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    Hotel in Shanghai, China

    Park Hyatt Shanghai

    675pts

    Residential Altitude Living

    Park Hyatt Shanghai, Hotel in Shanghai

    About Park Hyatt Shanghai

    Park Hyatt Shanghai occupies floors 79 to 93 of the Shanghai World Financial Center, positioning 173 rooms and suites at the upper tier of Lujiazui's sky-high hotel market. Designed by Tony Chi with a modern Chinese residential aesthetic, the property carries a Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star rating and a La Liste Top Hotels score of 91.5 points, placing it firmly among Pudong's most credentialed addresses.

    Above the Financial District: What Altitude Does to a Hotel Stay

    Pudong's Lujiazui cluster has produced a particular category of hotel that doesn't exist elsewhere in China: properties that treat their floor number as a genuine amenity. The Shanghai World Financial Center, at 492 metres and 101 stories, is one of the district's defining towers, and Park Hyatt Shanghai occupies its uppermost hotel floors — the 79th through 93rd. That placement shapes every element of the experience, from the time it takes to reach your room to the quality of light through floor-to-ceiling windows at dawn. It also places the property in a specific competitive bracket: sky-positioned luxury hotels where the vertical address is as relevant as the brand.

    Interior designer Tony Chi, whose portfolio extends across collaborations with Alain Ducasse and Wolfgang Puck, was tasked with making those floors feel residential rather than transient. The result leans on grey, cream, and dark wood tones, with hidden doors and site-specific art punctuating what might otherwise read as studied minimalism. Beijing artist Gao Xiaowu's three bald porcelain figures greet arrivals at the 87th-floor lobby elevator — a detail that signals the property's interest in Chinese contemporary culture rather than generic luxury signifiers. For guests comparing options across Shanghai's premium hotel tier, properties like Bvlgari Hotel Shanghai and Capella Shanghai, Jian Ye Li offer different formal registers , heritage lane-house intimacy on one side, European luxury branding on the other. Park Hyatt's proposition is distinct: modernist altitude, with a Chinese residential design language underneath.

    The Lunch and Dinner Divide Across Four Floors of Dining

    Few hotels in Shanghai distribute their food-and-beverage programming across as many floors and as many distinct registers as this one. Understanding how daytime and evening service differ here is more useful than a general overview, because the mood, the menu scope, and the practical experience shift considerably depending on when you arrive.

    During the day, the 87th-floor Dining Room functions as the property's most substantive culinary anchor. It presents contemporary Shanghainese, Zhejiang, and Jiangsu cuisines , the eastern Chinese coastal tradition that defines the city's restaurant culture at its most locally rooted. Rare teas, seasonal beverages, and Chinese wines accompany the menu, which respects local culinary traditions without folding into pastiche. The Living Room, meanwhile, serves light menus and afternoon tea through daylight hours , a format that in Shanghai's hotel dining scene has become a destination in itself for local clientele as much as hotel guests. Western comfort food runs throughout the day here, making it the more accessible entry point for travellers with varied preferences.

    By evening, the gravitational centre of dining shifts to the 91st floor, where 100 Century Avenue divides east from west. The eastern section takes a Cantonese concept, delivering what the hotel frames as Lingnan-style cooking , the culinary tradition of Guangdong province, characterised by lighter seasoning, dim sum, and a focus on ingredient freshness. The western section runs as a steakhouse, with leading beef and protein formats that track against the city's broader appetite for premium Western dining at elevation. The two-concept layout on a single floor is a format choice that allows the property to serve very different dinner occasions without architectural separation , a pragmatic solution for a hotel whose dining floors must serve both in-house guests and destination diners from across Pudong.

    For business travellers, the 86th-floor Park Salon narrows the format further: it is reserved for in-house guests and runs all-day refreshments alongside a Social Hour in the evening, with complimentary champagne, wines, and liquors accompanying a light selection. This tiered structure , public dining on 91, residential dining on 87, private lounge on 86 , reflects a deliberate stratification of access and formality that few Shanghai hotels sustain across multiple floors.

    Rooms and Suites: Scale and Placement

    The 173 rooms, including 13 residential suites, each measure from 55 square metres, with 3.1-metre ceiling heights that prevent the rooms from feeling compressed despite the tower's footprint constraints. Daybeds along sky balconies, walk-in dressing chambers, and soaking tubs appear across the room categories. The courtyard-style corridor design , where two rooms can be closed off together , serves families and groups without requiring a formal suite upgrade, a practical detail that the Lujiazui business hotel set doesn't consistently offer.

