The Park Hyatt Tokyo in Shinjuku reopened on December 9 after a 19-month restoration. Despite a top-to-bottom refurbishment down to the concrete skeleton, the hotel has retained its cosmopolitan charm. Longtime guests had voiced anxiety over potential loss of the property's unique identity.
The Park Hyatt Tokyo, located in the Shinjuku Park Tower, is an iconic hotel known for its cosmopolitan appeal. It reopened on December 9, 2025, following a 19-month "restoration" project. During the work, communal spaces, fitness facilities, restaurants, and guest rooms were stripped down to the concrete skeleton and rebuilt—in some cases, exactly as before.
The renovation evokes the ancient Greek thought experiment of the Ship of Theseus: if every plank and sail thread of a wooden ship is gradually replaced, does it become a new vessel? Or does identity transcend physical parts? For the hotel, longtime guests expressed anxiety upon the announcement of the lengthy project, fearing that its soul might vanish amid the construction dust.
Hyatt describes the effort as a restoration, insisting it remains the same hotel, not a new one. This reopening, amid Tokyo's tourism and luxury sectors, confirms that the property's essence has been preserved.