Under Construction

Waldorf Astoria Tokyo Nihonbashi

Tokyo · Hotel

Rising roughly 284 meters over the historic Nihonbashi waterfront, this 52-story glass tower anchors one of central Tokyo's largest urban-redevelopment schemes, its "swinging setback" silhouette — designed by Nikken Sekkei with Pelli Clarke & Partners — evoking the folds of a kimono, the flow of…

18 months to delivery
44%
AnnouncedBreaking GroundConstructionOpening SoonNow Open
Est 2027
Completion
197
Keys
71
Units
52
Floors
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The story so far
Under construction
Expected opening2027est.
Milestones are dated to when they actually happened and linked to their source. This record fills in over time as TMW tracks the project.
About the project

Rising roughly 284 meters over the historic Nihonbashi waterfront, this 52-story glass tower anchors one of central Tokyo's largest urban-redevelopment schemes, its "swinging setback" silhouette — designed by Nikken Sekkei with Pelli Clarke & Partners — evoking the folds of a kimono, the flow of the river, and the soft layering of a noren curtain. The upper crown of the building holds Japan's debut Waldorf Astoria: a 197-room hotel across nine floors offering signature restaurants, the brand's hallmark Peacock Alley lounge, an indoor pool, a spa and fitness center, and a ballroom-and-chapel events suite. Above the hotel sit just 71 Waldorf Astoria Residences — the first Waldorf Astoria branded homes in the Asia-Pacific region — spanning expansive layouts from roughly 60 to 430 square meters, with residents enjoying a sky lobby lounge, private kitchen and party rooms, and a salon perched some 250 meters above the city. At street level the development weaves new retail, business and event facilities around the meticulously preserved 1930 former Nomura Building, knitting a landmark of pre-war Tokyo into a contemporary international financial hub. Directly connected to Nihombashi Station and minutes from Ginza, Tokyo Station and the Marunouchi business core, the tower pairs rarefied vertical living with one of the capital's most storied addresses.