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Competition Dates

August 25 - 31, 2025

Quartet Applications accepted from October 1, 2024 until March 1, 2025
 

Competition Information

Overview

The Banff International String Quartet Competition is recognized as one of the premier chamber music competitions in the world. Established in 1983, BISQC is a large celebration of chamber music in a festival format attracting enthusiastic capacity audiences. The unparalleled exposure to concert presenters, managers and broadcasters from North America and abroad makes BISQC a career launching pad for all invited ensembles. 

All quartets invited to participate in the competition are provided return transportation from their home to Banff as well as room and board for the duration of BISQC. A separate rehearsal room for each quartet will also be provided.

 

Prizes

In addition to generous cash prizes, the laureate quartets are offered residency opportunities at Banff Centre and, for the first prize laureates, a custom-designed three-year artistic and career development program which includes touring, a recording residency, the Southern Methodist University Peak Fellowship Ensemble-in-Residence Prize of a paid residency worth $110,000 CAD, an Esterházy Foundation Residency with concerts at Haydn Hall in Eisenstadt and the Lucerne Festival, and an opportunity for a two-week Chamber Music in Residency at the prestigious Britten Pears Arts in England.

   

Career Development Prizes

In recognition of the extraordinary level of artistry that BISQC attracts, in 2016 a new career development program was introduced which guarantees financial support to all invited quartets. All quartets not advancing to the finals will receive a Christine and David Anderson Prize of $5,000 CAD.

How to Apply

Online applications are accepted between the dates of October 1, 2024, and March 1, 2025. 

Applying for BISQC is a 2-step process:

  1. Complete all Acceptd application questions and upload all support materials
  2. Pay $250 CAD non-refundable fee through Acceptd in order to complete and submit the application

Applications close March 1, 2025, 23:39 GMT -07:00 (11:59 pm MT)
ALL SUPPORT MATERIAL INCLUDING VIDEOS, MUST BE SUBMITTED BY THIS TIME.

Full details below and in the Rules, Regulations and Repertoire.

Rules, Regulations & Repertoire

 

Prizes

1st Place Laureates

One quartet will be awarded a custom-designed, three-year artistic and career development program which includes: 

• $25,000 CDN cash prize; 
• Winner’s Concert Tours in career-building markets in Europe and North America, arranged by Banff Centre; 
• A two-week residency at Banff Centre including a recording produced by Banff Centre; 
• Coaching, career guidance, and mentorship; 
• Southern Methodist University Peak Fellowship Ensemble-in-Residence Prize which includes a one-year paid visiting residency at the Meadows School involving performances, coaching, and mentorship. This residency is valued at over $110,000 CDN. 
• A residency with the Esterházy Foundation, including concerts at Haydn Hall in Eisenstadt and the Lucerne Festival. 
• An opportunity for a two-week Chamber Music Residency at the prestigious Britten Pears Arts in England

2nd Place Laureates

• $12,000 CDN cash prize; 
• A creative residency at Banff Centre including coaching and mentorship opportunities.

3rd Place Laureates

• $8,000 CDN cash prize; 
• A creative residency at Banff Centre including coaching and mentorship opportunities.

The R.S. Williams & Sons Haydn Prize:

$4,000 for the best performance of a Haydn quartet from Round 1.

The Canadian Commission World Premiere Prize, in honour of the R.S. Williams & Sons Company:

$4,000 for the best performance in Round 3 of the commissioned quartet by Kati Agócs.

Christine and David Anderson Prizes: 

In recognition of the extraordinary level of artistry that BISQC attracts, all quartets not advancing to the finals will receive a $5,000 CAD prize to support their emerging careers. 

 

Prizes are in Canadian dollars and are subject to relevant Canadian government withholding taxes, with the exception of the Southern Methodist University Peak Residency. Funds for the SMU Residency are paid directly by SMU to the musicians of the winning ensemble and may be subject to United States withholding taxes.

All Prizes will be announced on Sunday August 31, 2025 at the Awards Ceremony following the final round of the competition.  

