
Hugo's Hong Kong brings Modern European cooking to Tsim Sha Tsui's K11 Art Mall, with Chef Eric Taluy steering a kitchen recognised by Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Asia list in both 2023 and 2024. The format splits across lunch and dinner services through the week, with extended Saturday and Sunday brunch windows. Among Hong Kong's European-influenced tables, it occupies a well-regarded mid-tier position with consistent critical notice.

Where Tsim Sha Tsui Meets the European Table
The K11 Art Mall on Hanoi Road is an unusual address for serious dining. Conceived as a hybrid arts and retail destination, it draws a crowd that moves between galleries, boutiques, and restaurants with equal ease. Within that environment, Hugo's Hong Kong has carved a distinct position: a Modern European kitchen that reads as genuinely considered rather than commercially convenient, operating inside a building whose surrounding tenants skew aspirational-lifestyle rather than culinary.
Tsim Sha Tsui has historically played second fiddle to Central and Wan Chai in Hong Kong's fine-dining geography, but the neighbourhood's better restaurants have benefited from a loyal local base and strong hotel-adjacent foot traffic from the adjacent Kowloon waterfront strip. Hugo's sits within that context, accessible to both the Kowloon hotel corridor and the MTR network, making it a plausible destination from any part of the city.
The European Technique Question in Hong Kong
Modern European cooking in Hong Kong occupies a complicated position. The city's most decorated European tables — Caprice at the Four Seasons, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Alexandra House, and Amber at the Landmark Mandarin Oriental — each carry three Michelin stars and anchor themselves within the city's hotel or Grade-A commercial infrastructure. Below that tier, a more varied set of restaurants applies European methods to a city where seasonal and ingredient assumptions imported wholesale from France or Italy rarely hold.
Hong Kong's procurement landscape is a practical argument for creative adaptation. The city has almost no agricultural hinterland of its own, which means kitchens relying on European techniques must make deliberate choices about where ingredients come from and how those origins interact with classical preparations. The most interesting Modern European cooking in Hong Kong tends to reflect that constraint honestly , treating the sourcing decision as an editorial one, whether drawing on Hokkaido dairy, Japanese mushrooms, Okinawan pork, or produce from the New Territories' modest but active farming sector.
Chef Eric Taluy operates within this framework at Hugo's. The kitchen's Modern European identity gives it latitude to work across a wide ingredient geography while maintaining a coherent technical vocabulary , that combination of method-rigour and sourcing flexibility is precisely what distinguishes credible European cooking in Asia from its more literal-minded equivalents. Alongside Hugo's, Ta Vie on Staunton Street represents another version of this tension, resolved there through a Japanese-French idiom that sits at four stars in the Michelin guide. The comparison is instructive: different culinary languages, similar underlying question about what European rigour produces when it meets Asian ingredients.
For a broader view of where Hugo's sits among its European and globally-influenced peers, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide.
What the OAD Recognition Signals
Hugo's earned a Recommended listing from Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Asia in 2023, then advanced to a ranked position at #338 on the same list in 2024. OAD rankings are compiled from surveys of experienced diners and food professionals rather than anonymous inspectors, which makes them a reasonable proxy for sustained kitchen quality as perceived by a well-travelled peer group. A jump from Recommended to a numbered ranking within a single year suggests the kitchen made a measurable improvement in how that audience reads it.
In the company of Hong Kong's Modern European tables that hold Michelin stars , Caprice, Amber, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana , Hugo's occupies a different price tier (specific pricing is not publicly confirmed in current venue data) and a different competitive register. OAD recognition, a Google rating of 4.5 from 411 reviews, and a format that runs six days of lunch and seven evenings per week suggest a kitchen operating at genuine volume without apparent consistency problems.
For context on Modern European cooking across other cities, the same editorial approach appears in kitchens as different as Aulis London, Casa Fofò, and Oak Gent in Belgium. Further afield, La Rei Natura by Michelangelo Mammoliti in Serralunga d'Alba and Twins Garden in Moscow represent different national interpretations of the same Modern European category. Hugo's Hong Kong belongs to a genuinely global peer group.
Service Format and the Rhythm of a Week
The restaurant runs a split service structure across the full week. Monday through Friday, lunch runs from noon to 3 pm and dinner from 6:30 to 10 pm. On Saturday and Sunday, the lunch window extends slightly, opening at 11:30 am to accommodate a weekend brunch format before the same 6:30 pm dinner start. That consistency across all seven evenings, combined with a weekday lunch that opens on the dot of noon, suggests a kitchen designed for both the business-lunch circuit and the leisure-dining market , a useful flexibility for a Kowloon address that serves both.
The split service format is worth noting for visitors planning around the K11 Art Mall's gallery and retail programming. The building's events calendar occasionally draws evening crowds, and the restaurant's 10 pm last sitting means there is room to visit post-gallery without rushing.
Hugo's is also tracked by Aulis Hong Kong, which operates a very different format in the same city , a chef's table counter experience oriented toward experimental tasting menus. The two restaurants represent distinct ends of how European culinary influence presents itself in Hong Kong.
Planning a Visit
Know Before You Go
- Address: K11 Art Mall, 18 Hanoi Rd, Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong
- Lunch: Mon–Fri 12:00–3:00 pm | Sat–Sun 11:30 am–3:00 pm
- Dinner: Daily 6:30–10:00 pm
- Cuisine: Modern European
- Chef: Eric Taluy
- Recognition: OAD Leading Restaurants in Asia #338 (2024); OAD Recommended (2023)
- Google Rating: 4.5 from 411 reviews
- Getting There: Tsim Sha Tsui MTR station (Exit L6 connects to K11 Art Mall); accessible from the waterfront hotel strip on foot
For further planning across the city, EP Club maintains guides to dining, accommodation, and more: our full Hong Kong hotels guide, our full Hong Kong bars guide, our full Hong Kong experiences guide, and our full Hong Kong wineries guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Fast Comparison
A compact peer set to orient you in the local landscape.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hugo’s Hong Kong | Modern European | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #338 (2024); Opinionated… | This venue | |
| 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong) | Italian | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Italian, $$$$ |
| Ta Vie | Japanese - French, Innovative | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Japanese - French, Innovative, $$$$ |
| Caprice | French, French Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, French Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Feuille | French Contemporary | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star | French Contemporary, $$$ |
| Neighborhood | International, European Contemporary | $$ | Michelin 1 Star | International, European Contemporary, $$ |
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