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Cathay Pacific starts refurbishment of its Hong Kong lounges

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It’s no secret that my favourite airline lounge in the world is Cathay Pacific’s The Pier First lounge in Hong Kong (review here). In my conclusion, I described it as “the perfect confluence of style, food, service and amenities.”

The lounge opened in 2015 and was designed by London-based Ilse Crawford. Located one floor below the main terminal, the space Cathay used is nothing to write home about with low ceilings and narrow views.

What the airline and the design studio were able to achieve was nothing short of exceptional, with a central corridor clad in green onyx and a clever artificial skylight transforming what could otherwise have been a dark and dingy lounge.

Cathay Pacific starts refurbishment of its Hong Kong lounges
The Pier First

The lounge also benefits from a fantastic a la carte restaurant in collaboration with Mott 32, a famous Hong Kong restaurant, free spa treatments and even day rooms.

It’s no surprise that Cathay Pacific wants to roll out this lounge concept further, including to the Norman Foster-designed The Wing First Lounge, which features an entirely different design aesthetic of open-air ceilings, hard marble surfaces and a dark colour palette.

Cathay Pacific starts refurbishment of its Hong Kong lounges
The Wing First

Whilst The Pier First is more to my personal tastes, I still liked The Wing First lounge. It was less cosy and more architectural than The Pier, with gleaming surfaces and iconic burgundy Chesterfield sofas.

There’s also something to be said about offering a variety of lounges at your home terminal catering to different tastes. Creating a number of ’boutique’ lounges with different styles and offerings is something I’ve long thought should be more common. After all, one size doesn’t fit all.

Nevertheless, I’m not complaining. Cathay’s lounges in Hong Kong are world-leading and it’s great to see continued investment before they are old and tired, unlike what is happening in Terminal 5 at Heathrow.

Cathay Pacific starts refurbishment of its Hong Kong lounges
The Pier First

The Wing First lounge closed last week and will reopen next year with a new look inspired by the warm, residential design of The Pier lounges (also on show in the airline’s London Heathrow lounges). Hopefully some of its best features, such as the cabanas with gigantic baths, remain in one shape or another.

Whilst The Wing First is closed, and to facilitate the transition, Cathay Pacific has spent the last six months fully refurbishing its The Bridge lounge, whilst the already re-opened The Deck lounge is being turned into an interim First Class lounge.

Cathay Pacific starts refurbishment of its Hong Kong lounges
The Bridge

The Bridge has been closed since covid but has been brought out of retirement and completely refurbished in the style of The Pier lounges. It’s almost impossible to distinguish them. It is a huge lounge – 2,700 square metres and with capacity for over 500 passengers. Here’s how Cathay describes the new look:

“The cherry wood, framed screens and black granite and travertine at The Bridge, along with carefully selected plants, furniture pieces, and original artworks from the airline’s award-winning “Gallery in the Skies” concept, come together to foster a residential, cohesive and harmonious environment.”

In addition to the classic Noodle Bar The Bridge also introduces an additional dining concept called ‘The Nook’ which will serve Chinese small plates such as savoury filled bao, crispy scallion pancakes and steaming rice rolls as well as a dim sum cart.

So, to summarise:

  • The Wing First has closed for a full refurbishment and will re-open mid-2026
  • The Bridge is now open after a full refurbishment
  • The Deck has been converted into a temporary First Class lounge until The Wing First reopens

Meanwhile, the business class section of The Wing will also undergo a facelift once The Wing First has reopened in mid-2026.

The lounge refurbishments in Hong Kong aren’t the only investments Cathay is making in its ground experience. It is also opening its first lounge at New York JFK airport and refurbishing its Beijing lounge. It seems Cathay Pacific is not an airline to rest on its laurels.

PS. Don’t forget Cathay Pacific is now flying its new Aria suite business class to London – full review here.