Winner's Tour

All quartets accepted into the competition must agree that if they win first prize, they will perform in the Winner’s Concert Tours arranged for them by BISQC or its designates in January 2026, March 2026, Summer 2026, Fall 2026, Winter 2027, Summer 2027, and Spring or Summer 2028. Concert booking periods will be available to all accepted quartets by April 30, 2025. Any dates added to the tour after this date would need to be mutually agreed upon by the winning quartet.

BISQC does not retain any fees for its management service in arranging the Winner’s Concert Tour but reserves the right to enter into an agreement with other management to secure concert engagements. Concert engagements obtained by BISQC or its designates as part of the first prize will not be subject to any fee payable to the prize-winner’s current or future artist management. In addition, the winning quartet and its current or future artist management agree to give exclusivity within a 100 km radius to Winner’s Concert Tour presenters for the concert season in which the quartet appears.

Should a situation arise where the winning quartet cannot procure the necessary travel documents or visas, or cannot fulfill the concert obligations, BISQC retains the right to transfer the winning prize to the 2nd or 3rd place quartets or a quartet of its choosing.

Should there be a change in personnel in any of the winning quartets after the competition, it must be communicated with BISQC for review. BISQC reserves the right to cancel the quartet’s participation in the winner’s career development program, including any future concert performances.

All competing quartets coming to Banff Centre campus agree to comply with all provincial and Banff Centre mandated health and safety measures.

By agreeing to participate in the 15th BISQC, competing quartets become ambassadors of Banff Centre and the Banff International String Quartet Competition and must conduct themselves in an exemplary manner. BISQC reserves the right to cancel the participation of quartets and/or their members that display inappropriate behavior in advance of or during the competition or during the Winner’s Concert Tour and Career Development period. Quartets will be required to sign a Code of Conduct as part of the application process and winners will have a Code of Conduct included in their Career Development contract.

MKI Artists and Konzertdirektion Hampl will oversee and manage the extensive touring of North America and Europe as part of the 2025 first prize winner’s tour 

Eligibility

The competition is open to string quartets of all nationalities whose members are each under the age of 35 as of September 1, 2025 (born on or after September 1, 1990).

First and second prize winners of any previous Banff International String Quartet Competition (BISQC) are ineligible to apply. For the purposes of this rule, this includes quartets and individual members of quartets.

Quartets that have already competed twice in BISQC are ineligible to apply. For the purposes of this rule, a quartet will be considered the same group if 50 percent of the personnel are returning.

Application Process

All applying quartets will submit materials and fee via the BISQC Acceptd online application platform. This includes:

  • Complete all application questions on the Acceptd portal - https://app.getacceptd.com/banff
  • Pay a non-refundable application fee of $250 CAD
  • Resume of the quartet's history including repertoire list and performance history for the period covering January 2022 to October 2024
  • Two professional quality high-resolution format (minimum 300 DPI) colour photographs, one in landscape orientation and one in portrait orientation, including photo credit details
  • A brief description of each member's training and experience
  • Proof of date of birth for each quartet member (e.g. copy of valid passport or birth certificate)
  • Two recommendations to be submitted directly by the recommenders via Acceptd
  • Three videos* (one per work) recorded after January 1, 2024. The three videos will contain: 

