Built around the Landmark atrium. Spa is the city's quiet escape.
"Opened 2005 above the Landmark mall in Central — the Mandarin Oriental brand's second Hong Kong hotel and the only luxury hotel in the world built directly into a luxury shopping atrium. 111 rooms, every one a 50-square-metre minimum, with the city's most considered single hotel spa."
The Landmark Mandarin Oriental opened on 1 September 2005 — the brand's second Hong Kong hotel after the original Mandarin Oriental at 5 Connaught Road, and the only luxury hotel in the world built directly into a luxury-shopping atrium. The 17-storey property occupies the upper floors of The Landmark — Hong Kong's flagship Hermes-Chanel-Brunello Cucinelli mall, owned by the Hongkong Land conglomerate — with rooms beginning on floor 5 and topping out on floor 21. Twenty years on, the property remains the most quietly considered design-led five-star in Central.
There are just 111 rooms — small for a Central five-star, by deliberate design. The room categories are stripped back to four: L600 (the entry, 600 square feet / 50 sqm), Entertainment Suite (700 sq ft / 65 sqm), L900 (900 sq ft / 84 sqm), and the L1500 corner suites (1,500 sq ft / 140 sqm). Every room is finished in the brand's restrained Asian palette — bleached oak, dark walnut accents, antique Chinese ceramics, and bath fittings calibrated to the Mandarin Oriental Singapore standard. The L600 is, in 2026, still the largest entry-level room in any Central five-star.
Amber, the resort's contemporary French restaurant, holds two Michelin stars under chef Richard Ekkebus and is, by Michelin guide consensus, the most-decorated single fine-dining room in Hong Kong outside the Four Seasons. SOMM, the resort's wine bar on the 7th floor, runs the most-considered hotel-bar wine programme on the island. PDT Hong Kong, the resort's secret-bar collaboration with Jim Meehan's New York speakeasy, is one of the most-booked cocktail rooms in Asia — entry by reservation only, accessed through an unmarked door behind a phone booth in The Landmark Atrium. The Oriental Spa, on the 5th and 6th floors at 21,000 square feet, is the largest hotel spa in central Hong Kong and runs the brand's most-considered traditional Chinese medicine programme.
What separates the Landmark MO, in 2026, is the deliberate alternative it presents to the larger sister property at Connaught Road. Where the original Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong is heritage and harbour-view, the Landmark version is design-and-spa. Where the original has 501 rooms, the Landmark has 111. Where the original is grand-classical Asian luxury, the Landmark is Hermes-and-Brunello-Cucinelli contemporary. For a guest who wants the Mandarin Oriental brand precision applied to a different Hong Kong moment — a serious solo working stay, a milestone city anniversary in central Hong Kong, or a multi-day shopping-and-dining trip — this is the considered alternative.
The Landmark mall (Hermes, Chanel, Brunello Cucinelli, Bottega Veneta) is in the same building. Central MTR is connected by elevated walkway. The 5th-floor business centre has six private boardrooms; the L1500 corner suite has its own dining-room boardroom for ten.
The most considered solo-traveller room in Central — the L600 at 50 square metres is unusually large for an Asian city hotel, with a wraparound writing desk and an oversized bath. The 21,000-square-foot Oriental Spa is the city's most-considered single facility for a wellness-led working stay. SOMM and PDT Hong Kong are the considered evening solo rooms.
The L1500 corner suite, dinner at Amber (two Michelin stars), and a 90-minute couples' Oriental Spa ritual is the considered Landmark MO anniversary. Brief the in-suite team 96 hours ahead — they will arrange a private PDT Hong Kong reservation and a closing SOMM Champagne pour.
Rates checked May 2026. Price varies by date and view.
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