Need Assistance?

By phone or email

Live Chat

Welcome, .

The Landmark Mandarin Oriental

15 Queen's Road Central, The Landmark, Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Hong Kong | Hong Kong Island Hotels

Add to Favorites Favorites Email Print

Reserve Online

Lowest price over the last 30 days: HK$ 2,975.00 (approx. GB£ 238)

 

Arriving:
Leaving:

1 Adult

0 Children

Best rate guaranteed. Need to book a group?

  1. At a Glance
  2. Reviews
  3. Amenities
  4. Map & Guide
  • 19.0 Feedback Score
    out of 20

    Details Hide details

    • Rooms

      19.0

    • Service

      19.0

    • Public Spaces

      19.0

    • Overall

      18.5

  • 6 Verified
    Guest Reviews

    View

What recent guests liked:

  • Phillip Craig

    “Great part of Central Hong Kong for best shopping … ”

  • Geoffrey

    “Stylish rooms, though average-sized for HK. Outstanding … ”

  • Sharon

    “the hotel experience matched the impressiveness of … ”

  • Andrew

    “Nice hotel, great location, good facilities, the … ”

The Landmark Mandarin Oriental

15 Queen's Road Central, The Landmark

Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Style: Modern Design

Atmosphere: Lively

113 Rooms

Joël Robuchon

This hotel is a favorite of…

Joël Robuchon

Chef

Text size:Make text smallerMake text bigger

The original Mandarin Oriental on Hong Kong island just about cornered the market on over-the-top classic luxury. No surprise, then, that the Landmark, over in Central, is a little bit different. It’s a contemporary masterpiece in a town where tastes run conservative — the interiors by Adam Tihany and Peter Remedios are very near the cutting edge of modern luxury.

Floors in black wood are probably the most immediately striking feature in the guest rooms, but hardly the only notable one — on average, these are purported to be the largest hotel rooms in Hong Kong, and while we don’t have the statistical knowledge to assess that claim, we can say that at 450 square feet, even the smallest rooms at the Landmark are more than spacious enough. The clean lines and muted colors seem to further enlarge the space, and there’s plenty of room for every technological diversion you can imagine, including (finally!) iPod connections for the sound system.

A hundred-odd rooms is smallish for a Mandarin, and necessitates just one restaurant and one bar, the baroque European-inflected Amber and the wildly popular MO Bar — both patronized heavily by Hong Kong locals as well as hotel guests. The spa, by contrast, seems nearly excessive, spanning two floors and offering a byzantine array of treatments. The Central location is right in the thick of it all — think Wall Street and Midtown rolled into one. Shoppers, particularly, have cause to rejoice: guests at the Hyde Park Mandarin in London have to walk all the way across the road to get to Harvey Nichols, while here at the Landmark it’s right next door.

Back to top