Built in 1951, the renovated Police Married Quarters (PMQ) opened alongside Art Basel Hong Kong 2014, boasting two buildings dedicated to showcasing the best of Hong Kong art and design. Read more.
If you’re looking for modern Chinese, you could hardly do better than Chateh, the Nelson Chow–designed space in the tony Miramar Shopping Centre. Read more.
The restaurant Duddell’s launched the same year as the inaugural Art Basel Hong Kong in 2013 and was an immediate success with the art crowd. Read more.
This hotel brings over-the-top funk, with a wavy, purple-lit exterior that showcases the off-the-wall talents of Charles Allem and Colin Cowie, interior designer and events planner to the stars. Read more.
The Peninsula is Hong Kong’s oldest hotel, dating back to 1923, and from the outside nothing has changed: It’s hard not to picture a tuxedo-clad Jazz Age crowd rolling up to the Art Deco exterior. Read more.
It’s not often that luxury can be described as bleak, severe, or industrial, but such is the case with Tuve, the Design Systems hideaway that opened last year in the Tin Hau district. Read more.
The aptly named Upper House, designed by Andre Fu, is an elegant minimalist affair that merges a quiet Asian sensibility with the sleek modern look of a futuristic-looking Hollywood film set. Read more.