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Yeng Keng Hotel
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Yeng Keng Hotel

An 1860 Anglo-Indian merchant's mansion on Lebuh Chulia, Jawi Peranakan heritage

🇲🇾 George Town, Malaysia·Est. 1860·Anglo-Indian·$
66 HHI Notable
Heritage Notable

About the Property

Originally the private residence of Shaik Eusoffe bin Shaik Latiff, an influential Anglo-Indian merchant, this 1860 mansion on Lebuh Chulia is a rare surviving example of the Jawi Peranakan domestic tradition. Its symmetrical facade, arched verandahs and decorative plasterwork reflect the hybridised tastes of an elite class that straddled Malay, Indian and British worlds in 19th-century Penang.

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Original Purpose

Private residence of Shaik Eusoffe bin Shaik Latiff

Highlights

Restored 1880s Anglo-Indian residenceLebuh Chulia heritage street locationPeriod Anglo-Indian architectural detailsUNESCO World Heritage ZoneCourtyard garden setting

History Timeline

1786

George Town is founded by Francis Light; Lebuh Chulia quickly becomes a cosmopolitan street hosting Indian Muslim traders, Arab merchants, and the Anglo-Indian community whose residences line its length.

1826

Penang enters the Straits Settlements; wealthy Anglo-Indian families on Lebuh Chulia commission grand residences that blend classical British columns with Mughal arched verandahs and Malay decorative elements.

1860

Shaik Eusoffe bin Shaik Latiff, a prominent figure in the Jawi Peranakan community, constructs his private Anglo-Indian residence on Lebuh Chulia, featuring wide colonnaded verandahs and formal reception rooms.

1942

Japanese forces occupy George Town; the Shaik Eusoffe residence on Lebuh Chulia is requisitioned and used as officer quarters during the occupation, leaving limited damage to the original fabric.

2008

George Town UNESCO inscription places the Lebuh Chulia residence within the core heritage zone; its intact Anglo-Indian architecture is recognised as rare surviving evidence of the Jawi Peranakan community.

2014

Yeng Keng Hotel opens after a meticulous restoration of the 1860 residence, preserving the colonnaded facade, original timber ceilings, and decorative floor tiles of this 19th-century Anglo-Indian landmark.