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7RNR 7HO 2SHQIURPDPWRSP&ORVHG-DQ Tokyo
is a dynamically modern metropolis
that nearly 13 million people call
home. Exciting, stimulating and safe, Tokyo offers a
treasure trove of ever-unfolding surprises and
discoveries that beguile the resident and visitor alike.
Covering more than 800 square miles (2,000 square
kilometers), it is an enormous, fascinating entity unto
itself.
Although it has been the official capital since 1868
when the youthful Emperor Meiji moved the capital
from the court in Kyoto to the castle town of Edo −
then renamed Tokyo, or Eastern Capital − it had
been the administration center of the country since
the opening years of the 17th century when
Tokugawa Ieyasu unified the nation, built Edo Castle
and established the Tokugawa Shogunate.
Already a city of over a million inhabitants by the
mid-18th century, the large, bustling city continued to
thrive, expand and embrace all that was new, unique
and exciting − much as it does today. Fires and
earthquakes have taken their toll but never deterred
Tokyoites, like the proverbial phoenix, from rising
vigorously from the ruins.
Fast-paced, energetic and busy, the city rarely
seems to rest, and this is especially true of Tokyo’s
many centers. Shinjuku, Shibuya, Ikebukuro, Ueno,
Nihombashi, Shimbashi and the famed Ginza, each
center has its own special flavor and its enthusiastic
adherents. Exclusive boutiques, enormous
department stores and innumerable specialty shops
entice the browser and window shopper as much as
the serious buyer.
Art lovers are drawn to the many fine museums
and art galleries, and the superb exhibits from around
the world that are constantly on display. Music
fanciers also have a wide selection of concert halls
that have full schedules of both local and visiting
musicians performing all types of music. Theater is
extremely active as well, whether for local adaptions
from the European and American stage or the
spectacular Kabuki and highly refined Noh.
From traditional Buddhist temples and Shinto
shrines to high-tech and shopping, Tokyo is an
unforgettable experience to savor and enjoy the year-
round.
GETTING THERE ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ACCOMMODATIONS ━━━━━━━━━━━━
Accommodations range from the best world-class hotels
(¥30,000 − ¥100,000, excluding tax and service charge, for a
single room) that offer a multitude of services to more
moderate ‘business’ hotels (¥8,500 − ¥15,000, excluding tax and
service charge, for a single room).
Traditional-style inns, Ryokan, let you experience some of the
graciousness of old Japan; and your bedding is folded up and
stored away during the day. Fresh tatami mats, softly sliding
doors and luxurious Japanese baths (¥12,000 − ¥40,000 per
person including two meals, tax and service charge are extra).
All hotels are clean, safe and comfortable. Budget
accommodations such as youth hostels (¥3,450 − ¥4,050
excluding meals, plus tax) are also available.
DINING ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
People in Tokyo are known for their preference for eating
out and there are more than enough restaurants to satisfy them.
Almost every kind of cuisine in the world is available, and eating
establishments range from 5-star quality to modest vendors in
stalls around the stations.
Fast food chains are also represented in force, both local and
international ones. Most moderately-priced restaurants still
have plastic models of what they serve in the window, and most
traditional-style Japanese restaurants still specialize in one kind
of cuisine.
Many coffee shops serve ‘set’ breakfasts and lunches, while
standard restaurants, which serve dishes with elements of both
Western and Japanese foods, have reasonably-priced luncheon
‘sets’.
Department stores invariably have a restaurant floor with a
variety of Western, Asian and Japanese restaurants — usually
toward the top — and their basement food floors and larger
supermarkets have prepared
foods ‘to go’.
Truly fine restaurants are
now plentiful and several world-
renowned restaurants have
opened up branches in Tokyo,
although the smaller ‘bistro’
type can be equally as delicious.
GETTING AROUND ━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Train and subway lines form a vast interlocking network that
covers most of the city. Color-coded, they are fast, efficient,
frequent, safe and clean and run from early morning to around
midnight. Best avoided during rush hours. Train exits are
indicated by direction; East, West, North, South and Central,
while the multiple subway exits are letter/number marked.
When you do not know the fare to your destination station, buy
the lowest one from the automatic ticket vending machine and
make up the difference at the other end.
Taxis are plentiful, spot bright lights on their roofs for easy
identification and display a red light in the front window when
vacant (green when not). Although it is usually possible to hail
one by raising an arm and flagging it down, in some places and
at certain times it is only possible to catch one at a taxi stand.
The passenger door is operated by remote control by the driver.
As the drivers rarely understand English it is best to have a map
and directions/address in Japanese. Fares start at ¥730 (for the
first 1,052 meters or 0.65 miles) and rise in ¥80 increments
(every 237meters/0.14miles or every 1 min. 30 sec. waiting
time). 20% surcharge between 10:00 p.m. and 5:00 a.m.
ENTERTAINMENT ━━━━━━━━━━━━
Never happened a lack of something to do is in Tokyo even
during the evening. Movie theaters feature the latest films, both
imported and domestic, and some theaters specialize in revival
and ‘classic’ films. Listings can usually be found in one of the
English-language daily newspapers.
