[category]
[title]
This is its Southeast Asia debut – featuring a menu by Odette’s chef-owner Julien Royer and a mini gallery inside

Dreaming of living out Audrey Hepburn’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s fantasy? Dream no more – Tiffany’s famed Blue Box Café is coming to Singapore.
Opening in mid-July atop the luxury jeweller's newly revamped flagship store at ION Orchard, the café marks its debut in Southeast Asia.
Inspired by the original Blue Box Café in New York, the Singapore outpost will serve a menu developed in collaboration with Julien Royer, the chef-owner behind three-Michelin-starred Odette. The menu will see a mix of classic American influences with French culinary techniques, alongside touches familiar to local diners.
This café is also part of a major transformation for Tiffany's ION Orchard flagship, which reopened as the brand's only triplex boutique in Singapore after renovations that began in September 2025. The redesigned space adopts Tiffany's latest global store concept inspired by The Landmark, its iconic Manhattan flagship, while a kinetic light sculpture by British architect Hugh Dutton adorns the façade with a sparkling nod to the house's diamond heritage.
Beyond the café, the flagship doubles as a mini gallery. Among the highlights is a majestic ceramic work by New York artist Peter Lane and the Monumental Bronze-Mounted Vase, an 1898 creation by Louis Comfort Tiffany whose nature-inspired motifs are said to reference Singapore's flora and fauna.
The boutique will also house Singapore's first Tiffany watch salon, private VIP suites and The Schlumberger Gallery, dedicated to the fantastical creations of legendary jewellery designer Jean Schlumberger.
To celebrate the reopening, Tiffany will also present Garden In Bloom at the store, a public archival exhibition running from July 2 to 12, 2026. The showcase will feature 20 rare jewellery and watch masterpieces from The Tiffany Archives, highlighting Schlumberger's whimsical interpretations of nature and showcasing pieces inspired by his travels around the world.
The exhibition carries a local connection, too. Historical photographs reveal that jewellery designer Schlumberger visited Singapore, including stops at the Singapore Botanic Gardens and Raffles Hotel. Tiffany believes the Republic's lush landscapes may have influenced some of his designs, several of which will be on display during the showcase.
Book a visit to Garden in Bloom here.
READ MORE
An enormous 7-storey wellness attraction is coming to Marina South in 2030
Singapore climbs 10 spots in this year’s Sustainable Development Report
F1's All Access 2.0 returns with a first-ever look at Race Control
Discover Time Out original video