JW Marriott Marquis Hotel Shanghai Pudong
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Review
Character and identity
Rising above the Huangpu River with a front-row view of the Lujiazui skyline, this 514-room tower trades on scale and sightlines. The atrium is theatrical, all soaring volumes and polished stone, and the rooms (sitting area, open-concept bathroom, Bvlgari amenities, Nespresso) are pitched at design-minded urban travellers. Dining anchors the experience: Le Manoir Ling spreads bold Cantonese cooking across three storeys of gilded, low-lit Parisian-style rooms, and JW Garden grows herbs and vegetables in a working courtyard plot. A rooftop bar, indoor pool and a 4D-sound Mindful Room round out the wellness side.
Who's it for
Best for:
Couples and design literates who want Shanghai's skyline framed through floor-to-ceiling glass, plus serious eaters drawn to Le Manoir Ling. It also works hard for families: dedicated kids' floors feature mini tents and cartoon bedding, and a weekend shuttle runs to Shanghai Disneyland.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone expecting a full destination spa should know there isn't one; the Mindful Room is immersive but singular in focus. Guests seeking a more boutique, low-rise feel or the heritage atmosphere of the Bund side will find this a different proposition.
Bottom line
What you're really paying for is the view, the room product and the cooking at Le Manoir Ling, a genuine reason to book even if you weren't staying. Couples should request a river-facing room high in the tower; families should ask specifically for the kids' floors and time a weekend stay around the Disneyland shuttle.
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Location
Nearby tracked hotels
10 nearest