
Nord-du-Québec (Eeyou Istchee Baie-James et Nunavik)·Cruises & Marine Wildlife Watching
Radisson and the James Bay Interpretation Centre
The northernmost locality reachable via the Billy-Diamond Highway, this village offers an interpretation centre on the region's natural and human environments, as well as an exceptionally clear night sky ideal for watching the northern lights.
Radisson marks the endpoint of the Billy-Diamond Road — formerly known as the James Bay Road — a 620-kilometre paved highway connecting Matagami to this most northern locality accessible by road in this section of northern Quebec, making this village a tangible symbol of the ultimate road frontier before the even more remote territory of Nunavik. Established in direct connection with the development of the La Grande hydroelectric complex, Radisson now serves as a logistics hub for visitors wishing to explore the Robert-Bourassa facility, while offering its own educational appeal through an interpretation centre dedicated to the natural and human environments characteristic of this portion of Jamésie, including in-depth information on the exceptional northern ecosystem surrounding the locality. Radisson's linear park, developed within the village itself, invites visitors to discover this particular subarctic environment on foot, where vegetation and wildlife bear witness to the harsh climatic conditions typical of this latitude. Radisson's extreme remoteness from any urban light pollution also makes it a prime destination for stargazing: Northern Lights dancing across autumn and winter skies, the Milky Way unfurling in all its splendour during summer nights, offering intrepid visitors a celestial experience that is difficult to replicate in the more southern and urbanized regions of Quebec.
Address
129, avenue Des Groseillers, Radisson (QC) J0Y 2X0
Phone
819 638-7777




