Hotel in Singapore, Singapore
The Singapore EDITION
250ptsDesign-Hotel Pluralism

About The Singapore EDITION
The Singapore EDITION at 38 Cuscaden Road is the EDITION brand's first Southeast Asia property, bringing Ian Schrager's design-led hotel formula to Orchard Road with 204 rooms, five food and beverage venues, and a Star Wine List 2026 recognition. The hotel's dining slate spans FYSH at EDITION with chef Josh Niland through to the signature Punch Room and a rooftop pool restaurant.
Where Orchard Road Meets a Design Hotel Playbook
Singapore's luxury hotel tier has been reshaping itself for a decade, splitting between legacy grand-hotel institutions and a newer cohort of design-forward properties with fewer keys, opinionated interiors, and food-and-beverage programs that compete on their own terms rather than as hotel amenities. The Singapore EDITION, at 38 Cuscaden Road near the leading of Orchard Road, belongs clearly to the second group. As the EDITION brand's first foothold in Southeast Asia, a collaboration between hotelier Ian Schrager and Marriott Hotels and Resorts, it enters a city where hotels like Capella Singapore and Raffles Hotel Singapore have long defined what five-star accommodation means — and positions itself against that lineage through a very different aesthetic logic.
The property runs 204 rooms, a number that keeps it in the mid-scale-for-luxury bracket: large enough to sustain five distinct food and beverage venues, small enough that those venues don't feel like airport concourses. That balance matters in Singapore, where hotel dining increasingly operates as a destination in its own right, and where standing out across multiple formats — restaurant, bar, rooftop, lobby , requires genuine editorial discipline, not just square footage.
Five Venues, Two Distinct Tempos
The most instructive way to read The Singapore EDITION's food and beverage offer is through the lens of when you visit. Daytime and evening service here are not simply earlier and later versions of the same mood; they represent genuinely different propositions, aimed at different states of mind and drawing from different parts of the hotel's identity.
During the day, the ROOF restaurant and pool dominate. This is the resort-within-the-city format that Singapore's design hotels have refined into a recognisable genre: a rooftop space that functions as a retreat from the humidity and density below, where the pool anchors the experience and food serves a supporting role. The daytime crowd at venues like this tends to skew towards in-house guests who want the slow rhythms of a holiday without leaving the building. Lunch at the ROOF operates on that logic , unhurried, visually oriented, calibrated for the kind of afternoon that doesn't need to end at any particular hour.
The evening shifts the hotel's centre of gravity downward and inward. FYSH at EDITION, the signature restaurant, is the anchor of the night-time program and the property's most internationally legible credential. Australian chef Josh Niland leads the kitchen, and his reputation in fish cookery , built through Saint Peter in Sydney , gives FYSH a specific identity within Singapore's crowded high-end dining scene. The city's restaurant tier at this level is competitive: a guest choosing between hotel restaurants and independent venues will compare FYSH against a wide field. Niland's approach to whole-fish cookery, which treats fish with the same nose-to-tail seriousness usually applied to meat, gives the restaurant a genuine editorial angle rather than a generic seafood format. The Star Wine List recognition for 2026 adds a drinks-program credential that positions FYSH's wine offering in a peer set above the standard hotel-restaurant list. For guests comparing hotel dining options across Singapore's Orchard corridor, that recognition matters as a signal of seriousness. See our full Singapore restaurants guide for how it maps to the broader dining scene.
The Punch Room and the Lobby Bar operate as evening venues with distinct personalities. The Punch Room, with its signature punchbowls, belongs to a global trend in cocktail programming that has moved from individual drink orders toward shared, ceremonial formats , a shift that suits Singapore's group-dining culture well. The pink-lit Lobby Bar with its custom pool table is a different register entirely: social, visually charged, designed for the kind of evening that begins with a drink and doesn't require a destination. Both spaces earn their keep in a city where standalone cocktail bars have raised the standard for hotel drinking programs considerably.
