In-Room Massage for Conrad Tokyo Guests — Shiodome
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Below your window, a 300-year-old garden sleeps. The bay glows beyond it. We’ll be at your door in 15 minutes.
BOOK NOWThe view from your room at Conrad Tokyo is split in two. In the foreground, the dark canopy of Hamarikyu Gardens — a 300-year-old former Imperial retreat with pine groves, tidal ponds, and a teahouse that has served matcha since the Edo period. Beyond it, Tokyo Bay stretches toward Rainbow Bridge and the lights of Odaiba. It’s one of the most striking contrasts in the city: ancient garden below, modern waterfront beyond, and you looking down on both from the 30th floor.
Conrad Tokyo occupies floors 28 through 37 of the Shiodome City Center. There are 291 rooms, all starting at 48 square meters, with freestanding bathtubs visible through glass partitions and artwork by 23 Japanese artists throughout the building. The design draws on two concepts — sumie (Japanese brush painting) and mon (gate) — creating a hotel that feels like a gallery you happen to sleep in. On the 29th floor, Mizuki Spa spreads across 1,400 square meters with a 25-meter pool, ten treatment rooms, and a hinoki cypress bath. It’s one of the largest hotel wellness spaces in Tokyo.
Ginza is five minutes on foot. Shiodome Station is directly below the building. The former Tsukiji outer market is a ten-minute walk. After a day that covers this much ground, the last thing you want is to go somewhere else for recovery. Melody Tokyo brings professional in-room massage to Conrad Tokyo guests from 5pm until 7am nightly. Message us your room number and we’ll have a therapist there in 15 to 25 minutes. No deposit. No advance booking needed.
A garden that’s been here for three centuries. A massage that arrives in fifteen minutes.
Address: 1-9-1 Higashi-Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-7337 (Shiodome City Center)
Phone: +81 (3) 6388 8000
Website: hilton.com/conrad-tokyo
Total Rooms: 291 rooms & suites
Hotel Floors: 28F–37F • Lobby on 28F • Spa on 29F • Guest rooms 30F–37F
Room Size: Standard 48 sqm • Suites 72 sqm • Corner Suites 85 sqm • Deluxe Suites 110–130 sqm
Brand: Conrad Hotels & Resorts (Hilton Luxury)
Design Concept: Sumie (brush painting) + Mon (gate) — 23 Japanese artists’ works throughout
Nearest Station: Shiodome (Toei Oedo Line / Yurikamome, 1 min walk) • Shimbashi (JR / Ginza Line / Asakusa Line)
Airport Access: Haneda ~20 min • Narita ~90 min
Location: Shiodome, Minato-ku • 5 min walk to Ginza • 10 min walk to Tsukiji Outer Market • Overlooking Hamarikyu Gardens
🧖 Mizuki Spa & Fitness (29F): 1,400 sqm — one of Tokyo’s largest • 10 treatment rooms • 25m pool (7m-high windows, ink-painting motif) • Hinoki cypress bath • Negative-ion relaxation room • 60 sqm fitness centre • Full-moon yoga monthly
🎨 Art Collection: Works by 23 Japanese artists • Toko Shinoda (centenarian calligrapher) piece in lobby • Cherry blossom motif headboards • Red lacquer sculpture at entrance • Art-infused throughout all public spaces
🍽️ Dining: Cerise (all-day brasserie) • China Blue (modern Cantonese, Michelin-recognised) • Kazahana (Japanese) • TwentyEight Bar & Lounge (28F, live music, cocktails with bay views) • Room service
The hotel where you look down on three centuries of Japanese history from your bathtub.
Bay-view rooms look directly down on Hamarikyu Gardens — a 250,000 sqm Edo-period garden with tidal ponds connected to Tokyo Bay, 300-year-old pine groves, and a teahouse that has been serving matcha to visitors since the Tokugawa shogunate. Beyond the garden, Tokyo Bay stretches to Rainbow Bridge and Odaiba. At night, the garden goes dark while the bay and the bridge light up. No other luxury hotel in Tokyo has this foreground. It’s the difference between a city view and a view that tells a story.
Twenty-three Japanese artists have work displayed throughout the hotel. A painting by Toko Shinoda — the centenarian calligrapher — hangs near the lobby concierge. A red lacquer sculpture greets you at the entrance. Cherry blossom motifs are embossed into the headboards. The design concept pairs sumie (brush painting) with mon (gate), creating spaces that feel curated rather than decorated. You move through the building and the art moves with you.
Every room has a freestanding bathtub separated from the bedroom by a glass partition. In bay-view rooms, you can see Hamarikyu Gardens and Tokyo Bay from the tub. White marble double basins, rain shower, and blinds for when you want privacy. The bathroom is the most memorable feature of the room — not because it’s the most luxurious in Tokyo, but because the positioning turns a bath into a viewing experience.
One of the largest hotel spa facilities in Tokyo. Ten private treatment rooms. A 25-meter pool with 7-meter-high windows and a sumie-inspired ink painting motif. A hinoki cypress bath. A negative-ion relaxation room. A fitness centre with personal trainers. Monthly full-moon yoga sessions. It’s not a spa bolted onto a hotel — it’s a 1,400 sqm floor dedicated to unwinding at altitude.