    1.     Two contrasting movements of a quartet by Franz Joseph Haydn from Opus 20, 33, 42, 50, 54, 55, 64, 71, 74, 76, 77;
    OR
    Two contrasting movements from one of the ten celebrated W.A. Mozart quartets (K. 387, K. 421, K. 428, K. 458, K. 464, K. 465, K. 499, K. 575, K, 589, K, 590);
    OR
    Two contrasting movements from one of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Opus 18 quartets.
    2.     First movement from a quartet from the romantic or nationalist repertoire of the 19th century, or the Debussy Quartet, Op. 10, or the Ravel Quartet, or the Elgar Quartet, Op. 83, or Sibelius Quartet "Voces intimae", Op. 56. Quartets by Schubert or Beethoven will not be accepted in this round.
    3.     One complete quartet from the following list: 
    •    Béla Bartók: String Quartet No. 1 through No. 6
    •    Alban Berg: Lyric Suite or String Quartet Op. 3
    •    Benjamin Britten: String Quartet No. 1, Op. 25; or No 2, Op. 36; or No. 3, Op. 94
    •    Henri Dutilleux: Ainsi la nuit
    •    Alberto Ginastera: String Quartet No. 1, Op. 20 or No. 2, Op. 26
    •    Paul Hindemith: String Quartet No. 4, Op. 22 or No. 5, Op. 32
    •    Leoš Janáček:  String Quartet No. 1, “Kreutzer Sonata” or No. 2, “Intimate Letters”
    •    György Ligeti:  String Quartet No. 1 or No. 2
    •    Ruth Crawford Seeger: String Quartet
    •    Arnold Schoenberg: String Quartet No. 3, Op. 30 or No. 4, Op. 37
    •    Dmitri Shostakovich: String Quartet in F Major, No. 3, Op. 73; or in B flat Major, No. 5, Op. 92; or in E flat Major, No. 9, Op. 117
    •    Mieczysław Weinberg: String Quartet No.1 through No. 17
    •    Alexander Zemlinsky: String Quartet No. 3, Op. 19 or No. 4, Op. 25

*The videos must be of professional quality, shot by a single stationary camera in real-time, and must not be edited or altered in any way. You can record movements individually if preferred – you do not need to record multi-movement works in one take. Audio editing is strictly forbidden. Subtle audio processing (eg. reverb and equalization) may be used, as long as a natural impression of the ensemble is maintained. BISQC reserves the right to disqualify edited recordings or recordings that are not of professional quality. Physical DVDs or CDs, or digital audio recordings will NOT be accepted. Applicants must use the Acceptd online application tool.

Online applications, together with all supporting documents and the application fee, must be submitted between the dates of October 1, 2024 and March 1, 2025. All application materials must be received by March 1, 2025 (23:59 GDT-07:00).

Jury and Selection Process

  • All applications will be pre-screened by BISQC prior to the preliminary jury adjudication process. Any application not meeting the highest standards will not be forwarded to the preliminary jury for consideration.
     
  • The three preliminary jury members will review all submitted materials and select no more than 10 quartets to attend the competition.
     
  • Quartets selected for the 15th BISQC will be advised no later than April 30, 2025, by email and phone.
     
  • The quartets selected to participate in BISQC are strongly encouraged to arrive in Banff on Friday, August 22, 2025, but may travel on Saturday, August 23, 2025 as long as they arrive in Banff no later than 4pm. All competing quartets must remain on site through to departure on Monday, September 1, 2025.
     
  • Selected Quartets shall not communicate with jury members during the competition, nor shall any other person communicate with the jury members on behalf of any competitor. Violation of this rule may result in automatic disqualification from the competition.
     
  • The preliminary jury (3) and competition jury (7) will adjudicate the selected competing quartets using voting procedures prepared by BISQC’s official mathematician. The decisions of the preliminary jury and competition jury shall be final, and no correspondence will be entered into regarding the decisions of either group.

View Preliminary Jury Voting Procedures

View Competition Jury Voting Procedures

Competition Repertoire & Format

The quartet’s selected repertoire for performance during the competition may include the works presented during the application phase.

Each quartet invited to BISQC will perform in the first four rounds and if selected, will perform a fifth time during the Final Round.

The competition format and required repertoire is as follows:

ROUND 1:  21st Century Haydn

Quartets will perform a complete work by Franz Joseph Haydn, as well as a complete quartet written on or after January 1, 2000. Total performance time of no more than 50 minutes. Time requirements of this round should be strictly observed.

Haydn Selections: 
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 20, No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 33, No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 42, No. 35
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 50, No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 54, No. 1, 2 or 3
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 55, No. 1, 2 or 3
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 64, No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 71, No. 1, 2 or 3
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 74, No. 1, 2 or 3
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 76, No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6
•    Franz Joseph Haydn:  String Quartet, Op. 77, No. 1 or 2

ROUND 2:  Romantic

Quartets will perform a complete quartet from the romantic or nationalist repertoire of the 19th century, or the Debussy Quartet, Op. 10, or the Ravel Quartet, or the Elgar Quartet, Op. 83, or Sibelius Quartet "Voces intimae", Op. 56. Quartets by Schubert or Beethoven will not be accepted in this round.