Classical concerts and recitals, rock and jazz sessions by
both visiting and local musicians are performed regularly at the
many theaters, halls and clubs around town. Several resident
symphony orchestras have full schedules. Tickets are sold at
ticket agencies in the city.
Theaters presenting local and touring plays, operas and
ballets abound and range from the stately New National Theatre
to the Globe Tokyo, a reproduction of Shakespeare’s original.
Well-attended Kabuki productions run for most of the year and
the various schools of Noh play offer frequent demonstrations
of their art at their various specialized theaters. The all-women
Takarazuka Revue, too, often puts on spectacular performance.
For the thirsty, the number of drinking establishments is
infinite. Small ‘red lantern’ places which usually have one
hanging beside the door, cater mainly to a regular clientele and
serve mostly traditional snacks. “Izakaya” (Japanese-style pub)
are popular with business people and university students. Rock
clubs, ‘Karaoke’ singing bars, beer halls and clubs abound. Clubs
are mainly concentrated in the Roppongi area.
There are various types of family entertainment including
Ueno Zoological Gardens, which is the oldest zoo in Japan,
several aquariums, many amusement and theme parks, such as
Toshimaen, Tokyo Dome City, Tokyo Disney Resort, and Sanrio
Puroland which is an indoor theme park where you can meet
the world-famous Hello Kitty and other Sanrio characters.
SPORTS ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Sumo wrestling, with Tokyo tournaments in January, May and
September, Nippon Professional Baseball`s season is from Apr.-
Oct, and football(J.LEAGUE)are the most popular spectator
sports in the country. Sumo dates back some 1,500 years and
baseball and football only just over a hundred, but it is difficult to
tell which has the
more avid fans.
The martial arts
(Budõ) such as Judo,
Kendo, Karate, Kyudo
and Aikido are mostly
practiced at schools,
with exhibitions only
occasionally open to
the public.
CULTURAL EXPERIENCES ━━━━━━━━
A range of cultural experiences in English is available.
Ikebana, the art of flower arrangements, emphasizes simplicity
and precision of form with the aim of symbolizing the various
aspects of nature.
■ Sogetsu: http://www.sogetsu.or.jp/e/
■ Ohara School: http://www.ohararyu.or.jp/english/index.html
■ Ikebana International
http://www.ikebanahq.org/lessons.php
The art of tea ceremony, or Chanoyu, is an aesthetic form of
spiritual refinement that was originally very popular among the
ruling samurai.
■ Tea Ceremony in Tokyo
https://www.jnto.go.jp/eng/pdf/special/teaceremonyintokyo.pdf
Tour Operators offers very unique tours to experience Japanese culture.
http://japan-tours.jnto.go.jp/eng/index.php
■ Experience Japanese Culture,From The Traditional To
The Brand New
https://www.gotokyo.org/en/tourists/attractions/experience/index.html
SHOPPING ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Shopping in Tokyo is an experience to remember. The sheer
volume of merchandise and the endless variety of constantly
changing goods attractively displayed have created a
consumer’s paradise.
The department store chains offer a bewildering array of
products both Japanese and Western style, from flowers and
food to Kimono and brand name designer clothes. They also
frequently sponsor a variety of art exhibitions and cultural
events. They usually have English-speaking assistants, and
packing and shipping services. The Ginza, traditionally the most
exclusive shopping area with a number of department stores
and specialty shops, is being challenged by the Aoyama,
Shibuya, Harajuku and Shinjuku areas where the young, trendy
and affluent gather during the day.
Discount shopping is also to be found in the larger super-
markets and in the wholesale Asakusabashi (for traditional
goods) and Kappabashi (for any kind of restaurant/dining/
tableware; plastic food display) districts. At the other end of the
spectrum are the arcades in or near the major hotels. For that
special souvenir, try one of the flea markets held once or twice a
month at certain temple and shrine compounds, where
everything from genuine antiques to yesterday’s bric-a-brac are
offered for sale.
100-yen (1 coin) shops offer a wide variety of miscellaneous
daily goods as well as small souvenirs, and can be found
throughout the city.
Electronics enthusiasts find contentment in Akihabara,
where electronics and parts for any conceivable appliance or
audio-visual equipment are stocked in abundance. Shinjuku
and Ikebukuro are also famous place for shopping. Tax-free
shops are plentiful in Tokyo.
For the fashion-conscious, whether haute couture or the
latest fad, the connecting Harajuku, Omotesando, Aoyama,
Shibuya area is where you will more than likely find that special
boutique with just what you wanted. Tokyoites are
discriminating shoppers, and this is reflected in the shopping
scene.
TIPS FOR TRAVELERS
Tourist Information Centers with their multi-language staffs
are invaluable places for obtaining detailed information on just
about any subject. Visit certified local Tourist Information
Centers.
Visas are required for some nationalities. Check with a
Japanese embassy/consulate.
