Hotel in Singapore, Singapore
Artyzen Singapore
1,270ptsVertical Garden Conversion

About Artyzen Singapore
A former colonial mansion on a leafy Cuscaden Road side street, Artyzen Singapore translates a century of philanthropic heritage into 142 rooms with private balconies, a cantilevered rooftop infinity pool, and a degustation restaurant helmed by Melbourne-hatted chef Victor Liong. Named to Tatler's Best Hotels Asia-Pacific 2025 list, it sits a short walk from Orchard Road and the Singapore Botanic Gardens, starting from SGD 289 per night.
A Mansion Repurposed: Heritage Architecture on Cuscaden Road
Singapore's luxury hotel tier has long been divided between the grand colonial institutions along the civic corridor and the glass-and-steel towers lining Orchard Road. Artyzen Singapore occupies a more specific position: a low-rise heritage property on a leafy side street that predates both categories. The building was once Villa Marie, a sprawling tropical-garden mansion commissioned by the great-grandson of Tan Tock Seng, one of colonial Singapore's most consequential philanthropists. That lineage gives the property a biographical weight that purpose-built luxury hotels rarely carry, and the design team has been deliberate about letting it show.
Approaching from Cuscaden Road, the effect is immediately different from the hotel corridor half a kilometre north. Where properties like Conrad Singapore Orchard operate at tower scale with lobby footprints to match, Artyzen reads more like a private residence that has been carefully, methodically opened to guests. Arched corridors, barrel-vaulted entry passages, and vertical gardens running to a 15-metre-high atrium ceiling create a sequence of interior moments that reward a slow pace rather than a quick check-in. Art Deco curves sit alongside dense tropical planting without either element overwhelming the other — a calibration that Singapore's more conservative luxury hotels rarely attempt.
The property was named to Tatler's Leading Hotels Asia-Pacific 2025 list, a recognition that places it alongside properties operating at significantly higher price points across the region. At rates from SGD 289 per night, it competes in a different bracket than flagship properties such as Capella Singapore or Raffles Hotel Singapore, which carry considerably heavier legacy premiums. The Tatler inclusion is a trust signal worth registering: it reflects editorial assessment rather than a standardised rating system, and it puts Artyzen in a competitive set defined by design intelligence and cultural specificity rather than room count.
The Rooms: Verticality as a Design Argument
The 142 rooms and suites are built around a consistent formal idea: height. Lofty ceilings, ceiling fans (a deliberate architectural callback to pre-air-conditioning Singapore), and floor-to-ceiling windows dominate the standard room configuration. Every room includes a private balcony, which is not standard across Singapore's luxury tier and becomes a meaningful differentiator during the cooler months between November and February, when evening temperatures make outdoor time genuinely pleasant rather than aspirational. Wall art across the property references the Straits era obliquely, in motif rather than museum-style reproduction, keeping the heritage reference from tipping into pastiche.
Suites add landscaped green terraces with sun decks and outdoor furnishing, extending the living area outward in a way that suits extended stays or travellers who prefer to spread across a property rather than use it as a base for departure. The barrel-vaulted entry corridors that appear across room categories are an architectural detail worth noting: they compress and then release space in a way that makes the rooms feel larger on entry than the floor plan might suggest on paper. Properties like Andaz Singapore work the same verticality concept at greater scale, but Artyzen's 142-key count keeps the experience more contained.
Quenino by Victor Liong: Degustation in the Heritage Frame
Singapore's fine dining scene has seen repeated attempts to frame pan-Asian degustation as a coherent format, with varying degrees of credibility. The more persuasive examples ground themselves in specific culinary lineages rather than broad regional gestures. Quenino by Victor Liong, operating on Level 4 of the property, works this way: Liong brings Melbourne hatted-restaurant credentials, and co-chef Sujatha Asokan brings Singaporean culinary grounding, and the collaboration is structured as degustation-only rather than à la carte. That format decision narrows the kitchen's scope in ways that typically improve consistency and ambition simultaneously.
The all-day Cafe Quenino on Level 1 operates in a different register, with floor-to-ceiling windows facing the garden, a contemporary Asian menu running from breakfast through evening cocktails, and a pace calibrated for lingering rather than turnover. The pairing of a formal upper-floor restaurant with a more accessible ground-floor operation is a model that several Singapore properties have adopted as a way of broadening F&B; revenue without compromising the flagship's positioning. For the full Singapore dining context, our Singapore restaurants and hotels guide maps the current competitive field.
The Roof Garden: Infrastructure Above Orchard
Rooftop programming across Singapore's hotel sector has become increasingly standardised: a pool, a bar, views toward the financial district or Marina Bay. Artyzen's Roof Garden differs in one specific detail that separates it from the category average. The 25-metre infinity pool is cantilevered, with a partial glass bottom and underwater speakers, creating a sensory situation that pools at comparable properties, including Conrad Singapore Marina Bay, do not replicate. The bar operates alongside the pool with resident mixologists, and the westward orientation above Orchard Road delivers views that work particularly well in the early evening when the city's light shifts. This is not a rooftop designed primarily for photography; the engineering detail is the point.