Walk out of the hotel and you’re in Ginza within minutes. Department stores, luxury boutiques, art galleries, the Kabuki-za theatre. The former Tsukiji outer market is ten minutes the other way. Shiodome Station is directly below the building, connecting to the Toei Oedo Line and Yurikamome. Shimbashi Station gives you JR lines and the Ginza metro. It’s one of the best-connected locations in Tokyo for both shopping and transport.
TwentyEight Bar & Lounge on the 28th floor is one of Tokyo’s most elegant hotel bars — floor-to-ceiling bay views, live music, an extensive whisky selection. China Blue serves Michelin-recognised modern Cantonese cuisine under blue lantern light with the neon skyline behind it. Kazahana offers refined Japanese fare. Cerise handles everything else from breakfast through late dinner. You don’t need to leave the building to eat and drink exceptionally well.
Every room starts at 48 square meters — larger than most Tokyo luxury hotel standard rooms. Suites go to 72, corner suites to 85, deluxe suites to 130 sqm. Even in the standard rooms, the layout is clean and uncluttered: bed area, seating area, separate bathroom. There’s consistent working space around the bed for our therapists. The high ceilings and minimalist Japanese design make the rooms feel even more open than the numbers suggest.
The freestanding bathtub is separated from the bedroom by a glass wall. Before your massage, fill the tub and soak while looking at the garden or the city — depending on which side your room faces. The blinds give you privacy when you need it. White marble basins and a rain shower complete the space. It’s a pre-massage ritual that the room layout naturally encourages: soak, robe, massage, sleep.
Bay-view rooms look over Hamarikyu Gardens and Tokyo Bay. At night, the garden is a dark, calming foreground against the glowing bay. City-view rooms face the Ginza and Shiodome skyline — closer, brighter, more energetic. Both create excellent atmosphere for a massage after dark. Our therapists dim the room lights and let whichever view you have provide the ambiance.
The Shiodome location is well within our coverage area. Our therapist enters through the ground-floor lobby, takes the express elevator to the 28th-floor reception, and is directed to your room floor. The hotel staff are familiar with the process. From the time you message us to the knock on your door: 15 to 25 minutes.
TwentyEight Bar & Lounge is on the 28th floor — the same floor as the lobby. After your massage, you can take the elevator down for a nightcap with the bay view, or order room service. The late-night whisky at TwentyEight, looking out at the illuminated bay, is one of the best ways to extend the calm. Post-massage quiet meets single malt.
Cherry blossom headboards. Brush painting motifs in the corridors. Original works by Japanese artists at every turn. The rooms feel composed in a way that supports rather than distracts. During a massage, the visual calm of the space matters more than you might think — the art, the muted palette, the clean lines. It all contributes to the sense that the room was designed for exactly this kind of quiet experience.
Mizuki Spa is 1,400 sqm of dedicated wellness with a hinoki bath and ink-painting pool. We’re the late-night chapter.
| Aspect | 🏛️ Mizuki Spa & Fitness (29F) | 🛏️ Melody Tokyo (Your Room) |
|---|---|---|
| Experience | 1,400 sqm facility. 10 treatment rooms. 25m pool with ink-painting motif and 7m windows. Hinoki cypress bath. Negative-ion relaxation room. Personalized body and facial treatments. Full-moon yoga monthly. | Therapist comes to your room on 30F–37F. Massage with Hamarikyu Gardens or the city skyline through your window. Your freestanding tub beforehand. Your room, your view, no elevator ride. |
| Hours |
Daytime to evening Advance booking recommended Pool & fitness for guests & members |
5pm–7am nightly Same-day message No deposit required |
| Best for | Planned wellness journey — swim in the ink-painting pool, soak in the hinoki bath, body treatment, relax in the negative-ion room. A dedicated half-day escape on 29F. | Post-Ginza shopping. Post-China Blue dinner. The “garden is dark, bay is glowing, and I’m not leaving this room” moment at 10pm. |
Swim at Mizuki during the day. Dinner at China Blue or TwentyEight. Message us when you’re back in the room. The best stays here use all three.
We hire only Japanese female therapists who excel in all three qualities: skill, hospitality, and appearance. We maintain the highest standards in both technique and service, with extensive experience at luxury hotels frequented by international guests.
Our pricing is completely transparent. Unless you request additional services or options, there are no extra charges—ever. You can book with confidence knowing the final amount matches exactly what we quote upfront.
Every therapist photo on our site shows the actual person who will visit you. The therapist you select is exactly who arrives—no exceptions. We strictly enforce this policy to eliminate any concern about misleading photos or last-minute substitutions.
She enters through the ground-floor entrance and takes the express elevator to the 28th-floor lobby. From reception, she’s directed to your room floor (30F–37F). The hotel staff are familiar with the process. The high-speed elevators move quickly through the building, so the gap between lobby and your door is minimal.
