Sapporo Hotels
Find a hotel in Sapporo, Japan. Get the best discounts on Sapporo hotels - up to
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Hotel Okura Sapporo from $203.00 USD • Phoenician Plaza Hotel Sapporo from $100.65
USD • Comfort Hotel Sapporo
Although there isn't much to see in central Sapporo, it's a pleasant place simply to
stroll around. The single best attraction is the compact and pretty Botanical Gardens
(April 29-Sept Tues-Sun 9am-4pm; Oct-Nov 3 Tues-Sun 9am-3.30pm; ¥400), at North Three,
West Eight, a ten-minute walk southwest of Sapporo Station. Immediately to the right as
you enter is the small but interesting Ainu Museum , which is also known as the
"Batchelor Kinenkan" in memory of Reverend John Batchelor, a British priest
and author of The Ainu of Japan , considered to be the definitive work on Hokkaido's
aborigines. The museum has a collection of around 2500 Ainu artefacts (though only a
fraction are displayed at any time), ranging from clothes made of bird skins from the
Kuril islands to a sacred altar for performing the ritual slaughter of a bear cub -
there are English-language explanations.
Following the red-gravel pathway around to the right of the museum will lead you to
Miyabe Hall , with its intriguing displays of letters and journals belonging to
Professor Miyabe Kingo, the first director of Hokkaido University, who established the
gardens in 1886. Miyabe's descriptions of his travels abroad, written in English and
illustrated with photographs, make fascinating reading.
The gardens themselves are very attractive, with a long pond, a greenhouse, a
rockery, shaded forest walks and neat flower gardens, including a collection which shows
the plants and flowers used by the Ainu in their daily lives. In the centre of it all
stands a natural history museum , housed in a pale-green wooden building dating from
1882. Inside you'll find a staggering collection of stuffed animals, paintings and other
bizarre objects, including snarling wolves, huge sea lions, and a dog sled from
Sakhalin.
On the way to or from the gardens, check out the Old Hokkaido Government Building ,
at North Three, West Six. This palatial red-brick building is a fine example of the
Sapporo-style of architecture that fused the late-nineteenth-century European and New
World influences flooding into Japan. You'll see the same style on the campus of
Hokkaido University at North Eight, West Seven, and at Sapporo Brewery . Directly in
front of the Sapporo International Communication Plaza is the Tokeidai , a wooden clock
tower that attracts hordes of Japanese tourists. You'd be right in thinking that this
newly renovated building, which is a symbol of the city, would look more at home in
somewhere like Boston, because that's where it was made in 1880. One block south lies
Odori-koen and the contrasting 147-metre red steel TV Tower . There's no need to fork
out ¥700 to go up to the viewing platform; the vista from the nineteenth floor of
Sapporo City Hall opposite is free and just as good.
The neon-illuminated excess of Susukino , the largest area of bars, restaurants and
nightclubs north of Tokyo, begins on the southern side of Odori-koen, and is best
explored at night. If you've not yet had your fill of parks, Nakajima-koen , at West
Four, South Nine, is the third of central Sapporo's large-scale green spots and is only
worth visiting to see the Hasso-an, an early Edo-period teahouse, virtually the only
traditional Japanese building in the city. A better use of time is to head to West
Seventeen, North One, to the large, white Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art (Tues-Sun
10am-5pm; ¥250 for permanent exhibition), which holds a modest but absorbing collection
of paintings and sculptures, some by Japanese artists. The nearest subway station to the
museum is Nishi Juhatchome, on the Tozai line.