
Conrad Hong Kong
When you book Conrad Hong Kong in Hong Kong through our Hilton for Luxury partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit. Plus, for a limited time, a complimentary night is included with your stay.
Special Offer: 3rd night free
3rd night free
Exclusive Booking Perks
- VIP guest status
- Complimentary breakfast for 2 guests
- USD100 hotel credit per stay (or local equivalent)
- Double Hilton Honors Points
- Upgrade to next room category (subject to availability)
Location
Conrad positions its properties as showcases of destination character through curated art and locally inspired design, and the Hong Kong outpost delivers on that promise from its Admiralty address. This eastern edge of the central business district occupies reclaimed land where naval dockyards once stood, the area's English name referencing the former Admiralty Dock while the Cantonese Gāmjūng ("Golden Bell") recalls the timekeeping bell at Wellington Barracks.
Today Admiralty hums with the energy of Hong Kong's financial core, bordered by Wan Chai's shophouse streets to the east and Victoria Harbour's container traffic to the north. The neighbourhood sits at a convergence point: glass towers climb the hillside above, while ferries and traditional junks cut across the harbour below. Central's luxury shopping arcades lie minutes west on foot, but Admiralty retains a distinct working rhythm, its MTR station one of the territory's busiest interchanges.
Hong Kong International Airport sits 26 kilometres west across Lantau Island, connected by the Airport Express rail link in under 25 minutes, depositing arrivals directly into the pulse of the city's commercial heart.
Admiralty's position places three Michelin three-starred restaurants within a kilometre: 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo - Bombana brings owner-chef Umberto Bombana's Italian passion to ingredients like Aveyron lamb and Hokkaido scallops, while Sushi Shikon ages raw fish with pickled entrails for exceptional umami depth. Book a table at Amber, where Dutch chef Richard Ekkebus's dairy-free, sustainability-focused French cooking continues to earn acclaim. The property sits at the base of Hong Kong Island's verdant Peak, where Lugard Falls tumbles through forest trails two kilometres south.
Sheung Wan Market, 1.9 kilometres west along the harbourfront, sprawls with wet market stalls selling live seafood and medicinal herbs under corrugated roofs unchanged for decades. Victoria Peak's tram departs from nearby Garden Road for panoramic views across the harbour to Kowloon's neon density. The peculiarly named Bowrington Bridge villain hitting ceremony, 1.6 kilometres east, offers a glimpse of Cantonese folk practice where women symbolically beat paper effigies to dispel bad luck.
Winter months from December through February bring the most comfortable conditions, with afternoon temperatures in the upper teens and clear, dry air that sharpens the harbour views. The light turns crystalline, and locals shed their layers by midday. Spring arrives with humidity and frequent fog that softens the skyline, temperatures climbing into the mid-twenties by April as occasional downpours mark the onset of the wet season.
Summer stretches from May through September with oppressive heat, the thermometer hovering around thirty degrees while typhoon warnings send office workers scurrying. This is when Hong Kong feels most tropical: air conditioners labour, umbrellas shade pedestrians from brutal sun, and sudden afternoon cloudbursts flood tram tracks.
Autumn emerges in October as humidity retreats and temperatures ease into the mid-twenties, the city's most pleasant season extending through November when blue skies return and outdoor exploration becomes genuinely inviting again.
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