S'kan Styles Hotel

Sandakan


Contemporary, and multicoloured, S'kan Styles' rooms are generally medium sized and clean (though there were lingering smoke odours in the corridors when we visited) with international-standard bathrooms, snow-white linen, flat-screens and modern fittings. Sea-view rooms are pricier than city-view rooms, but boast widescreen views of the Sulu Sea. Breakfast is on the veranda.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Sandakan attractions

1. Malaysia Fountain

0.26 MILES

The fountain commemorates the independence of Sabah on 16 September 1963 with the departure of the last Governor of British North Borneo.

2. Sandakan Heritage Museum

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This small museum near the beginning of the Heritage Walk is a bit neglected but worth a look for the old photos and memorabilia of Sandakan's tumultuous…

3. Agnes Keith House

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This atmospheric two-storey colonial villa, Newlands, tells the story of American writer Agnes Keith and her British husband Harry, the Conservator of…

4. Chinese Cemetery

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5. Sam Sing Kung

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The Sam Sing Kung temple (also pronounced 'Sam Sing Gong') dates from 1887, making it the oldest building in Sandakan. The temple itself is a smallish, if…

6. St Michael's & All Angels Church

0.48 MILES

One of the very few surviving pre-WWII buildings, this pretty stone church (1893) sits as a relic of colonial times and a monument to Christian worship on…

7. Japanese Cemetery

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A poignant piece of Sandakan's ethnic puzzle, this cemetery was founded in the 1890s by Kinoshita Kuni, known as the successful madam-manager of Sandakan…

8. Kampong Buli Sim Sim

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This traditional Malay stilt village, located about 3km east of the city centre, is the original settlement Sandakan grew from back in 1879. It's still an…