Comments (31)

  • WiseEye says:

    I know BA will be refurbishing its lounges at LHR after 20 years but it is refreshing to see Cathay’s approach – The Wing was already a lounge way beyond its equivalent, the BA First lounge, at LHR. So it is great to see Cathay’s investment to maintain a cutting edge, distinctive product / experience. BA has a lot to learn here.

  • Polly says:

    Absolutely agree re The Pier, not forgetting the Wing and Bridge etc. we had one of the best meal of our lives in the Pier F lounge. ( years later, we still mention it occasionally) Just love the way they consistently keep high standards, even in their J sections. Spacious and relaxing feeling from when you walk in the door.

    • Michael C says:

      Hope you and OH get to visit them again soon, @Polly !
      Will be thinking of you in SIN in July.

      • polly says:

        Hi Michael, lovely you can look forward to SIN in July. We are finally booked back to Asia J HKT for November, fingers crossed. Plan is 10d in SIN, then onto Bali Bintang, and Canggu..
        Been driving back and forth to France , which we love anyway, for a change of scene.
        We just used our Feb 241 F SIN cancelled, for Lisbon, and enjoyed Portugal as you suggested way back. Bit of a waste but CE was amazing both ways for a change. Super staff, food and timing. The lamb on the way back was so good.
        Will you try to be at the hfp summer party? Hope to get a ticket…hoping Cat, Lady London and l can have a reunion, its been a while…The Coven, as Rob calls us… be great to see some regulars there..

    • JDB says:

      Well, Cathay is owned and operated by Swire who know a thing or two about hospitality!

    • QFFlyer says:

      Even The Cabin (for those who care to cast their minds back that far, it’s been closed for probably a decade now) was a great lounge – it was my first at HKG I believe, when I was Sapphire (I’ve only been Emerald for about eight years). I remember sitting in the combined sort of work/relax pods they had with a glass of Champagne blown away the first time I was there, especially as that was with someone else also new to the lounge (I travel solo a lot now, but always enjoy seeing someone experience something new for the first time, even if it’s not for me).

  • Kpworldtravels says:

    Cathay lounges in HKG are undoubtedly the best!

  • Matty says:

    I suppose it’s down to financials and maybe BA can’t afford to refurb its home lounges, unlike Cathay – a flourishing airline?

    • Rich says:

      Check out IAG’s accounts and quarterly updates – they’re flourishing.

      • JDB says:

        @Rich – dig a little deeper and it’s not that rosy! The good financial times and prodigious cash generation currently being enjoyed by many European carriers with high demand and high load factors, partly caused by delayed aircraft deliveries are not a good long term guide.

        • Rhys says:

          IAG has always been the most profitable of the European network carriers, both before and after covid.

    • JDB says:

      BA can afford to refurbish its LHR lounges and will do in due course, but where to park the passengers while that’s going on is a logistical nightmare.

      There’s rather more to it just financials, although space issues and high costs/low profitability affect all European carriers far more than ME or Asian airlines so lounge quality is correspondingly affected.

      BA’s operation out of LHR is infinitely more complex and constrained than Cathay’s, with far more flights but spread over a shorter time period and in a terminal with limited lounge space.

      • Catalan says:

        Perhaps BA’s approach will be to wait until the effects of the British Airways Club kick in (with expected quieter lounges) before commencing refurbishments?

        • memesweeper says:

          I think much of the growth in lounge demand has come from increased numbers in Club Europe (which is a consequence of BA’s strategy to promote/upsell) and (speculation on my part) increased average dwell time as the balance of Club customers shifts away from business and towards leisure. Culling BA status holders who are in economy might not make much difference, and I’d be surprised if the difference was “a whole lounge in T5’’s worth.

          • QFFlyer says:

            This is something I love about UK terminals and hate about Australian, but also completely get it – our domestic and international pax are completely separate, in fact anyone can go airside domestically, you don’t even need a boarding pass (or if you do, nobody checks it). But domestic lounges, even Domestic J (rather than Qantas Club, which are what is intended for the masses) aren’t that special (or maybe I’m jaded).

