About northeast of the village up the Kuskanax Valley are the springs. In 1931, the access route was by car, and the remainder by packhorse or on foot, to the concrete swimming pool and hotter pool for relaxation. Cabins and tents were available for overnight stays. Nowadays on a former logging road, the
amphitheatre-shaped resort is built of rock and
red cedar. The main building houses the diameter
hot springs pools on the banks of the Kuskanax Creek, next to a serviced campsite. The resort, designed by Saskatchewan architect
Clifford Wiens, includes four cedar chalets in a narrow
A-frame design. The pool's water is piped in from the source of the springs half a mile away. Premier
Dave Barrett, who opened the resort officially in 1974, and filtered onsite. The smaller, Hot Pool is kept at in winter and in summer, and the filtered water is recycled every 30 minutes. The larger Warm Pool is maintained at in the winter and in the summer, on a two-hour recycling schedule. The resort was built for $700,000 and paid for by the federal and provincial governments in the form of grants for the benefit of the municipality, which owns it. Wiens, referred to only as "the architect from Saskatchewan", was the only "outsider" involved the development. Not everyone in Nakusp was pleased with the development, and continued to hike a half mile to the site of original hot springs, until one night when the old pool was "mysteriously dynamited." The resort made a profit for the first time in 2010.
Halcyon Hot Springs, another privately owned hot springs resort, is north of Nakusp. ==Services==