Location: Between Orchard and the Botanic Gardens
The Cuscaden Road address puts Artyzen in a position that most Orchard-corridor properties cannot claim: walking distance from the Singapore Botanic Gardens, the first UNESCO World Heritage Site in Singapore, without being embedded in the retail corridor itself. The commercial energy of Orchard Road is accessible in minutes on foot, but the immediate street context is residential and quiet. The hotel operates a complimentary courtesy car service, offering transfers to Newton Food Centre, the Botanic Gardens, and Tiong Bahru Market, which functions as a practical acknowledgment that some guests will want to move beyond the immediate neighbourhood without the friction of arranging transport independently.
For context on what this address means within Singapore's broader hotel geography: properties on or directly adjacent to Orchard Road itself, such as Carlton Hotel Singapore or Amara Singapore, trade on immediate commercial connectivity. Artyzen's position one street removed trades on residential calm while retaining proximity. It is a meaningful distinction for travellers whose priority is the Botanic Gardens, the embassy quarter, or the quieter stretches of the Orchard precinct rather than the shopping corridor proper.
Wellness and the Vertical Garden Logic
The wellness facilities at Artyzen are organised around the same vertical-garden logic that defines the public spaces. A gym, private spa rooms, and yoga pavilions are set within a planted environment under a 15-metre-high ceiling, which changes the texture of an early-morning workout or treatment in ways that a basement or podium wellness level does not. The spatial generosity here reflects a broader pattern in Southeast Asian hotel design, where properties like 21 Carpenter and others in the design-led tier have moved away from wellness as an amenity box to tick and toward it as a spatial and programmatic commitment. Artyzen's version is more ambitious than its room count might suggest.
Planning Your Stay
Artyzen Singapore is located at 9 Cuscaden Road, Singapore 249719, and can be reached by phone at +65 6363 6000 or online at artyzen.com. Rates start from SGD 289 per night, making it one of the more accessible entry points in Singapore's design-led heritage tier — a category that, at its upper end, includes properties requiring considerably larger daily commitments. The cooler dry season between November and February is the period when private balconies and the rooftop pool deliver most consistently. For travellers comparing options across the region, the Tatler Leading Hotels Asia-Pacific 2025 listing provides a useful peer-set reference; among the hotels in that cohort, Artyzen's price-to-architectural-ambition ratio is worth registering. Globally comparable heritage conversions in the design-led category include Aman Venice, Castello di Reschio, and HOTEL THE MITSUI KYOTO, each of which operates in the same tradition of repurposing historically significant structures for contemporary luxury use.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the leading suite at Artyzen Singapore?
The suites at Artyzen Singapore are distinguished by large landscaped green terraces with sun decks and outdoor furnishing, extending meaningfully beyond the room footprint. All room categories include private balconies, barrel-vaulted entry corridors, ceiling fans, and Art Deco-influenced interiors referencing Singapore's Straits heritage. The property's 142-key count keeps suite availability limited, so advance booking is advisable, particularly during the November to February high season. Rates start from SGD 289, with suite pricing above that baseline.
What's Artyzen Singapore leading at?
The property's clearest strengths are architectural: the heritage conversion of Villa Marie produces spatial qualities, particularly in ceiling heights, vertical garden integration, and private balcony access, that purpose-built hotels in the same price bracket rarely replicate. The Tatler Leading Hotels Asia-Pacific 2025 recognition reflects this, as does the rooftop's cantilevered infinity pool with glass base and underwater speakers. The proximity to the Singapore Botanic Gardens, combined with the complimentary courtesy car service, adds practical range that keeps the Cuscaden Road address from feeling peripheral relative to Orchard Road hotels like The Outpost Hotel Sentosa or others farther from the civic core.
Do they take walk-ins at Artyzen Singapore?
Reservations are strongly advisable, particularly for Quenino by Victor Liong, which operates as a degustation-only restaurant with limited covers. Room bookings can be made via the hotel's website at artyzen.com or by phone at +65 6363 6000. Cafe Quenino on Level 1 operates all-day and is more likely to accommodate walk-in guests for breakfast, lunch, or early evening. During peak travel periods between November and February, advance planning applies across all parts of the property.
How does Artyzen Singapore's heritage relate to the building you're actually staying in?
The connection is structural rather than decorative: Villa Marie, the original mansion on the Cuscaden Road site, was built by the great-grandson of Tan Tock Seng, whose philanthropic legacy shaped colonial Singapore's civic institutions. Artyzen's design preserves and extends that architectural DNA through barrel-vaulted corridors, Art Deco archways, and a vertical garden framework that references the tropical-garden character of the original estate. The wall art across rooms references the Straits period in motif rather than reproduction, keeping the heritage legible without converting the hotel into a period piece. For travellers interested in Singapore's colonial-era built environment, the property sits adjacent to the embassy quarter, with the Botanic Gardens, another heritage landmark, reachable on foot.
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