            But if all Emeralds could access Qantas F lounges on domestic flights flying Y-discount fares, the F lounges would soon be reduced to mediocre at best.

            That’s why my controversial opinion that BA lounges are actually ok is…ok…in my mind, they’re catering to a huge potential passenger base and still managing to deliver a half decent offering (although I admin having been in the KL Crown Lounge (non-Schengen – that was always a benefit of the UK not being part of the Schengen zone, same for AY at HEL), BA’s aren’t a glowing example (also same for AY at HEL, and probably others, elsewhere).

        • Devin says:

          BA’s new concept will open in Dubai in the next few weeks, BA is then planning to start refurbishing the arrivals lounge in Q4.

      • Andrew says:

        @JDB none of those explain though why it will be 20+ years before these lounges have seen anything more than a light refresh.

        • Danny says:

          @JDB

          It’s purely about financials.

          If BA wanted they could give out vouchers to eligible lounge passengers. Or set up a grab and go lounge instead. They just can’t be bothered and keep kicking the can down the road.

          • JDB says:

            @Danny – it’s not just about financials. The costs have been budgeted for some time and are in fact relatively inconsequential in the context of BA/IAG. It’s complicated for lots of reasons but it will happen fairly soon.

  • Guido says:

    I love spending time in The Pier First in Hong Kong, it’s a fabulous, comfortable, quiet lounge with amazing amenities, fantastic staff and fabulous food. I’ll walk some extra distance to get there, the walking is good after a flight anyway. Add to that the great on board experience with CX, proper priority boarding compared to the zoo that is T5 and it should be obvious why I can’t see any point in flying BA to Asia. HKG has excellent connectivity to almost anywhere I want to go.

    • Danny says:

      BA is more interested in flying to zit-ville, USA, than any new city in Asia it seems.

      • Devin says:

        At present it’s more zit-ville Europe due to the shortage of widebody frames and the surplus of narrow body. Since getting rid of the 744, BA has become a proportionally more short haul airline with the large number of 320/321 neos being delivered currently. When the delivery of the current orders of long haul aircraft, BA will have 20 more longhaul aircraft than in 2019, that’s even when you take in to account the replacement of the LGW fleet and the LHR 777-200 fleet.

        With a stretched fleet, it’s much more straightforward to fly to east cost where you can use one aircraft for an entire rotation instead of Seoul which has an aircraft utilisation time of around 32 hours.

  • john says:

    My partner flew Cathay Business Aria suite last week back from HKG to LHR and has determined that there seem to be teething issues, which is a shame really. She was seated first row in a middle pair. She noted that the divider between the two middle seats had big scratches on it and seemed to be covered in some clear tape. The arm rests on her seat and someone else she saw did not move in to position easily and had to be rather man handled. She had no working usb / wireless or power working in her seat which the crew said seemed to be a common fault on Aria. Aside from those, the asthetics were good!

    Hopefully they can work these issues out..

  • Throwawayname says:

    I don’t really understand why everyone is comparing the CX lounges to the BA ones, clearly the two airlines operate in different markets. Heck, with the exception of KLM, I can’t think of a major European airline whose hub lounges are definitely worse than BA’s. If BA aren’t willing and/or able to offer a lounge as good as (let alone better than), say, those of LOT, or even AENA, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to work out that theirs won’t be as good as the best in the world.

    The actual achievement for CX is that its lounges are more highly-regarded than those of its competitors in Greater China, SE Asia and possibly anywhere in the Far East- places where, unlike Europe, airlines are constantly making serious investments in their premium products.

  • Jordan D says:

    Fond memories of the Wing First back in 2018, before a QR flight to DOH, as a BA Gold. Just a wonderful place to wait until a very late night departure. A shame that the impending loss of Gold means those memories are unlikely to be revisited. Was good whilst it lasted.

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