ROUND 3:  Kati Agócs World Premiere 

Quartets will perform a new quartet of approximately 9 minutes in length by Canadian composer Kati Agócs. The work will be available to quartets that successfully pass the preliminary screening round and accept the invitation to participate in the 15th BISQC. Score and parts will be sent to the competing quartets by June 4, 2025.

ROUND 4: Beethoven/Schubert + 20th Century

Quartets will perform the first movement of a Ludwig van Beethoven Op. 59 work OR the first movement of a Franz Schubert late work from the list below, PLUS one complete work from the 20th century list below:

Schubert Selections:
•    Franz Schubert String Quartet No. 13, D. 804 (Rosamunde) 1st movement: Allegro ma non troppo
•    Franz Schubert String Quartet No. 14, D. 810 (Death and the Maiden) 1st movement:  Allegro
•    Franz Schubert String Quartet No. 15, D. 887 1st movement: Allegro molto moderato

20th Century Selections:
•    Béla Bartók: String Quartet No. 1 through No. 6
•    Alban Berg: Lyric Suite or String Quartet Op. 3
•    Benjamin Britten: String Quartet No. 1, Op. 25; or No 2, Op. 36; or No. 3, Op. 94
•    Henri Dutilleux: Ainsi la nuit
•    Alberto Ginastera: String Quartet No. 1, Op. 20 or No. 2, Op. 26
•    Paul Hindemith: String Quartet No. 4, Op. 22 or No. 5, Op. 32
•    Leoš Janáček:  String Quartet No. 1, “Kreutzer Sonata” or No. 2, “Intimate Letters”
•    György Ligeti:  String Quartet No. 1 or No. 2
•    Ruth Crawford Seeger: String Quartet
•    Arnold Schoenberg: String Quartet No. 3, Op. 30 or No. 4, Op. 37
•    Dmitri Shostakovich: String Quartet in F Major, No. 3, Op. 73; or in B flat Major, No. 5, Op. 92; or in E flat Major, No. 9, Op. 117
•    Mieczysław Weinberg: String Quartet No.1 through No. 17
•    Alexander Zemlinsky: String Quartet No. 3, Op. 19 or No. 4, Op. 25

Following the Beethoven/Schubert + 20th Century Round, the jury will select three quartets to advance to the fifth and Final Round.

ROUND 5: Finals

Each finalist quartet will present a program of not more than 45 minutes of music. The program must contain music by a minimum of three different composers. Individual movements of larger works are permitted, but the excerpts of movements are not allowed. The program is intended as an opportunity to demonstrate both excellence in performance and skill in curating. Time requirements of this round should be strictly observed.

  • Each quartet will submit a written description of the thought behind the chosen program. The written description should provide the listener, both audience and jurors, insight into the ideas behind the works. Why these works?  What are you exploring or illuminating by the selections?
     
  • As the winning quartet will be expected to work with many presenting organizations on programming, this round provides an opportunity to demonstrate their interest and thoughtfulness in creative curating.
     
  • The finalists are welcome to program repertoire around a thematic idea that they choose, but a specific theme is not required.
     
  • The written narrative describing the program can be submitted in English or in another language. Any submissions not in English will be professionally translated by the competition and the English translation will be shared with the jury and public. The submission should be no more than 750 words.
     

If accepted to compete in the 15th BISQC, competitors will be advised, prior to arrival in Banff, as to which repeats will be accepted and which repeats must be omitted during performances.
 

The works from the repertoire list as stated on the application form will be the repertoire performed during the competition. No other work may be substituted without prior written approval of the BISQC Director.
 

Any quartet that has competed in a previous Banff International String Quartet Competition cannot present any of the same repertoire they performed for the public and jury in any previous BISQC.
 

Quartets are free to perform standing or sitting in any formation.
 

All performances take place in the Jenny Belzberg Theatre at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity.

