Designed as a ‘living tree’,
the Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo promises to offer guests an extraordinary journey through nature when it opens in
December 2005.
The deluxe 179-room hotel is within the top floors of the soaring new Nihonbashi Mitsui Tower and adjacent Mitsui Main Building, a Registered Important Cultural
Property. The extraordinary design of the hotel is part of an effort to build a new urban experience in Nihonbashi, a renaissance that is slowly returning the city’s
business and financial district to its celebrated historical and cultural roots.
Guided by the main themes of ‘forest’ and ‘water’ the hotel is conceived as a single large tree, with the guestrooms as branches. These themes are expressed using
original materials on everything from wall treatments, carpets, fabrics, screens and furniture. In keeping with traditional Japanese aesthetics, no single object has been
created to stand alone, but rather all items come together to create a harmonious whole.
“Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo is perfectly located to appreciate the beauty that Tokyo has to offer, with incredible views of the Imperial Palace gardens, Sumida River and
Tokyo Bay,” says General Manager, Christian Hassing. “Our guests will be able to relax and enjoy the hotel which has been designed to reflect a quiet forest in the midst
of Tokyo,” he added.
The ‘roots’ of Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo are nourished by a cascading waterfall located at the hotel entrance, while the ‘canopy’ located on the 38/F invokes the image of
treetop branches and leaves, through an abundance of leafy motifs. The overall effect
is designed to give the sensation of standing in the middle of a forest.
Reiko Sudo is the principal textile designer behind the creation of Mandarin Oriental, Tokyo, and much of her creative design has literally been woven into the hotel. The
original inspiration of using fabric as the centerpiece came from the traditional Japanese kimono. Sudo is one of the founders of the Nuno Corporation
- a company and retail store that produces and sells innovative functional fabric. Her name is synonymous with original textiles that blend tradition and technology, and her work has
been showcased worldwide, with exhibitions in the United States, India, and Israel. Her creations are also featured in collections of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston,
The Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York.
Sudo, together with interior designers Lim Teo Wilkes Design Works (LTW) and Ryu Kosaka the hotel’s restaurant designer, incorporated original fabrics and materials
that portray the artistic and cultural traditions of Japan throughout the hotel.
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