Tiffany opens new Hong Kong boutique, unveils Blue Book Hidden Garden
Tiffany’s new Hong Kong flagship adds a Blue Box Café and unveils Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden, a clear play for Asia’s biggest high-jewelry buyers.

Tiffany turned Lee Gardens in Causeway Bay into more than a boutique stop. The new Hong Kong address opened with a dedicated high-jewelry salon, signature jewelry, watches, home and accessories, and the city’s first Blue Box Café at this location, making the store feel built for milestone buying as much as browsing.
The scale matters. Tiffany says the space covers about 414 square meters on the ground floor and more than 770 square meters across two floors, and it uses the house’s latest global retail concept inspired by The Landmark flagship in New York. For a brand like Tiffany, that kind of footprint is not just about inventory. It is about giving serious clients room to make a decision when the purchase is a birthday piece, an anniversary present, or the kind of trophy jewel that needs privacy and time.

The opening also gave Tiffany a stage for Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden, the summer chapter of its high-jewelry collection. Designed by Nathalie Verdeille and the Tiffany Design Studio, the collection reinterprets Jean Schlumberger’s flora-and-fauna motifs across a spring, summer and fall rollout. The spring chapter debuted in April 2026, and the summer chapter arrived in June, pushing the yearlong story into its second act with themes of nature in full bloom.
That sequencing is smart gifting strategy. Tiffany is not just selling individual pieces; it is building scarcity and anticipation around collectible high jewelry, the kind of thing that lands with clients who want the gift to signal taste, access and permanence. Hidden Garden leans into that with a visual language of secret landscapes, sunlight, movement and transformation, the sort of concept that fits a landmark engagement, a major anniversary, or a generational purchase intended to stay in the family.
The Blue Box Café should widen the store’s appeal beyond the jewel case. Scheduled to open in mid-June, it will offer an all-day menu, breakfast, afternoon tea and weekend brunch designed by Michelin-starred chef Agustin Balbi, with wall art by Molly Hatch. That mix gives Tiffany another way to turn a visit into an occasion, which is exactly how luxury houses are courting Asian buyers now: not just with product, but with a complete experience that makes the purchase feel ceremonial.
Tiffany called the Lee Gardens opening a significant milestone in its longstanding commitment to Hong Kong and local clients. With a larger footprint, a new café and a fresh chapter of Blue Book on view, the brand is making the case that the most valuable gifts are the ones that arrive with a sense of place.
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