Mandarin Oriental Tokyo

Tokyo, Japan
Nihonbashi

179 Rooms

The views from the Mandarin Oriental Tokyo are extraordinary: the hotel begins at the 38th floor, a height from which you can just about take in the whole of the city. If anything the interiors are a bit more conservative than the Mandarin standard, sporting a buttoned-up look that suits the location in the Nihonbashi banking district. Guest rooms are...

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2-1-1 Nihombashimuromachi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, Tokyo, 103-8328, JPN

Amenities

  • 24 hour front desk
  • Parking
  • Gym
  • Spa
  • Restaurant
  • Bar
  • Cribs (subject to availability)
  • Room service
  • Concierge
  • No pets allowed
  • Valet parking
  • Sauna
  • Self service parking (charges apply)
  • Off street parking
  • Spa treatments (on request)
  • Babysitting (on request)
  • Jacuzzi
  • Steam rooms
  • Lounge
  • Luggage storage
  • Beauty salon
  • Multi-lingual staff
  • Air conditioning
  • Business center
  • ATM/bank office

Mandarin Oriental Tokyo

The views from the Mandarin Oriental Tokyo are extraordinary: the hotel begins at the 38th floor, a height from which you can just about take in the whole of the city. If anything the interiors are a bit more conservative than the Mandarin standard, sporting a buttoned-up look that suits the location in the Nihonbashi banking district. Guest rooms are all restrained elegance — what interior decorator would want to challenge those picture windows head-on — though functionally they’re almost extravagant, with enormous forty-five-inch flat-screen televisions and bathrooms you could mistake for the spa.

Don’t, though — the spa itself must be seen to be believed. Also impressive are the dining options: too many to remember, they include fine Italian and Cantonese offerings as well as French-inspired cuisine in the Signature restaurant and even futuristic micro-tapas in the impossibly small (six-seat) Molecular Bar, in the corner of the Oriental Lounge. In the heat of it all you may have to remind yourself to save some energy and a few yen for shopping — the upscale Ginza district borders on Nihonbashi and some of Tokyo’s best shops are within easy reach.