Built in 1928 by Asia’s oldest hotel brand, the Peninsula
Hong Kong is one of the most historic properties on the Kowloon Peninsula, just across Victoria Harbour from
Hong Kong Island. Designed originally as an upscale accommodation for passengers riding the adjacent Kowloon-Canton railway, the Peninsula has been a fixture of
Hong Kong society throughout the region’s history. It was a magnet for Hollywood stars and dignitaries, the site of
Hong Kong’s surrender to Japanese forces at the start of World War II, and temporary housing for residents following the war.
In 1994, a 30-story tower was added to house 135 additional rooms and suites as well as shops, a spa, a fitness center, twin rooftop helipads, and Felix—the hotel’s 28th-floor fine-dining restaurant, designed by Philippe Starck. The entire property was renovated in 2013 to update rooms with creamy colors, polished wood, and stitched leather and introduce high-tech extras that include a bedside control panel allowing guests to adjust the room’s light, sound, and temperature without getting out from under the covers. Today, the hotel is sleek and modern, but historic relics evoke the glory days that established the Peninsula as the “Grande Dame of the Far East.”