BYU Education Week draws tens of thousands of people to campus for a week each August — and for a lot of families, it’s a tradition that spans generations. Grandparents, parents, and kids all come together for the classes, the spirit, and the time as a family.
So why split everyone across separate hotel rooms?
One roof beats a row of hotel rooms

The Provo Canyon Treehouse is built for exactly this kind of trip:
- Sleeps up to 12 — two bedrooms plus a sleeping loft, bunk room, and pull-outs, so the whole family stays together
- A full kitchen for family breakfasts and dinners (a real budget-saver for a week-long stay)
- A great room and creekside patio where everyone naturally gathers at the end of the day
- In-unit laundry — the unsung hero of a multigenerational week
Instead of meeting in a hotel lobby, you come home each evening to one shared space in the canyon.
15 minutes from campus, a world away after class
The cabin sits about 15 minutes from BYU campus — close enough for easy daily trips to your classes, but tucked up in Provo Canyon among the pines and the creek. After a day of sessions, the hot tub, fire pit, and quiet are waiting.
A note on fit: the home has two bathrooms and some of the sleeping is camp-style (loft and pull-outs), so it’s at its best for one extended family sharing the space rather than several separate households.
Plan your Education Week stay
See the cabin and the things to do nearby, then check availability on Evolve. August fills early — reserve ahead.