The currency is Yen (¥), convertible at the airport,
international hotels and major banks. A 8% consumption tax is
added to most goods and services.
Cash and Credit Cards Cash can be carried in Tokyo
without anxiety. You will need cash for smaller dining spots and
stores. Major credit cards are widely accepted in Tokyo.
ATM Service Major foreign credit, debit and cash cards can
be used at some Post Office ATMs marked with the
‘International ATM Service’, some Seven Bank ATMs that can
be found in Seven-Eleven convenience stores and some
AEON Bank ATMs.
Climate Tokyo has 4 distinct seasons. Summer is hot and
humid (25.2°C/77.4°F), autumn is comfortable (17.6°C/63.7°F),
winter is cold, sunny and dry with occasional light snowfalls
(5.2°C/41.4°F) and spring is mild with scattered showers
(14.1°C/57.4°F). Mid-June to mid-July is the rainy season and
September/October brings typhoons.
Electricity
100 volts AC. 50 Hz in Tokyo and eastern Japan, 60 Hz in
Osaka and western Japan. Sockets take a two-prong plug with
flat-sided prongs.
Emergency calls
Police: Tel.110
Fire and Ambulance: T el.119
Police in English & Several Other Foreign Languages: Tel.03-3503-8484
AMDA International Medical Information Center: Tel.03-5285-8088
Tokyo Metropolitan Health & Medical Information Center: Tel.03-5285-8181
Tokyo Metro JR Yamanote Line
Tokyo Zoological Park Society Tea ceremony at Happo-en Ikebana © JNTO Shopping Omotesando ©TCVB
ANNUAL EVENTS IN TOKYO ━━━━━━━━
The festivals of Japan are perhaps one of the country`s
greatest sources of enjoyment.
Listed here are only some of the major festivals in Tokyo. If
you want to visit a festival during your stay, contact Tourist
Information Centers.
January 1: New Year`s Day . From the first to third, many companies
and businesses are closed. Many people visit temples and shrines to
pray for good health and happiness in the coming year.
January 6: Dezomeshiki or New Year`s Fire Review with
acrobatic stunts on top of tall ladders at Tokyo Big Site.
Mid-January (for 15 days) First Sumo Tourment at Ryogoku
Kokugikan
February 3 or 4: Setsubun or bean-throwing festival is
observed at leading temples and shrines across the country.
Mid-May (for 15 days) Third Sumo Tourment at Ryogoku
Kokugikan
Mid-May Kanda Matsuri (Festival) of Kanda Myojin Shrine
(held every odd-year). Dozens of Mikoshi (portable shrines) are
on parade.
3rd Fri., Sat. & Sun. of May: Sanja Matsuri (Festival) of
Asakusa-jinja Shrine, featuring a parade of 3 large portable
shrines and 100 small ones.
Mid-June: Sanno Matsuri (Festival) of Hie-jinja Shrine features
a procession of portable shrines through the busy streets of
Akasaka District, every even year.
Last Sat. of July: Sumida River Fireworks Festival
Mid-September (for 15 days): Fifth Sumo Tournament at
Ryogoku Kokugikan
Mid-October - Mid-November: Chrysanthemum Exhibitions at
Yushima-tenjin Shrine and Sensoji Temple (Asakusa Kannon).
November 15: Shichi-Go-San is the shrine visiting day for
children aged 3, 5 and 7 in appreciation of their good health
given them by the guardian gods.
December 17-19: Hagoita-Ichi (Battledore Fair) of Sensoji
Temple (Asakusa Kannon).
SIDE TRIPS FROM TOKYO ━━━━━━━━━
Mt. Takao is 599 meters (1,965 feet) high and located in
western Tokyo. It is rich in nature and is designated as a quasi-
national park. About an hour from the center of Tokyo, it is a
popular spot for mountain hiking. The autumn leaves in
November and the plum blossom in February are particularly
beautiful, attracting many people to the mountain. There is also
a famous temple near the peak.
Kawagoe, 1 hr. by rail from Tokyo, flourished as a castle
town in the 17th century during the Edo Period. The city has
been designated an important preservation district for groups of
historic buildings where rows of magnificent merchants` houses
in the traditional storehouse-style stand side-by-side. It is called
‘Ko-edo,’ or ‘Little Edo,’ because of its city architecture. The
feudal lord of Kawagoe Castle ordered a bell tolling the time be
built in the 17th century. The Bell Tower has been rebuilt
several times, and the present 4th-generation bell is a symbol of
Kawagoe, together with the streets lined with these traditional
houses.
Yokohama, 30 min. by rail from Tokyo, is the foremost port
in Japan. A city with a colorful past, it has a long list of sites
worth seeing. Among them are the Silk Center and the
Yokohama Doll Museum. Yamashita Park is the oldest park in
Japan to be laid out along the sea, and has a historic ship
permanently docked. The restaurants in Chinatown are
legendary for their cuisine. The Landmark Tower has
observation deck on the 69th floor.
Shin-Yokohama Raumen Museum is a unique museum
on ramen noodles as well as a small theme park that recreates a
town of the Showa period (about 50 years ago). You can taste
selected ramen restaurants from across the nation.