The Property in Singapore's Design-Hotel Tier
Comparing across the city's five-star tier requires some precision. Properties like Andaz Singapore and Artyzen Singapore occupy the design-conscious end of the market without the EDITION brand's specific Schrager-school aesthetic, which prioritises materials, lighting, and colour as primary design tools rather than heritage or locality. The Singapore EDITION's interior identity , colours and textures that the brand describes as its organizing principle , positions it differently from the grand-hotel tradition represented by Raffles Hotel Singapore, and differently again from the corporate-luxury formula at Amara Singapore or Carlton Hotel Singapore.
The Cuscaden Road address places the property at the quieter northern edge of the Orchard Road corridor, removed from the retail noise of the main shopping stretch. That location suits the hotel's profile: guests arriving here are not primarily retail tourists. They are more likely business travellers who want design and F&B; quality, or leisure guests who have cross-shopped the EDITION format against peers like 21 Carpenter or Conrad Singapore Marina Bay and chosen this property for its specific combination of Schrager-brand identity and Josh Niland's dining program.
For context on what the EDITION format means globally, the brand's properties share a design DNA and hospitality philosophy that has played out differently in each city. Guests who have experienced Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo in Tokyo or Cheval Blanc Paris in Paris will recognise the category even if the specific design expression differs. Singapore's version is the brand's first test of that formula in Southeast Asia, which makes it a reference point for the region in the way that Aman New York in New York City or Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles serve as fixed reference points in their respective markets.
Planning a Stay: What to Prioritise
The hotel's 204 accommodations, 681 square metres of flexible meeting space, spa, and gym make it functional for extended stays and corporate travel, not only short leisure visits. The F&B; program is where the property earns its margin over pure-business competitors: the five venues give it a rhythm across the day that a simpler hotel cannot replicate. For a first stay, the sensible approach is to anchor an evening around FYSH and treat the Punch Room as a pre- or post-dinner venue rather than a standalone destination , the punchbowl format rewards sharing and works better as part of a longer evening than as a quick drink. The ROOF functions leading at lunch or late afternoon, when the pool is active and the light is worth the elevation. The Lobby Bar's custom pool table and pink lighting are self-explanatory as an evening format: arrive late, not early.
Booking should be approached with FYSH prioritised, particularly for weekend evenings, given Niland's international profile and the limited counter of Singapore's high-end fish-focused dining options. The hotel itself, at 204 rooms, is unlikely to face the extreme lead times of Singapore's smaller design properties, but FYSH reservations operate on a separate rhythm from room bookings and should be secured first. Guests comparing across the broader market might also consider The Outpost Hotel Sentosa by Far East Hospitality in Sentosa Island for a resort-focused alternative, or reference global peers such as Hotel Esencia in Tulum and Castello di Reschio in Lisciano Niccone for a sense of how design-led properties elsewhere calibrate the same balance between aesthetics and hospitality program depth.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What room category do guests prefer at The Singapore EDITION?
- The hotel offers 204 accommodations across a range of categories, and the EDITION brand's design approach , with materials and lighting as primary tools , tends to reward higher-floor rooms where the visual identity is most consistent. The property's Star Wine List 2026 recognition and the Josh Niland dining program suggest a guest profile that prioritises F&B; quality alongside room comfort, so pairing a well-positioned room with a FYSH reservation is the standard approach for guests who want the full property experience.
- What is the defining characteristic of The Singapore EDITION?
- In Singapore's five-star hotel tier, the EDITION is the city's reference point for the Ian Schrager design-hotel format , a property where the food and beverage program is treated as integral to the hotel's identity rather than ancillary. The combination of Josh Niland's FYSH restaurant (Star Wine List 2026), the Punch Room's shared cocktail format, and the rooftop ROOF pool restaurant gives the property a daytime-to-late-night rhythm that most competitors in the Orchard Road corridor cannot match across five separate venues.
- What is the leading way to book The Singapore EDITION?
- Room reservations are available through Marriott's Bonvoy platform, which the EDITION brand operates under, giving loyalty members access to points accumulation and standard Bonvoy benefits. FYSH at EDITION reservations should be made directly and separately, as the restaurant operates as a destination dining venue with its own booking pipeline. Given Niland's profile and Singapore's competitive high-end dining calendar, weekend FYSH reservations are leading secured several weeks in advance. The hotel's 38 Cuscaden Road address is accessible from Orchard MRT station.
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