Haneda is about 20 minutes away. Narita roughly 90 minutes. Message us your expected check-in time and we’ll coordinate. The 48 sqm rooms with freestanding bathtubs are ideal for arrival night — soak in the tub with the bay or city glowing outside, then a 90-minute massage to reset. You’ll wake up on the 33rd floor with the garden below and your body thinking it’s in the right time zone.
Standard rooms at 48 sqm have the bed, a seating area, and a separate bathroom behind the glass partition. The floor space around the bed is generous and clear. Suites at 72 sqm have a separate living room, bedroom, and walk-in wardrobe — plenty of space for two setups. Corner suites at 85 sqm and deluxe suites at 110–130 sqm are ideal for extended or couples sessions.
Nothing. We bring everything. Soak in the freestanding tub first — the glass partition lets you watch the city lights while you do. Put on the bathrobe. After the massage, order room service or head down to TwentyEight Bar on 28F. If it’s a bay-view room, the garden will be dark below and the bay will still be glowing. That’s the perfect post-massage scene.
China Blue for modern Cantonese under blue lantern light. Kazahana for refined Japanese. Or walk to Ginza for dinner and come back. Message us while you’re finishing dessert. The therapist arrives before the bath cools. Conrad makes the dinner-to-massage-to-sleep sequence effortless because the restaurants, bar, and rooms are all vertically connected.
Two therapists, same room, same time. Standard rooms at 48 sqm accommodate two setups. Suites at 72 sqm are more comfortable with the separate living room. Corner suites at 85 sqm are ideal. Each person picks their own style and pressure. Bay-view suites with the garden below — that’s the most popular couples booking at this hotel. Mention “couples” when you message.
Tailored to the garden view, the glass-partition bath, and the Ginza-weary feet. Full menu — see all styles here.
In the bay-view rooms, the Hamarikyu Gardens go dark after sunset while Tokyo Bay glows beyond. The therapist dims the lights and the contrast between the ancient garden and the modern waterfront becomes the backdrop for your massage. Warm oil, full body, the scent diffusing through the room. The freestanding tub and glass partition means the bathroom light can be left softly on as a gentle accent. 90 minutes is the most popular choice; 120 if the day started at Tsukiji and ended in Ginza.
Ginza is five minutes away. The former Tsukiji outer market is ten. Hamarikyu Gardens is a walk through the park. If you do all three in a day — and most guests at this hotel do — your calves, feet, and lower back are done by evening. This session targets the specific damage with firm, deliberate pressure. The 48 sqm rooms give the therapist space to work properly. 60 minutes for targeted areas; 90 for the full reset.
A hotel designed around sumie and mon — Japanese brush painting and traditional gates — deserves a massage tradition that matches. Shiatsu uses no oil, works through clothing, and applies deep rhythmic pressure through acupressure points on the floor. The minimalist Japanese design of these rooms creates the right visual context for the oldest Japanese bodywork tradition. The floor space beside the bed works well in all room types. 60 or 90 minutes.
These therapists frequently cover the Shiodome/Shimbashi area. See all profiles here.
Flowing oil technique with a natural sense of rhythm. Creates the ideal atmosphere for the Conrad’s art-filled rooms and garden views. Popular with couples and bay-view suite guests.
Precise, firm pressure that targets the damage from Ginza shopping and Tsukiji walking. Knows the Conrad’s layout and moves through the building efficiently. First choice for guests returning from a full day on foot.
Three centuries of garden below. An evening of city ahead. Everything within walking distance.
Walk down from the hotel and you’re in the Edo-period gardens you’ve been looking at from your window. Tidal ponds, 300-year-old pine trees, matcha at the teahouse on the water. It’s a morning of gravel paths and beauty that the rest of Tokyo can’t touch.
Five minutes on foot. Mitsukoshi, Wako, Ginza Six, designer flagships, art galleries. The Kabuki-za theatre if you want a traditional performance. Hours on marble and hardwood floors. By evening, your feet have had enough.
Ten minutes walking. Fresh seafood, tamagoyaki, street food stalls, kitchen knife shops. A morning of standing, tasting, and navigating narrow lanes. Toyosu Fish Market is a short ride for the wholesale experience.
China Blue for Cantonese under blue lanterns. Kazahana for Japanese refinement. Cerise for all-day brasserie style. Finish with cocktails at TwentyEight while the bay glows outside. Take the elevator up. Message us.
Major corporate offices surround the hotel. Meetings, client dinners, conference rooms. By evening your neck and shoulders are locked. The walk from the office towers back to the hotel takes five minutes. The massage takes 60 to 90.
The Yurikamome line from Shiodome takes you to Odaiba in minutes — TeamLab, DiverCity, waterfront walks. Rainbow Bridge from one side during the day, then the same bridge from your room at night. A complete loop of the bay.
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Payment is accepted in Japanese yen cash or by credit card only.
A 10% handling fee applies to credit card payments.
Your quiet reset after a long day in Tokyo. We bring relaxation to your room—whether you're here for business or leisure. Available daily, 5pm–7am.