The Spa has been extremely popular with our guests since the day we opened. Take a look at how some of them described the luxurious experience. |
|
|
|
Five-Star Award, Mobil Travel Guide
2008
World's Best Spas
Condé Nast Traveller, UK, 2008
Five-Star Award, Mobil Travel Guide
2007
Top Hotel Spa
Travel + Leisure, 2007
Top Urban Spa
Condé Nast Traveler, Reader’s Choice Awards, 2007
Five-Star Award, Mobil Travel Guide
2006
Top Urban Spa
Condé Nast Traveler, Reader’s Choice Awards, 2005
World's Best Spas
Condé Nast Traveller, UK, 2005
|
|
|
|
“You’ll want for nothing at the Mandarin Oriental Spa, and if you do you’ll get it instantly. A destination spa in the middle of a city where the only thing absent are real live geishas.” Times Online, October 2007 - UK
“Mandarin Oriental, New York has the city’s grandest spa – the pool has amazing views over the Hudson River. Jet-lag treatment options are perennially popular…”
Harper’s Spa Guide 2006 - UK
“Throughout the Spa, treatments – Mandarin’s signature ritual-laden mix of Asian traditions – tend toward the sybaritic…Spa aficionados should consider honeymooning at the hotel, too…not only is its 14,500-square-foot spa the lushest hotel spa in the city, but there’s also a 75-foot lap pool and a solid in-room yoga program with Yoga Works instructors.”
SpaFinder, USA – January/February, 2006
"The kind of sexy surge of omnipotence induced by your ascent to the 35th floor of the Mandarin Oriental…was practically invented in this town. At the Mandarin, every room has wrap-around, floor-to-ceiling windows, showcasing sunrises over Central Park and sunsets over the Hudson… For the final extravagant touch, block in the VIP Spa Suite…soak in the stone Jacuzzi, and get side-by-side massages while you gaze out at the beautiful silent city that is – pinch yourself – Manhattan."
New York magazine, USA
"The only thing better than the rooms [at Mandarin Oriental, New York] may be the hotel’s immaculate spa with its steam rooms, exercise equipment, treatment rooms and aerie minimalist pool. The weather outside may be frightful, but who cares when you’re floating in a cloud-level pool of blue?"
Aaron Dalton, Los Angeles Times, USA
|
|
|
|
|
|
|