Aman’s slick new brand lands in Tokyo

The patisserie restaurant at Janu in Tokyo
The patisserie restaurant at Janu in Tokyo

Azabudai Hills, in Minato Ward, is one of the most ambitious development projects Tokyo has seen in years: part urban-regeneration initiative – Heatherwick Studio has contributed several acres of elegant greenery – and part lifestyle one, with hundreds of galleries, restaurants and shops. There’s only one hotel, but it’s suitably newsworthy: Janu Tokyo is the 122-key flagship in a new brand from Aman, the collection owned since 2014 by Russian real-estate mogul Vladislav Doronin. Doronin has parlayed a clutch of chic resorts into a muscular global hospitality-residential enterprise. Janu wants to be a younger, slicker iteration of the full-bore luxury its big sibling proposes, with less eye-watering room rates (admittedly still bordering on $1,000 a night, but it’s Tokyo, after all).

Janu’s entrance hall with designer Jean-Michel Gathy’s shimenawa woven-rope and lattice-wood ceiling
Janu’s entrance hall with designer Jean-Michel Gathy’s shimenawa woven-rope and lattice-wood ceiling
The living room of a Janu suite
The living room of a Janu suite

Design superstar Jean-Michel Gathy is behind every last vignette, including the striking shimenawa woven-rope and lattice-wood ceiling in the vast reception. There are 4,000sq m of spa, including a lap pool, hydrotherapy and thermal areas, five movement studios, a hyperbaric oxygen chamber and the only full-sized boxing ring in a Tokyo hotel. Wellness freaks, this may be your new Tokyo home. janu.com, from $991 


The Dorchester Collection takes Dubai

The living room of the Marina Duplex at the Dorchester Collection’s Lana hotel
The living room of the Marina Duplex at the Dorchester Collection’s Lana hotel © Dorchester Collection

While The Dorchester in London has been undergoing a multi-stage refurb, leaning confidently into its illustrious history, the Dorchester Collection’s first new hotel opening in nearly 13 years is looking to the future in Dubai. The Lana – all 225 suites, residences, spa, shopping gallery and eight restaurants of it – is in a purpose-built Foster + Partners-designed tower that sits like a sprawling, elegant game of Jenga on Business Bay. The interiors are by Patrick Gilles and Dorothee Boissier, both alumni of Christian Liaigre’s studio (lately enjoying major success creating residences, restaurants and their own furniture-accessories line).

The Dorchester Collection’s Lana hotel is housed in a Foster + Partners-designed tower
The hotel is housed in a Foster + Partners-designed tower . . .  © Dorchester Collection
The The Dorchester Collection’s Lana hotel sits on the water’s edge by Business Bay in Dubai
 . . . that sits on the water’s edge by Business Bay © Dorchester Collection

The rooms and suites are spare, spacious and replete with 21st-century technology, as would be expected; but Gilles and Boissier mitigate hard edges with material richness such as gleaming rosewood boiserie, and just enough colour. This is destination hospitality writ large (as hospitality often is in Dubai), with a phalanx of celebrity chefs – among whose ranks are Martín Berasategui and Paris’s favourite enfant terrible (and sometime Pharrell Williams collaborator) Jean Imbert, whom the hotel group tapped to replace Alain Ducasse at the Plaza Athénée in Paris in 2021. dorchestercollection.com, from Dh3,400 (about £730) 


Tribeca gets the Firmdale treatment

A bedroom at The Warren Street Hotel, New York
A bedroom at The Warren Street Hotel, New York

Kit Kemp, who founded Firmdale Hotels with her husband Tim almost 40 years ago, has carved out a hugely successful corner in London and, more recently, New York. From Soho’s Ham Yard to Marylebone’s Dorset Square, where their first property opened in 1985, Kit’s decorator’s hand is the group’s calling card: she builds joyous rooms, suites and restaurants (and bustling bars, cinemas, and sometimes even indoor pools).

The brasserie at The Warren Street Hotel
The brasserie at The Warren Street Hotel
Classic Kit Kemp style on show at The Warren Street Hotel
Classic Kit Kemp style on show at The Warren Street Hotel © Quentin Bacon

February marked the opening of a third New York address, The Warren Street Hotel, in the heart of Tribeca, and housed in its own purpose-built tower. All Kemp’s beloved design signifiers are present, from ornate embroidered headboards to powder-coated steel windows, with scads of pretty painted-wood furniture and the occasional turntable and box of vinyl in between. Downstairs there’s the usual all-day to late-night eponymous brasserie, for grazing on NYC time. firmdalehotels.com, from $925


Parisian style in Palma de Mallorca

The view from Portella in Palma de Mallorca
The view from Portella in Palma de Mallorca

With its buzzing roof terrace bar scene and all manner of amenities, from complimentary bikes to cocktail classes, Barcelona’s Casa Bonay packs ambience and cheery, colour-saturated design into a hotel that doesn’t break the bank. This month owners Enrique and Ines Miró Sans are taking things up several notches in Palma de Mallorca, with Portella, their second property.

Much of the wooden furniture has been reproduced from originals in the building
Much of the wooden furniture has been reproduced from originals in the building © Barbara Vidal
The lounge area at Portella
The lounge area at Portella © Barbara Vidal

It’s the first Spanish design project of any kind for the Paris-based studio Festen, which has rocketed into the spotlight to become one of the most in-demand among Europe’s discerning hoteliers. While Portella is the opposite of Casa Bonay, it’s apposite for medieval-moorish Palma; all is a staid, natural palette of earth, stone and lime wash. The metalwork is understated, the wood furniture hand-hewn (much of it faithfully reproduced from original pieces in the building), the linens all unbleached. The traditional central courtyard is now an alfresco living room-bar; downstairs in the former pottery ovens is a bathhouse-style wellness space. portellapalma.com, from €300 

@mariashollenbarger

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