Kamakura, 1 hr. by rail from Tokyo, is an ancient city of
some 120 temples and 41 shrines set in a semi-circle of
protective hills. The administrative and military center of Japan
from the 12th to 14th centuries, it retains a great deal of the
charm of old Japan. It is also the home of the Great Buddha,
considered one of the most beautiful statue in the world.
Hakone, 1 hr. 30 min. by rail from Tokyo, is a famous hot
spring resort area set in the beautiful mountains which
comprise the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. Among the variety
of attractions the area has to offer is the outstanding Open-Air
Museum of sculptures by noted artists from around the world.
A small Picasso Museum is also on the grounds. On fine days
magnificent views of Mt. Fuji are possible.
Mt. Fuji & the Five Lakes can be reached in 2 hrs. from
Shinjuku. Mt. Fuji is Japan`s highest mountain at 3,776 meters
(12,388 feet) and is one of the world`s most symmetrical cones.
Around its broad base can be found many lakes, waterfalls,
virgin forests, ice caves and various alpine plants. The region is
an ideal recreation area year-round.
Fuji-Q Highland is a huge amusement park at the foot of
Mt. Fuji. The park is popular for having many intense thrilling
rides.
Gotemba Premium Outlets
®
can be reached in 100 min. by
bus from Tokyo or Shinjuku.
Nikko, 2 hrs. by rail from Tokyo, is the shrine complex that
inspired the saying, ‘Never say splendid until you’ve seen
Nikko’. Set in a lush cryptomeria forest, the magnificent Nikko
Toshogu Shrine complex dedicated to Tokugawa Ieyasu, the
founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate, demonstrates the superb
skill of the Edo period artisans. Carved, lacquered, painted and
gilded, the buildings are inclined to dazzle one with the wealth
of finely worked detail. Be sure to look for the famous ‘See no
evil, say no evil, hear no evil’ monkeys. Nearby is delicate,
dramatic Kegon Falls that descend in a pure line from the
indigo waters of Lake Chuzenji. Another interesting side trip is
Edo Wonderland at Kinugawa Onsen, where the life style of
old Edo, present-day Tokyo, is re-created.
Tokyo
Int`l Airport
Tokyo
Int`l Airport
Mount Takao Station © TCVB
Useful web sites
■ East Japan Railway Company(JR-EAST)
Tel.050-2016-1603 (JR East)
http://www.jreast.co.jp/e/
■ Keisei Railways : Keisei Skyliner / Keisei Limited express
http://www.keisei.co.jp/keisei/tetudou/skyliner/us/
■ Airport Limousine Bus
Tel.03-3665-7220
http://www.limousinebus.co.jp/en/
■ Tokyo Metro
Tel.0120-104106
http://www.tokyometro.jp/en/
Useful web sites
You can find every kind of accommodations.
■ Japan Hotel & Ryokan Search
http://www.jnto.go.jp/ja-search/eng/index.php
■ Japan Hotel Association
http://www.j-hotel.or.jp/en/
■ Japan Ryokan & Hotel Association
http://www.ryokan.or.jp/english/
■ Japan City Hotel Association
http://www.jcha.or.jp/en/
■ Japanese Inn Group
http://www.japaneseinngroup.com
■ Japan Youth Hostels Inc.
http://www.jyh.or.jp/e/
Useful tickets
① N`EX TOKYO Round Trip Ticket : 4,000 yen
Special discount round ticket for overseas visitors when
traveling from Narita Airport to major stations in the Tokyo
area. Only available at Narita Airport (JR EAST Travel
Service Center or JR Ticket Office).
http://www.jreast.co.jp/e/pass/nex_round.html
② Tokyo Metropolitan District Pass (Tokunai Pass): 750 yen
Allows unlimited rides on JR East trains within the Tokyo
area.
③ Tokyo 1-day Ticket : 1,590 yen
Allows unlimited one-day use on all Tokyo Metro lines,
Toei subway, buses, trams as well as JR lines within the
Tokyo area.
④ Tokyo Metro One-day Open Tickets : 600 yen
http://www.tokyometro.jp/en/ticket/value/1day/
⑤ Tokyo Subway Ticket (24-hour: 800yen,48-hour:1,200yen,
72-hour:1,500yen)
http://www.tokyometro.jp/en/ticket/value/travel/
⑥ Toei One-day Economy Pass: 700 yen : Allows unlimited
one-day use on all Toei Metro lines and buses.
⑦ Yurikamome One-day Pass: 820 yen
⑧ Suica and Pasmo
Prepaid IC cards for travel on JR, subways, buses and private
railways in almost all areas in Japan.
On purchasing a new card, deposit of 500 yen is needed
(included in the total card amount).
