Schools.
ash1821.org →Exit 11
Yard Sale
I-49 Corridor · Grand Coteau & Sunset
A three-day sprawl along the Exit 11 corridor. Antique dealers, thrift vendors, estate sales. Discounts in every shop from Grand Coteau to Sunset. Early birds show up before sunup.
Annual · I-49 Exit 11 CorridorThree Ways In
Itineraries
For Road Trippers
A Perfect Day
Breakfast at the Hive. Morning walking tour of the historic district and the oak alley. Lunch at Big Hill Café. Afternoon at the Academy + Shrine (by appointment). Pie and a slow drive home.
For Weekenders
A Perfect Weekend
Stay at Train Wreck Inn or La Maison Chatrian. Friday night dinner. Saturday shopping on MLK Drive, Sweet Dough Pie Festival if in October, Sunset rubboard shop afternoon. Sunday Mass at St. Charles Borromeo or brunch.
For Pilgrims & Retreat-Goers
A Pilgrim’s Weekend
Book a silent retreat at Our Lady of the Oaks. Schedule a Shrine tour. Visit St. Charles Borromeo for Mass. Quiet afternoon on the back roads. Leave with what you came for.
À Manger
Where to Eat
Local kitchens on Martin Luther King Drive and around town. Hours can shift — call ahead when you can.
Big Hill Café at Brent’s
234 MLK Drive
Cajun and homestyle cooking in a century-old wooden building. Breakfast and lunch.
The Hive Market
Coffee + Bakery
Pecan milk lattes, sweet potato cinnamon rolls, brownie batter snowballs stuffed with vanilla ice cream. Festival of Words reading venue.
Le Petit Cajun Tearoom & Boutique
182 E MLK Drive
Teas, finger sandwiches, pastries, and a small retail boutique under the same roof.
More Kitchens
DDee’s · Josephine · Cajun Persuasion · Go-Bears
Four additional locally-owned eateries around Grand Coteau. Worth the short walk or drive. Hours added to the directory as verified.
Où Rester
Where to Stay
Small, personal, built around character. Book direct when you can.
Train Wreck Inn
Train-Car Lodging
Four separate lodging spaces including a restored train car and caboose. Wes Anderson-inspired interiors with midcentury twist. French spoken. AirBnB Experience dinners available.
La Maison Chatrian
252 Chatrian Street
Circa 1835 historic home on 25 acres. 2024 Louisiana Trust Stewardship Award. Home to the Mary Louise Charles story — a Black woman who inherited the home from the Chatrian family in the 1970s. Now a vacation rental.
Casita Azul Guest Cottage
One-Bedroom Cottage
Private guest cottage hosted by Patrice Melnick. Ici on parle français. Linked to the Festival of Words.
Our Lady of the Oaks
Retreat House
Ignatian silent retreats, preached weekends, and couples’ retreats. Lodging included. Booking at gcretreats.org.
La Carte
Town Map
Every shop, every restaurant, every church, every retreat house, every historic building — walkable in an afternoon.
Getting Here
How to
Find Us
Grand Coteau is a twenty-minute detour off Interstate 49, Exit 11. Eight miles south of Opelousas. Twenty minutes north of Lafayette. Forty-five minutes east of Baton Rouge. Two hours west of New Orleans. Four hours east of Houston.
The nearest commercial airport is Lafayette Regional (LFT). New Orleans Louis Armstrong (MSY) is the nearest major hub.