Practical Information

BISQC will provide the following to all invited quartets:

  • Return economy airfare from the quartet’s home base to the Calgary International Airport (including cello seat).
  • Return ground transportation to the Banff Centre from the Calgary International Airport.
  • Accommodation on Banff Centre campus from Friday, August 22 to Monday, September 1, 2025 (check-out Monday, September 1, 2025). Earlier arrival, if deemed necessary due to flight arrival times, is subject to availability of accommodation. Accommodation will be double occupation between quartet members when appropriate, or single rooms on request.
  • All meals from Friday, August 22 through Monday, September 1, 2025.
  • A separate rehearsal room for each quartet.

Obtaining appropriate travel documents and insurance is the sole responsibility of each competitor. BISQC accepts no liability of any kind whatsoever for any personal illness or injury sustained by the competitor or for loss or damage to a competitor’s belongings, including instrument, during transit or while at the competition.

Under no circumstances will a change of personnel between the application process and the end of the competition in Banff be permitted.

BISQC has the right, without payment of any fee, to record, videotape, film, broadcast, or photograph any competition concerts or events for any purpose. All rights, including copyright in such media shall vest in and be owned by BISQC in perpetuity.

BISQC has the right to produce and distribute without limit or payment of any fee, audio and/or video recordings of all competition concerts or events in whole or in part.

The official language of the competition is English.

If there is discrepancy between the BISQC website, Acceptd, and the Rules, Regulations, and Repertoire document, the document shall be deemed correct. At its discretion, BISQC reserves the right to clarify these rules and update as necessary. Please contact the BISQC office regarding any discrepancies.

Canadian Commission Composer

Kati Agocs

Photo by Robyn Twomney

Hailed as “a composer of imposing artistic gifts” (Gramophone Magazine) and “one of the brightest stars in her generation of composers” (Audiophile Audition), Kati Agócs writes “sublime music of fluidity and austere beauty” (The Boston Globe), that is “simmering, and lucid…and demands to be heard” (The New York Times). A recent Guggenheim Fellow, she is also a winner of the Arts and Letters Award, the lifetime achievement award in music composition from The American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a two-time nominee for Classical Composition of the Year in the Juno Awards. Kati Agócs is a citizen of Canada, the United States, and Hungary (European Union). She has served on the composition faculty at the New England Conservatory in Boston since 2008, and maintains a work studio in Flatrock, Newfoundland.

Recent works include a new, large-scale piece for soprano soloist, chorus, and orchestra, commissioned by the Jebediah Foundation; Transluminescence, her piano concerto for Nicolas Namoradze, commissioned by the Esther Honens International Piano Competition; her Horn Concerto for James Sommerville co-commissioned by a consortium of five U.S. and Canadian orchestras; and the cantata Voices of the Immaculate, written for Lucy Dhegrae and Third Sound Ensemble and co-commissioned by Miller Theatre at Columbia University, Chamber Music America, New Music USA, and the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society. The world premiere of Voices of the Immaculate took place as part of her Miller Theatre Composer Portrait in New York City. Zachary Woolfe wrote in The New York Times: “For once, singing of complete and utter clarity…a simmering new cantata, conceived with transparency as a first principle…entirely, word for word, lucid…her text demands to be heard, and is.”

Her music has been commissioned and performed by many other premier ensembles and organizations including the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, Boston Symphony Chamber Players, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Ensemble Reconsil Vienna, Lontano, Albany Symphony Orchestra, National Youth Orchestra of Canada, Claremont Trio, Hub New Music, Jupiter String Quartet, Continuum, Da Capo Chamber Players, Ensemble Contemporain de Montreal, National Arts Centre Orchestra, and the multiple Grammy-award winning ensemble Eighth Blackbird, who toured the U.S. with Immutable Dreams. She contributed a work to violinist Jennifer Koh’s Grammy award- winning album “Alone Together.”