Tokyo
& Vicinity
© TCVB
© JR EAST
Tourist Information Center
Sumo Wrestling © NIHON SUMO KYOKAI
Narita Int`l Airport
Tokyo Int`l Airport
Cover Photos : Tokyo Skytree®(©TOKYO-SKYTREE),Cherry blossoms(©Yasufumi Nishi/©JNTO)
Sensouji Temple(©Sensouji) , Rainbow Bridge(©TCVB)
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Odaiba ( お台場 ) F8
Odaiba, one exciting part of Tokyo Bay Development Area, also
known as Rinkai Fukutoshin, is built on reclaimed land in the
Port of Tokyo. The main access to Odaiba is via Yurikamome, a
computerized unmanned transit system that crosses Rainbow
Bridge at its entrance and runs through the area. Decks Tokyo
Beach features Sega’s Tokyo Joypolis (indoor theme park),
many shops and restaurants. AQUA CITY ODAIBA is an
entertainment complex (large cinema theaters) .Diver City
Tokyo Plaza, is shopping complex adjacent to the 20-meters(65
feet)-high Gundam statue.
Other places of interest include Odaiba Kaihin Park,
Miraikan(National Museum of Emerging Science and
Innovation), Museum of Maritime Science, Telecom Center
Obsevatory, Fuji Television, Tokyo Big Sight (exhibition hall)
and Panasonic Center. Oedo-Onsen Monogatari is a hot springs
theme park where you can enjoy a variety of hot springs as well
as the traditional lifestyle and culture of the earlier Edo Period.
AREAS FOR STROLLING ━━━━━━━━━
The Imperial Palace Area ( 皇居 ) D, E4
Formerly Edo Castle, it is still surrounded by the innermost
moat. Handsome gates and old guard towers are set at intervals
around the site. The main entrance is approached by the
elegant Nijubashi Bridge and is occasionally open to the public.
▲
The East Gardens
The East Gardens (Higashi Gyoen), where the donjon once
stood.
Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. (enter by 4:00 p.m. Mar.-Apr.14 & Sep.-
Oct.) /- 5:00 p.m.(enter by 4:30 p.m. Apr.15 - Aug.)/ - 4:00 p.m.
(enter by 3:30 p.m. Nov.- Feb.) Closed: Mon., Fri., Dec.23 & from
Dec.28-Jan.3. It may close without notice in circumstances due to
court functions or other occasions.
Marunouchi ( 丸の内 ) E4
Marunouchi spreading out on the west side of Tokyo Station is
the largest office town in Japan. The construction of
replacements for old buildings is presently being promoted, and
compound buildings with offices, shops and first-class hotels
are going up one after another.
Ginza ( 銀座 ) E5
Ginza is one of the most famous downtowns of Japan. Ginza
means a silver mint, and its name derives from establishment of
the silver coin mint in the 1600’s. There are large department
stores such as Mitsukoshi, Matsuya and many large-size store
buildings dotted around 4-chome in particular, where the street
meets the intersection of Harumi-dori Avenue.
In the whole area of Ginza, there are art galleries, innumberable
restaurants and boutiques all competing each other of their
styles, and every store boasts the tradition and its culture
unique to Ginza. Many of world famous brand boutiques have
opened their shops in Ginza which cast the town as an
internationally noted area of top-fashion trend.
Tsukiji ( 築地 ) E6
Tsukiji located along the Sumida River lies next to the famous
downtown area of Ginza in Tokyo. For most people, what
springs to mind first when they hear the name ‘Tsukiji’ is the
Tsukiji Market, also called ‘Uogashi (fish market)’. This market
handles the largest volume of fishery products in Japan, and the
480 kinds of products handled around-the-clock make this
market globally unique.Tsukiji fish market will be moved to
Toyosu in oct.,2018.
Hama-rikyu Gardens ( 浜離宮恩賜庭園 ) E6
The garden is a metropolitan garden of Tokyo located at the
mouth of the Sumida River in Chuo-ku. It is called Hama-rikyu
for short and cherished by all citizens. It is a landscape garden in
a circular style with a tidal pond called Shioiri-no-ike. It was
remodeled as a metropolitan garden on the site of the villa of the
Tokugawa Shogun’s family built in the 17th century. The garden
has an atmosphere of utter tranquility where visitors can forget
the passage of time. Visitors can also enjoy matcha (powdered
green tea) and Japanese confections as refreshments at
Nakajima-no-ochaya, a teahouse built on Nakajima Islet located
in the middle of the pond.
Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. (enter by 4:30 p.m.)
Closed: Dec.29 - Jan.1
MUSEUMS ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
The list of museums in and around Tokyo is long, and many
specialize in one particular area. If your field of interest is not
represented in the selection below, consult with Tourist Information
Centers. Admission prices vary. Generally closed Monday (or the
day after if it is a national holiday) and the New Year`s holidays.
Enter 30 min. before closing time.
Tokyo National Museum ( 東京国立博物館 ) F2 boasts the
longest history of any museum in Japan with an extensive collection
of over 117,000 pieces associated with the fine arts and history of
Japan and neighboring countries. Hours: 9:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m./Open
until 9p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Closed: Mon. & the year
end through New Year’s holiday. Getting there: 10-min. walk from
JR or subway Ueno Sta.
