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Lowest price over the last 30 days: US$ 99.90 (approx. GB£ 63)
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Tablet Plus Privileges
Tablet Plus: every stay includes select privileges and/or amenities. View privileges
Tablet Plus privileges for Lebua at State Tower include:
- Complimentary upgrade upon hotel check-in, based upon availability
- Guaranteed 4pm check-out
- Complimentary internet access (only for hotels that do not already offer this free to all guests)
- Complimentary daily breakfast for 2
- One Ocean 52 drink voucher up to 2 registered guests (once per stay)
- Guaranteed early 10:00 a.m. check-in
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Guest Reviews
What recent guests liked:
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“The staff was exceptionally friendly and helpful. … ”
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“skybar, location, room”
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“The staff, service and view in the Club Lounge were … ”
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“Incredible views with balconies 50 floors up. Restaurant … ”
Lebua at State Tower
1055/111 State Tower, Silom Road, Bangrak
Bangkok, Thailand
Style: Modern Design
Atmosphere: Lively
327 Rooms
Most of Bangkok’s hotels are unashamedly big deals — whether they’re high-rise towers or sprawling compounds, they tend toward the decadent and ostentatious, with miles of silk draperies and fawning service straight out of the colonial era. Refreshing, then, to find a place a little less conspicuous, a little more restrained and contemporary — a place like the Lebua at State Tower.
At 327 rooms, it’s not small, but nor is it record-shatteringly large; and while it’s luxurious, to be sure (it’s an all-suite hotel), the Lebua is quite a bit less flamboyant than some of its competition. The look is clean and modern, with hardwood floors and black lacquered furniture, the views out over Bangkok and the Chao Phraya river are extraordinary, and what luxuries there are are as useful as they are indulgent: flat-screen televisions, Eames office chairs, and Bulgari bath products.
In-room work desks, a business center and extensive meeting facilities mean business travelers are in good hands. However, it’s the leisure traveler who is perhaps better positioned to make the most of the Lebua; there’s a fairly substantial gym (with a spa soon to be added), an open-air swimming pool, and a handful of bars and restaurants, including, most dramatically, the rooftop Sirocco restaurant — atop the 63rd floor, this is the world’s highest al fresco restaurant, and a backdrop that would frankly be wasted on something as prosaic as a business lunch.