Vancouver's 1927 grand hotel, restored. Hawksworth downstairs, Reflections rooftop above, the Art Gallery across the street.
"Vancouver's grand dame, restored. The 1927 bones are intact, the service is Rosewood-precise, and Hawksworth remains the city's most consequential dining room. If you have one important dinner to host in Vancouver, host it here."
The original Hotel Georgia opened on West Georgia Street in 1927, a twelve-storey Georgian Revival landmark designed by Robert Garnet Tatlow Lewis and John Yeon Bailey at a moment when Vancouver was still deciding what kind of city it wanted to become. For most of the twentieth century the answer arrived through the front doors of this hotel: governors, prime ministers, and a touring roster that included Elvis Presley, John F. Kennedy, Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, and the Rolling Stones all signed the register. By the late 1990s the building had drifted, and only an extensive closure and restoration could return it to relevance.
That restoration — completed in 2011 under Rosewood's ownership — is the reason the hotel is on this list. Rather than gutting the historic structure, the project preserved the 1927 Georgian Revival shell and rebuilt the interior to a modern five-star standard: 156 rooms and suites, ceiling heights restored to their original generous proportions, and a lobby that reads as a quiet act of civic restitution. The hotel reopened to immediate critical acclaim and has since become the address Vancouver business and old-money society quietly defaults to.
Hawksworth, the restaurant on the lobby level, is the defining amenity. Chef David Hawksworth's flagship has been Vancouver's most awarded dining room for over a decade — a serious kitchen with a serious wine list and the kind of room where deals close themselves. Bel Café, also on the lobby level, is the daytime address for breakfast meetings and properly made flat whites. The 1927 Lobby Lounge — restored beneath the original pressed-tin ceiling — is the cocktail room. In summer, Reflections opens on the fourth-floor terrace: Vancouver's most genuinely chic outdoor bar, twelve storeys above the Art Gallery.
Sense, A Rosewood Spa, occupies the lower level alongside an indoor saltwater pool, steam room, and a fully equipped fitness centre. The spa programme is small relative to a destination resort but complete: massage, facials, and the predictable Rosewood attention to small detail. Rooms are generous by downtown Vancouver standards — King Premier and above carry deep marble bathrooms, espresso machines, and the kind of soundproofing that survives a downtown Friday night. The Lord Stanley Suite and the Hotel Georgia Suite are the addresses for anniversary trips and serious occasions.
Location is the quiet weapon. The hotel sits at 801 West Georgia, directly opposite the Vancouver Art Gallery, three blocks from the Pacific Centre business core, and within easy walking distance of Robson Street, Coal Harbour, and the Vancouver Convention Centre. For business travel this is the most efficient address in the city; for couples, the Art Gallery, Stanley Park, and Gastown are all reachable on foot. Service is the second weapon — a long-tenured concierge team that handles restaurant reservations, helicopter transfers to Whistler, and last-minute Capilano bookings with the discretion that Rosewood requires of its flagships.
Rosewood Hotel Georgia is built for anniversaries. The 1927 architecture supplies the gravity that newer Vancouver hotels cannot, and the staff handles returning guests with the institutional memory that defines the brand. Book a Premier King facing the Art Gallery, dinner at Hawksworth on arrival night, breakfast at Bel Café the morning after, and a couples treatment at Sense Spa on the afternoon between. For tenth, twentieth, and silver anniversaries, request the Hotel Georgia Suite — the building's signature address, with restored period detail throughout.
For business in Vancouver, Rosewood is the unambiguous answer. The address is three blocks from the Pacific Centre core, fifteen minutes from the Convention Centre, and Hawksworth is the dining room every senior Vancouver lawyer, banker, and entrepreneur recognises by name. The 1927 Lobby Lounge handles the pre-dinner drink with the right gravitas; the meeting rooms are properly equipped without being corporate. If you are flying into Vancouver for a single important meeting, this is the hotel that signals seriousness without ostentation.
For a Vancouver honeymoon — or a honeymoon stopover en route to Whistler, Tofino, or an Alaska cruise — Rosewood delivers the romance that downtown locations rarely manage. The Hotel Georgia Suite, dinner at Hawksworth, drinks under the stars at Reflections, and a Sense Spa couples ritual on the second day. The concierge will arrange a private float-plane transfer to Bowen Island, dinner reservations at Blue Water Café in Yaletown, and a privately guided morning walk through Stanley Park. Vancouver romance, properly orchestrated.
Rates checked May 2026. Price may vary by date.
Rosewood Hotel Georgia and Hawksworth downstairs is the address Vancouver business defaults to. Start with the right hotel, then let the city close the deal.
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