The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo ( 東京国立近代美
術館 ) E4 houses Japanese art since the Meiji period on the three
upper floors, visiting collections on the ground floor. Hours: 10:00 a.m.
-5:00 p.m./-8:00 p.m. (Fri. & Sat.) Closed: Mon. , Dec. 28 - Jan. 1 &
during changing exhibition. Getting there: 3-min. walk from subway
Takebashi Sta.
The National Art Center, Tokyo ( 国立新美術館 ) C5 has Japan`s
largest exhibition space as a venue for various art exhibitions.
Hours: 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Closed: Tue. & the year end through
New Year’s holiday. Getting there: 1 - min. walk from Nogisaka Sta.
or 5 - min. walk from Roppongi Sta.
The National Museum of Western Art ( 国立西洋美術館 ) F2
was designed by Le Corbusier and holds an impressive collection of
Western art from the Renaissance to the present. Hours: 9:30
a.m.-5:30 p.m./-8:00 p.m. (Fri.) Closed: Mon. , Dec. 28 - Jan. 1 &
during changing exhibition. Getting there: 1-min. walk from JR or
subway Ueno Sta.
National Museum of Nature and Science ( 国立科学博物館 )
F2 houses both international and Japanese achievements in
biology, earth science and zoology. Hours: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m./-8:00
p.m. (Fri. & Sat.) Closed: Mon. & Dec. 28 - Jan. 1. Getting there:
5-min. walk from JR or subway Ueno Sta.
Miraikan National Museum of Emerging Science and
Innovation ( 日本科学未来館 ) F8 allows visitors of all ages to
interact with its exhibits in order to come away with a greater
understanding of the recent scientific discoveries that are changing
the way we view the world. Hours: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Closed:
Tue. , Dec. 28 - Jan. 1 & during facility maintenance. Getting there:
4-min. walk from Telecom Center Sta. on Yurikamome Line
Edo-Tokyo Museum ( 江戸東京博物館 ) G3 houses various
displays which enable visitors to learn the history, life styles and
culture of Tokyo, including those in the Edo period. Hours: 9:30
a.m.-5:30 p.m./-7:30 p.m. (Sat.) Closed: Mon. & the year end
through New Year’s holiday. Getting there: 3-min. walk from JR
Ryogoku Sta.
Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum ( 江戸東京たても
の園 ), the branch of the Edo-Tokyo Museum, preserves restored
farm houses, residences, public bath house, Japanese-style pub, soy
sauce store and other buildings of periods from the 19th to early
20th centuries. Hours: 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. (Oct.-Mar.)/-5:30 p.m.
(Apr.-Sep.) Closed: Mon. & Dec. 28 - Jan. 4. Getting there: 5 min.
from JR Musashi-Koganei Sta. by bus.
Idemitsu Museum of Arts ( 出光美術館 ) E5 has an excellent
collection of calligraphy, woodblock prints and ceramics. Hours:
10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m./-7:00 p.m. (Fri.) Closed: Mon., the year end
through New Year’s holiday & during changing exhibition. Getting
there: Near subway Hibiya Sta. or 5-min. walk from JR Yurakucho
Sta.
The Japan Folk Crafts Museum ( 日本民藝館 ) A5 features a
collection of furniture, textiles and ceramics by unknown craftsmen
in the former home of a folk art enthusiast, Yanagi Soetsu. Hours:
10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Closed: Mon. , the year end through New
Year’s holiday & during changing exhibition. Getting there: 7-min.
walk from Komaba-Todaimae Sta. on Keio Inokashira Line
The Japanese Sword Museum ( 刀 剣 博 物 館 ) G3 has a
collection of 300 swords and sword fittings. Three of them are
National Treasures. Hours: 10:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Closed: Mon. &
the year end through New Year’s holiday. Getting there: 7-min.
walk from JR or Subway Ryogoku Sta.
Nezu Museum ( 根津美術館 ) C5 features a superb collection of
well-known Japanese art. Hours: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Closed:
Mon., the year end through New Year’s holiday & during changing
exhibition. Getting there: 10-min.walk from Omotesando Sta.
Ukiyo-e Ota Memorial Museum of Art ( 太田記念美術館 ) B5 is
small in size but big in number of "UKIYOE" woodblock prints.
Rotates displays frequently . Hours: 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Closed: Mon. ,
the year end through New Year`s holiday & during changing
exhibition. Getting there: 5-min. walk from subway Meiji-Jingumae
Sta. or JR Harajuku Sta.
Mitsuo Aida Museum (相田みつを美術館 ) E5 displays artworks
of Mitsuo Aida who is a brush and ink calligrapher and poet. Hours:
10:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Closed: Mon. Getting there: 3-min. walk
from JR or Subway Yurakucho Sta.
