Grand Hyatt Shanghai: The 2009 World's Best Hotels
Institutional Investor Research is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Grand Hyatt Shanghai: The 2009 World's Best Hotels

330x160-research-shanghai-01.jpg

When the Grand Hyatt Shanghai opened in the landmark, 88-story Jin Mao Tower in March 1999, “grand” was not the first word that came to mind to describe the surrounding Pudong New District.

When the Grand Hyatt Shanghai opened in the landmark, 88-story Jin Mao Tower in March 1999, “grand” was not the first word that came to mind to describe the surrounding Pudong New District. Century Boulevard, the area’s main thoroughfare, was still a dirt track. The Pudong International Airport was months from completion, as was the first subway line connecting Pudong to the rest of Shanghai on the west side of the Huangpu River.


But the Jin Mao Tower stood as a bold glass-and-steel exclamation point on the Pudong landscape, a defiant declaration that prosperity and development would soon flourish in this nascent economic zone. From the hotel’s prime position atop the Jin Mao, in the 53rd through 87th floors of China’s then-­tallest building, the management of the Grand Hyatt Shanghai were confident that if they built an outpost of luxury and style in Pudong, people would come.


330x160-research-shanghai-02.jpg

555 rooms, Rates: 3,500 yuan to 42,300 yuan ($512 to $6,195)


And so they have. Over the past decade, as Pudong has evolved into the Wall Street of China, the Grand Hyatt Shanghai has been the hotel of choice for many of the 250-plus Fortune 500 companies in Pudong — several of which are downstairs neighbors in the Jin Mao Tower. Having played host to the Asia-­Pacific Economic Cooperation Global CEO Summit in 2001 and the Asian Development Bank’s annual meeting in 2002, the Grand Hyatt has proved itself as a destination hotel, where power brokers from around the world gather not only to view the landscape of Shanghai but to change it. “Shanghai is a cosmopolitan city, full of energy and very dynamic,” says hotel general manager Christopher Koehler. “As a landmark in this city, our hotel and its grandness certainly symbolize the city’s character.”


From the 1,200-seat Grand Ballroom near the hotel’s base to the chic Cloud 9 bar on the 87th floor, the Grand Hyatt’s well-­rounded facilities make it easy for traveling executives to hold court. The hotel boasts nine restaurants and bars, under the direction of executive chef Massimiliano Ziano, which span the culinary spectrum and truly stand out among the city’s wealth of fine-­dining options.


In the Grill deals are cut over prime Black Angus steaks or fresh Boston lobster and a bottle of Chateau Latour. In Canton — where every item’s price ends in the Chinese lucky number 8 — successful executives celebrate their good fortune with shark-fin and bird’s-nest delicacies. In the Zen-garden atmosphere of Kobachi, guests unwind over abalone with sake. And in the Piano Bar, ­it’s a cigar with a 35-year Glenfarclas, neat.


A key ingredient in the Grand Hyatt Shanghai’s success, of course, is the view. Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, the Chicago-­based architecture firm whose credits include the Burj Dubai and the new U.S. Embassy in Beijing, designed the hotel around a futuristic 33-story barrel-­vaulted atrium, so that every one of the 555 rooms has floor-to-­ceiling windows and sweeping panoramas of the Shanghai skyline. Of special note, the Grand Deluxe River View King rooms on the hotel’s western side boast 180-degree windows on the Huangpu River and the sprawling city beyond. Even the rooms’ oversize white-marble bathtubs come with a view — as does the grander “sky pool” in the pampering Club Oasis spa.


Although the decor by Bilkey Llinas Design includes traditional touches here and there — a well-­placed Chinese porcelain in a hall, handsome gold calligraphy on a bedroom wall — all that glass and steel lend a modern edge to the hotel’s art deco motif, in keeping with contemporary Shanghai.


In today’s Shanghai all the buzz centers on Expo 2010, which opens in May. As the city prepares to welcome some 70 million guests during the expo’s six-month run, the field of five-star hotels in Shanghai — and Pudong especially — has grown more crowded. In fact, the Park Hyatt Shanghai opened its doors in September 2008 in the Shanghai World Financial Center, right next door and just enough floors higher to steal away the title of world’s highest hotel from its older sibling.


As far as Koehler is concerned, with the Grand Hyatt Shanghai’s age has come maturity and wisdom. Many of the original staff are still on board, and their experience translates into a more professional and personal level of ser­vice, which Koehler calls “authentic hospitality.” His staff has witnessed incredible change in Pudong over the past ten years from their proud place atop the Jin Mao, and that perspective gives them an advantage to better serve their guests.


“Having ten years’ experience is definitely a benchmark for us,” Koehler says. “Yet we continuously aim to improve our standards of service and provide the very best care to our guests each and every day.”


Related

Even as they enjoy a recovery, luxury hotels keep raising the bar with renovations, technology and a strong accent on service.
Affluent business travelers are driving market growth in the hospitality industry, and hotels are responding in kind.
Boutique hotels excel at the type of attentive and distinctive service that guests are demanding.
Gift this article