Other recent compositions include Imprimatur (String Quartet #2), commissioned by the Harvard Musical Association, Krannert Center/University of Illinois, and the Aspen Music Festival and School to open the Aspen Music Festival; Concerto for Violin and Percussion Orchestra, commissioned by the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University for the New England Conservatory Percussion Ensemble; Rogue Emoji for Hub New Music, commissioned by Ashmont Hill Chamber Music with support from The Cricket Foundation; Morning Star, a motet commissioned by Boston’s Emmanuel Music in celebration of their Fiftieth Anniversary; and The Debrecen Passion, a work for women’s chorus and orchestra with texts by Szilárd Borbély. Her album The Debrecen Passion with Lorelei Ensemble and the Boston Modern Orchestra Project was named one of its Top Ten Classical Albums of 2016 by The Boston Globe, with Gramophone Magazine calling the title track “an iridescent wonder.”

Residencies include the Charles Ives Music Festival, Chelsea Music Festival, Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival, Oberlin University, National Youth Orchestra of Canada (as Composer-in-Residence for their Fiftieth Anniversary) and a curatorial residency with Metropolis Ensemble in the Bowery on New York’s Lower East Side. Awards and honours include the Guggenheim Fellowship; the Arts and Letters Award, Charles Ives Fellowship and Charles Ives Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; recording grants from the Aaron Copland Fund for Music; Composer fellowships from the Massachusetts Arts Council and the New York Foundation for the Arts; The Boston Foundation’s inaugural Brother Thomas Fellowship; the ASCAP Leonard Bernstein Fellowship at the Tanglewood Music Center; a Fulbright Fellowship to the Liszt Academy in Budapest; a Jacob K. Javits Fellowship from the U.S. Department of Education; residencies at the MacDowell Colony and Yaddo; and commissioning grants from the Canada Council for the Arts.

Born in Canada of Hungarian and American parents, Kati Agócs earned doctoral and Masters degrees from the Juilliard School, studying composition with Milton Babbitt, and studied voice privately with Adele Addison. She is an alumna of the Aspen Music School, Tanglewood Music Festival, Sarah Lawrence College, and Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific (United World Colleges), where she represented the province of Ontario. Her works are published by Kati Agócs Music and distributed internationally by Theodore Front Musical Literature.

Mentor in Residence

Mark Steinberg

Photo by Jürgen Frank

Mark Steinberg is first violinist and founding member of the Brentano Quartet. With the quartet he has performed for thirty years on five continents. The quartet is ensemble in residence at Yale University, has recorded extensively, and has won awards such as the Naumburg Chamber Music Award, the inaugural Cleveland Quartet award and the Royal Philharmonic Society award for best debut in the UK. Steinberg has appeared often in trio and duo concerts with pianist Mitsuko Uchida, with whom he presented the complete Mozart sonata cycle in London's Wigmore Hall in 2001. Mr. Steinberg has been soloist with the London Philharmonia, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Auckland Philharmonia, and other orchestras. He holds degrees from Indiana University and The Juilliard School and has studied with Louise Behrend, Josef Gingold, and Robert Mann. He is currently on the violin faculties of the Manhattan School of Music, and The Graduate Center at CUNY. Steinberg has been on quartet competition juries at the Banff International Quartet Competition, the London Quartet Competition, and twice at the Mozart International Quartet Competition in Salzburg as well as the Naumburg Violin and Chamber Music Competitions. He has taught often at the Banff Centre for the Arts, the Aspen Festival, Norfolk Chamber Music Festival, the Steans Institute at Ravinia, and the Taos School of Music and has given master classes at Rice University, the Eastman School of Music, the Cleveland Institute of Music, the Britten-Pears Institute in Aldeburgh, England, the Mozarteum in Salzburg, the Guildhall School, the Amsterdam Conservatory, and numerous other schools.

Mentor in Residence Program supported in honour of the R.S. Williams & Sons Company.

Many competitions exist for chamber music, but no competition is as prestigious for string quartets exclusively as Banff. Having served on the jury twice—once in the preliminary screening round and once for the live auditions in Banff—I can say, without any doubt, that the judging was honest and transparent. The Banff Competition has certainly helped launch the careers of many deserving young string quartets.

Philip Setzer, Emerson String Quartet

For questions please contact: 

Email: bisqc@banffcentre.ca 
Phone: 403.762.6231 
107 Tunnel Mountain Drive 
Box 1020, Stn. 23 Banff, Alberta 
T1L 1H5 Canada