Ghibli Museum, Mitaka ( 三鷹の森ジブリ美術館 ) is designed
by Hayao Miyazaki, Japan`s top animation director. The unique
space filled with charm and fantasy will evoke your memories of
childhood. Reserve ticket in advance with a specific appointment
date and time is required. For ticket information, please check the
official website. http://www.ghibli-museum.jp/en/ticket-information/
Asakusa ( 浅草 ) G2
With the Sensoji Temple at its center, this lively area personifies
the atmosphere of old ‘downtown’ Edo and offers glimpses into
a more traditional life style. Kappabashi, which sells wholesale
anything you would possibly want in the way of dishes, is within
easy walking distance.
Tokyo Skytree® is the tallest free-standing broadcasting tower
in the world at 634 meters (2,080 feet)tall. (as of Mar.,2018)
There is the glass-walled observatory deck at 450 meters tall
offer panoramic view of the city.
Ueno ( 上野 ) F2
The highlight of Ueno is Ueno Park which is a concentration of
cultural institutions such as the first zoo in Japan, Ueno
Zoological Gardens, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo
Bunka Kaikan (Cultural Hall), National Museum of Western Art,
National Museum of Nature and Science and Tokyo National
Museum, all offering recreation and relaxation for the citizens.
The park is particularly crowded in late Mar. to early April when
people gather to enjoy the view of the evanescent cherry
blossoms.
There is Ameya-yokocho Market, or "Ameyoko" in the area under
the elevated railway from
JR Ueno Station to
Okachimachi Station.
There are over 500 shops
that sell everything from
basic foods to high-class
imported goods at
reasonable prices, and thus
it is always crowded with
shoppers.
Akihabara ( 秋葉原 ) F3
Akihabara, the world`s largest and most famous electronics
district has also gained a reputation as a mecca for Otaku, or
fanatics of anime, computer games or so-called “Cosplay.” There
are many anime related stores where you can find animation
figures, costumes and manga.
Ikebukuro ( 池袋 ) B1
It is a prominent downtown rivaling with the Ginza, Shinjuku,
Shibuya and Asakusa. As it has often been selected as the scene
for TV dramas and novels in recent years, the young people who
are keen on the trend cast eager eyes on Ikebukuro. Sunshine
City is the shopping and entertainment complex including an
observatory 240 meters (787 feet) from the ground, NAMCO
NAMJA TOWN which is the indoor theme park, aquarium,
KONICA MINOLTA planetarium and the Ancient Orient
Museum.
Shinjuku ( 新宿 ) A, B4
A high-rise shopping and entertainment hub. JR Shinjuku
Station is an immense terminal, which serves the most
passengers in Japan a day.
▲
Tokyo Metropolitan Government
One of Tokyo’s landmarks with an observatory on the 45th floor.
Hours: 9:30 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. (enter by 10:30 p.m.)
▲
Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden
This garden covers a large area of 58.3 hectares and offers rich
greenery and tranquility, completely secluded from the hustle
and bustle of Metropolitan Tokyo. It is renowned as an
excellent place to see
flowers and wild
birds.
Hours: 9:00 a.m. -
4:00 p.m. Closed: Mon.
& Dec.29-Jan.3 (If a
Monday is a public
holiday, then closed
the following
weekday.)
Shibuya ( 渋谷 ) B6
Shibuya is a popular shopping and entertainment paradise,
particularly for the younger generation. Every street and area in
the district has a completely different atmosphere. The Shibuya
Center Street is crowded with a multitude of shops, including
youth fashion shops, fast food restaurants and game centers, and
it is famous as the place where new trends are born that quickly
spread among the youth nationwide. Koen-dori Street, which
extends to Yoyogi Park, is a shopping street with a row of
department stores and fashionable buildings that attract families
in particular. This is a trendsetting place for youth culture.
Harajuku ( 原宿 ) B5
Harajuku is a collective term for the area that stretches from the
Harajuku Station to Omotesando. On the west side of JR
Harajuku Station, there is a wood of the Meiji-jingu Shrine that
is famous for a Japanese iris field where irises bloom in
profusion in the rainy season, June and a treasury that stores
the articles Emperor Meiji cherished in the late 19th century.
The east side of the station is known nationwide as the young
people’s town. On Takeshita-dori Street, in particular, this
narrow pedestrian packed with young teenager in weekends.
Omotesando/Aoyama ( 表参道 / 青山 ) B, C5
In Omotesando and its adjacent Aoyama, fashion designers
began to set up their offices and studios after the Tokyo
Olympics in 1964. Since then, more and more fashion stores for
adults, fashionable coffee shops and restaurants have been built
in this area. Aoyama with its zelkova tree lined avenue has the
atmosphere that resemble those in European streets.
Roppongi/Akasaka ( 六本木 / 赤坂 ) C5, 6
The town of Roppongi is filled with popular nightspots with
visitors from abroad. There are many international shops and
restaurants, so it should be easy to find something to suit your
taste. This area is now developing into an artistic and cultural
center with two major entertainment complexes. Roppongi Hills
houses a cinema complex, restaurants, and the Mori Art
Museum and on the 52nd floor is “Tokyo City View” where a
11m height of glass-walled observatory offers stunning views of
the city. Tokyo Midtown includes the Suntory museum of
Arts,21_21 DESIGN SIGHT as well as international restaurants
and boutiques.
