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Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts

Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts () is a multinational hospitality company, founded in 1971 by tycoon Robert Kuok and bearing the name of Shangri-La, a Far Eastern mythical land of contentment depicted in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon. It is a subsidiary of Kerry Properties, the company has over 100 luxury hotels and resorts with over 40,000 rooms in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, North America and Oceania.

Shangri-La has 4 brands across different market segments: Shangri-La, Traders Hotels, Kerry Hotels, and Hotel Jen. The company's head office is in (嘉里中心), Quarry Bay, Hong Kong. The current chairman is Kuok Hui-kwong.

History

The first hotel of the luxury Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts Group was the Shangri-La Hotel Singapore, opened on 23 April 1971. The name derives from the mythical place Shangri-La, described in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon by British author James Hilton.

The Shangri-La Hotel Singapore was managed by Westin Hotels & Resorts, until Shangri-La International Hotel Management Limited was founded in 1979, and management of the Singapore Shangri-La was taken back over from Westin in 1984. However, it would not be until 1991 that Shangri-La assumed control of the rest of the hotels.

This hotel has also become the host to a prominent inter-governmental security conference known as the Shangri-La Dialogue.

Corporate affairs

Subsidiaries

Properties

As of March 2022, Shangri-La owns, operates, or manages 100 hotels in 77 destinations:

Senior leadership

  • Group Chairman: Kuok Hui-kwong (since January 2017)
  • Group CEO: Kuok Hui-kwong (since August 2025)

Former chairmen

  1. Robert Kuok (1984–1993)
  2. Pho Ba Quan (1993–1994)
  3. Richard Liu (1994–1997)
  4. Beau Kuok Khoon-chen (1997–2000)
  5. Alex Ye (2000–2003)
  6. Edward Kuok Khoon-loong (2003–2008)
  7. Kuok Khoon-ean (2008–2013)
  8. Beau Kuok Khoon-chen (2013–2017); second term

Former chief executives

  1. Robert Kuok (1984–1993)
  2. Pho Ba Quan (1993–1994)
  3. Paul Bush (1994–1997)
  4. Chye Kuok Khoon-ho (1997–2002)
  5. Edward Kuok Khoon-loong (2008–2009)
  6. Kuok Khoon-ean (2009–2013)
  7. Beau Kuok Khoon-chen (2013–2017)
  8. Lim Beng Chee (2017–2022)

See also

References

External links