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Chuo-ku
Tokyo
Japan 103-8328
Tel: 81 3 3270 8800
motyo-reservations@mohg.com
Metro: Shin-Nihonbashi
Concierge.com's insider take:
Despite its location in a jutting skyscraper near Tokyo Station and the original Mitsukoshi department store, Mandarin Oriental's first Japanese outpost (opened in December 2005) aspires to be a modern Zen paradise. Each of the 157 guest rooms and 21 suites is equipped with 450-thread-count Egyptian cotton sheets, a huge LCD television, and a surround-sound entertainment system that syncs with iPods and video cameras. Hallways are dramatically lit, and the interior design makes smart use of gorgeous custom fabrics. The spa offers relaxing treatments such as shiatsu and Ayurvedic massage, plus a steam room, sauna, and a series of pools. The overall effect is one of sophisticated calm, but the panoramic views of Tokyo and all its thrilling commotion—visible from Sushi Sora (an eight-seat restaurant that opened in April 2011), as well as every guest room, bath, and even the treatment rooms—are guaranteed to keep your pulse up.—Updated by Rebecca Willa Davis
From the readers of Condé Nast Traveler:
(179 rooms)
2011 Gold List
Overall Score: 92.7
- Design: 91.7
- Food: 88.6
- Location: 86.1
- Rooms: 100.0
- Service: 97.2
View the entire 2011 Gold List of the world's best places to stay ›
Also appeared in the Gold List in 2010
Amenities: Spa
Subscribe now to Condé Nast Traveler ›From the editors of Condé Nast Traveler:
From the vantage point of the Mandarin Oriental's thirty-eighth-floor lobbyall floor-to-ceiling plate-glass windows and brisk efficiencythe city looks scrubbed, a collection of Tinkertoys seen through a scrim of clouds, and the effect is dazzling. The 179 rooms, though tasteful to the point of dullness, are full of smart utilitarian details, such as the hallway-accessible "service closet," into which staff deposit your newspaper or polished shoes, and a waterfall-style shower tucked into a marble alcove. The Mandarin Oriental is in the quiet Nihonbashi area, which, although destroyed during World War II, still evokes something of what Tokyo must have been like in the Edo period. It's also close to the busy Ginza district, home to some of the city's most upscale stores. 2006 Hot ListView the entire Hot List of the travel world's most noteworthy debuts in 2006 ›
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write a review › | see all user reviews ›Mandarin Oriental vs. Peninsula Tokyo, my thoughts
I stayed at both the Mandarin Oriental (MO) and the Peninsula (P) in Nov2010, and both were great. If I had to choose I'd probably pick the MO if they were the... more









