He has designed some of the most photographed hotels on the planet without ever seeking the limelight for himself. Jean-Michel Gathy, a Belgian architect and designer born in 1955, has been shaping luxury havens that captivate the world for over forty years. At the helm of Denniston, the agency he founded in Kuala Lumpur in 1983, he has conceived a large part of the Aman universe and established a signature instantly recognisable, that of an understated refinement.
Internationally awarded and inducted into the « Platinum Circle of Hospitality Design » in 2006, this summer he invites travellers to rediscover his creations, from sun-drenched shores to urban getaways, and high-altitude retreats. Each of his hotels tells a story of place, meticulously designed to suspend time.
A Discreet Belgian Leading Global Luxury
Born in 1955, Jean-Michel Gathy has personally designed every project undertaken by his agency since its inception. Denniston is not merely an architectural firm · the practice brings together urban planning, architecture, interior design, and landscaping under one roof. This allows him to conceive of a hotel as a complete entity, from the design of the buildings down to the very last door handle. This holistic approach, rare in the profession, explains the absolute coherence of his creations. Over four decades, he has designed some of the most awarded establishments on the planet and remains one of the architects most closely associated with the Aman aesthetic, a global benchmark for refined luxury.
« Comfort », The Signature of a Master of Place
When asked what defines luxury, Jean-Michel Gathy invariably responds with a simple word: comfort. Far from ostentatious opulence, he designs each space as a true home away from home, where warmth and serenity take precedence over display. A sense of place, timeless elegance, and the art of living form the triptych of his creations. His architectural language is immediately recognisable: theatrical arrival sequences, long reflective pools, interplay of shadow and light, and perspectives that unfold in stages. With his designs, one doesn’t just enter a hotel, one steps into a narrative.

Sun-Drenched Shores: The Art of Coastal Living
It is undoubtedly in the Maldives that Gathy’s magic finds its fullest expression. At Cheval Blanc Randheli, on the Noonu Atoll, he orchestrates a private island where overwater villas and a turquoise lagoon compose a picture of absolute purity. Further afield, in the Caribbean, Amanyara in the Turks and Caicos Islands unfurls its wooden pavilions and reflective pools at dusk, while One&Only Reethi Rah, also in the Maldives, cultivates the art of high-end castaway chic. Everywhere, water, light, and sky become the true materials of the design.

Urban Escapes: Luxury in the Heart of Cities
The master also excels at weaving his tranquility into the vibrant bustle of major capitals. In Venice, Aman occupies the Palazzo Papadopoli, a 16th-century palace situated on the Grand Canal, just a short row from the Rialto Bridge. In New York, the architect has taken over the Crown Building on Fifth Avenue, transforming an Art Deco jewel into an oasis suspended above Manhattan. From Bangkok to Tokyo, his urban addresses adhere to the same golden rule. In the city, Gathy does not fight the hustle and bustle: he makes it the counterpoint to a precious silence.


Mountain Retreats: The Great Outdoors in Majesty
More recently, the designer has turned his attention towards the peaks. In the Italian Dolomites, Aman entrusted Denniston with the metamorphosis of the mythical Rosa Alpina in San Cassiano, where blonde wood and contemporary Alpine lines harmonise with mineral walls. The approach echoes that of The Chedi Andermatt in Switzerland, another of the architect’s creations where the chalet is reinvented as a design sanctuary. From lagoon to glacier, the same grammar of serenity unfolds.

When choosing a summer escape, exploring the map of hotels designed by Jean-Michel Gathy is akin to charting a world tour of beauty. From the warmth of a Maldivian villa to the coolness of a Dolomitic retreat, his addresses share that rare ability to make you forget everything else. More than hotels, these are destinations in their own right, where architecture serves a single promise: that of a perfect moment.