    Views orient guests toward either Puxi's historic skyline across the Huangpu River or the newer Pudong development spreading south and east. Both exposures work differently across the day: the Puxi-facing rooms track the Bund's flood-lit waterfront after dark, while Pudong-facing rooms capture the density of the financial district in daylight. For guests choosing between this address and alternatives across the river, properties like Andaz Xintiandi, Shanghai or Alila Shanghai sit in the Jing'an and Xintiandi neighbourhoods, offering proximity to the older city fabric and a ground-level urban experience that Pudong's tower hotels cannot replicate. The decision between the two sides of the river is less about quality tier and more about whether altitude and financial district access or neighbourhood walkability matters more to your stay.

    Water's Edge and the Wellness Position at Height

    The 85th-floor Water's Edge zone organises the property's wellness offer around a 20-metre infinity pool that tracks the Huangpu River view from its lounger line. Two treatment rooms handle a program focused on cleansing and detoxifying treatments. The fitness centre adjoins the pool level. Within Shanghai's upper-hotel wellness tier, this is a contained rather than expansive offer , it doesn't compete on sheer treatment menu depth with properties like Amanyangyun, whose heritage campus positions spa programming as a primary draw. What Water's Edge offers instead is a specific and hard-to-replicate experience: an open-water swim at 85 floors, with a city of 25 million people arranged below the pool's edge.

    Credentials and Peer Set

    Park Hyatt Shanghai holds a Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star rating and scored 91.5 points in the 2026 La Liste Leading Hotels ranking , a French-published guide that draws on 600 sources globally and places significant weight on consistency across multiple visits and metrics. These two signals together position the property at the credentialed upper-mid tier of Shanghai's luxury hotel market: below the handful of properties holding five-star Forbes ratings, but consistently reviewed and confirmed at a level that makes it a reliable choice across multiple visit types. For broader China itinerary context, guests extending beyond Shanghai can reference properties including Mandarin Oriental Qianmen in Beijing, Amanfayun in Hangzhou, or Amandayan in Lijiang to triangulate against different property types and regional contexts.

    Planning Your Stay

    The hotel sits in Lujiazui, Pudong's core commercial zone, adjacent to the SWFC at 100 Shi Ji Da Dao. Airport limousine service is available directly through the hotel, and the property's 24-hour business centre, positioned off the 87th-floor lobby, handles international courier and standard business support. Multilingual staff and room service complete the practical offer for international travellers. For Shanghai hotel comparisons beyond the Pudong corridor, our full Shanghai restaurants and hotels guide maps the city's properties across neighbourhood, price tier, and format, including options like Bellagio Shanghai, Artyzen NEW BUND 31 Shanghai, and Cachet Boutique Shanghai for travellers with different priorities. The SWFC's tower profile , the distinctive open-topped rectangular aperture at its summit , makes the building immediately identifiable from across Pudong; arriving by taxi or car, you'll have confirmed your destination well before pulling up to the lobby entrance.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I expect atmosphere-wise at Park Hyatt Shanghai?

    The property reads as calm and deliberately residential rather than grand-lobby theatrical. Tony Chi's palette of grey, cream, and dark wood runs throughout, and the absence of a street-level entrance concentrates arrival entirely into the elevator journey to the 87th floor. The La Liste score of 91.5 points (2026) and the Forbes Four-Star rating both reflect a consistent, repeatable atmosphere rather than a headline-grabbing single feature. Guests coming from properties like Aman New York or Aman Venice will recognise the register: quieted, considered, with altitude and view doing the atmospheric work that other hotels assign to public art installations or event programming.

    What is the leading suite at Park Hyatt Shanghai?

    Property offers 13 residential suites across its upper floors, each positioned at the larger end of the 55-square-metre-minimum room scale. Suite-specific pricing and configuration details are leading confirmed directly through the hotel or via parkhyattshanghai.com, as the property's available categories vary with occupancy and seasonality. The courtyard-style connecting corridor design means that even non-suite bookings can be configured for families or groups requiring private shared space.

    Why do people go to Park Hyatt Shanghai?

    Answer is largely positional. Lujiazui access, an altitude-based view offer that very few hotels in the city can match, and a dining programme that covers Shanghainese, Cantonese, and steakhouse formats across multiple floors combine to make the property relevant for business travellers with proximity needs and leisure guests whose primary draw is the skyline itself. The 91.5 La Liste score confirms that the experience holds across multiple visit types. For guests whose priority is neighbourhood culture and walkable city access, properties on the Puxi side, including those featured in our Shanghai guide, may align better with that brief. For Hyatt brand travellers extending across China, the Park Hyatt tier represents the network's upper positioning, and this Shanghai address is among its most cited properties in the Asia-Pacific portfolio.

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