The Peninsula Hong Kong

The Peninsula Hong Kong
The Peninsula Hong Kong · via Wikimedia Commons
Colonial / Art Deco · 1928 · Kowloon, Hong Kong

The Peninsula Hong Kong

The Peninsula Hong Kong — known to generations of guests simply as the Pen — is the oldest and most celebrated hotel in Hong Kong, a Grade I historic building that opened its doors on 11 December 1928 to become the instant social hub of British colonial life in Kowloon. Its Italianate facade commands the tip of the Tsim Sha Tsui peninsula, facing the harbour and the island skyline across the water. Inside, a lobby of Edwardian and Second Empire opulence — ornamental stained glass, original 1928 woodwork, gilded columns — hosts the city’s most famous afternoon tea service. A fleet of 14 Rolls-Royce Phantoms painted Peninsula green ferries guests to the airport and across the city, sustaining a standard of theatre that has made the Pen a byword for luxury hospitality across Asia for nearly a century.

At a glance

Type
Luxury hotel
Period
1926–1928
Style
Colonial / Art Deco (Italianate)
Location
22 Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Coordinates
22.2953° N, 114.1715° E
Architect(s)
Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels Co. commission
Heritage
Grade I Historic Building, Hong Kong

Overview

The Peninsula Hong Kong is the flagship property of The Peninsula Hotels group and one of the great historic hotels of the world. The original building contains 300 rooms across the main structure and a 1994 tower extension. Eight restaurants — including the legendary Gaddi’s fine-dining room and Philippe Starck-designed Felix on the 28th floor — attract both guests and Hong Kong residents. A rooftop helipad offers helicopter transfers to Hong Kong International Airport, while the lobby’s traditional English afternoon tea has been served continuously since 1928, remaining one of the most sought-after social experiences in the city.

History

The Hongkong and Shanghai Hotels company opened the Peninsula in December 1928 as the finest hotel east of Suez, designed to receive passengers arriving on the trans-Siberian railway or by ocean liner at the adjacent Kowloon wharf. During World War II the hotel served as the Japanese military headquarters in Hong Kong after the colony’s surrender in December 1941; the handover documents were signed in the lobby. After liberation in 1945 the Pen resumed operations and steadily expanded its reputation through the postwar decades. The 1994 addition of a 30-storey tower provided modern room stock and the Felix restaurant, while leaving the original 1928 facade untouched. Grade I historic building status was awarded by the Antiquities Advisory Board, cementing its protected legacy.

Architecture & Design

The Peninsula’s original block presents a restrained Italianate colonial elevation — symmetrical bays, arched windows, and a roofline loggia — that reads as dignified authority rather than colonial bombast. The lobby interior combines Edwardian and Second Empire idioms: a double-height vaulted ceiling supported by gilded columns, intricate plasterwork friezes, ornamental stained glass, and the original 1928 woodwork preserved through decades of careful maintenance. The contrast between this jewel-box ground floor and the Philippe Starck-designed minimalist interiors of the 1994 tower is deliberately theatrical, offering guests a choice between historical immersion and contemporary spectacle.

Cultural significance

The Peninsula is more than a hotel — it is a living archive of Hong Kong’s colonial, wartime, and post-colonial history. The Japanese surrender ceremony in its lobby in 1945 makes it a site of global historical consequence. As a Grade I listed building it anchors the heritage streetscape of Tsim Sha Tsui against the pressure of redevelopment. Its role in defining Hong Kong’s identity as a luxury destination — the Rolls-Royce fleet, the afternoon tea, the harbour views — has been absorbed into the city’s international brand and reproduced in films, novels, and travel writing for a century.

Visiting today

The Peninsula’s lobby afternoon tea is open to non-guests (advance booking strongly recommended; demand is high year-round). The restaurant Felix on the 28th floor offers harbour panoramas and a Starck interior worth visiting for the architecture alone. The lobby itself, free to enter, is one of the finest public interiors in Hong Kong. Rolls-Royce transfers, helicopter airport shuttles, and luxury retail are all available through the hotel concierge. The surrounding Tsim Sha Tsui promenade and Avenue of Stars are within a few minutes’ walk.

Getting there

The Peninsula stands at the junction of Nathan Road and Salisbury Road in Tsim Sha Tsui. Tsim Sha Tsui MTR station (East Tsim Sha Tsui exit L6) is a two-minute walk. The Star Ferry pier, connecting to Hong Kong Island, is a five-minute walk along the waterfront. Numerous bus routes serve Nathan Road. Taxis from Hong Kong International Airport take 30–40 minutes; the Airport Express to Kowloon station is 20 minutes, then a short taxi or bus to the hotel.

Sources & resources

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