•
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
A B C D E F G
A B C D E F G
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Tokyo
N
Shinkansen
Japan Railways (JR)
Other Railways
Subways
Temples
Shrines
Accommodations
0
0
0
1
1 mile
2 km
LEGEND
1 52
5
24
47
19
30
49
50
46
52
48
13
4
32
1
3
7
8
2
9
10
11
12
21
26
17
18
25
20
22
23
27
29
34
38
44
39
42
16
15
43
33
31
14
40
35
37
41
36
6
28
51
45
Yasukuni-dori Av.
Shinjuku
Gokokuji
Rikugien
Garden
Yanaka
Cemetery
Koishikawa
Korakuen
Garden
Nijubashimae
Idemitsu Museum of Arts
Toranomon
Hills
Zojoji
Temple
Tokyo Tower
Suntory Hall
Atago
-jinja
Shrine
JETRO
National
Noh
Theater
Shinjuku
Gyoen
Garden
Shinjuku
Central
Park
Tokyo
Metropolitan
Gov. Office
Kabukiza Theater
Hamamatsucho
Tamachi
Shinagawa
Kita-shinagawa
Gotanda
Meguro
Ebisu
Daikanyama
Komaba-
Todaimae Shibuya
Harajuku
National Museum of Western Art
National Science
Museum
Tokyo Metropolitan
Art Museum
Kanda
Myojin
Shrine
Shin-
Ochanomizu
Edo Tokyo Museum
Sony
Showroom
Ueno
Park
Ueno Zoo logical Gardens
Toshogu Shrine
Sensoji Temple
Kiyosumi
Garden
Fukagawa Edo
Museum
Higashi-Honganji Temple
Nippon
Budokan
Hall
National
Theater
Chidorigafuchi
Park
East
Garden
Imperial
Palace
National
Diet Bldg
Hama
Rikyu Onshi
Garden
Tsukiji
Fish
Market
National
Museum of
Modern Art
Yasukuni
Shrine
Zoshigaya
Cemetery
Otsuka
Sugamo
Tabata
Mikawashima
Minami-
Senju
Nishi-Nippori
Nippori
Akihabara Asakusabashi
Shin-Nihombashi
Hatchobori
Etchujima
Bakurocho
Ryogoku
JR SOBU LINE
Shinobazu Pond
Shitamachi Museum
Okachimachi
Suidobashi
Suidobashi
Ochanomizu
Ochanomizu
Kanda
Imperial Theater
Shimbashi
Tokyo
Sunshine 60 Obser vatory
Sunshine City
Ikebukuro
Ikebukuro
Higashi-
Ikebukuro
Zoshigaya
Kasuga
Korakuen
Awajicho
Kanda
Tokyo
Kyobashi
Otemachi
Takebashi
Akihabara
Yushima
Asakusa
Asakusa
Tawaramachi Ueno
Ueno
Keisei-Ueno
Ryogoku
Hamacho
Kiyosumi-
Shirakawa
Monzen-
Nakacho
Suitengu-mae
Edobashi
Nihombashi
Mitsukoshimae
Ningyocho
Shintomicho
Tsukiji
Tsukijishijo
Shiodome
Takeshiba
Hinode
Shibaura-Futo
TOKYO PORT
Kokusai-Tenjijo
Ariake
Ariake
Tennis-no-mori
Shin-Toyosu
Toyosu
Shijo-mae
Shinonome
Kokusai-
Tenjijo-
Seimon
Aomi
Tokyo-
Teleport
Fune-no-
Kagakukan
Daiba
Tennozu Isle
Telecom Center
Tsukishima
Kachidoki
Ikebukuro
Higashi-
Shinjuku
Shinjuku-
Sanchome
Waseda
Kagurazaka
Akebonobashi
Kojimachi
Hanzomon
Sakuradamon
Kokkai-
Gijidomae
Toranomon
Shimbashi
Kamiyacho
Onarimon
Shiba-
Koen
Higashi-
Ginza
Ginza
Kasumigaseki Hibiya
Shinjuku-
Gyoenmae
Yotsuya-Sanchome
Yotsuya
Ichigaya
Iidabashi
Iidabashi
Iidabashi
Kudanshita
Jimbocho Shinjuku-
Nishiguchi
Tochomae
Takadanobaba
Sugamo
Komagome
Ikebukuro
Ikebukuro
Mejiro
Takadanobaba
Higashi-
Nakano
Okubo
Shin-Okubo
Seibu-Shinjuku
Ichigaya
Yotsuya
Shinanomachi
Sendagaya
Yoyogi
Yoyogi
Shinjuku
Yoyogi-
Hachiman
Hatsudai
JR YAMANOTE LINE
JR JOBAN LINE
SUMIDA RIVER
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Tokyo
Opera
City
Odaiba-
Kaihinkoen
Fuji TV
Palette
Town
Aqua City
Odaiba
•
•
•
Oedo-Onsen Monogatari
•
•
•
•
RINKAI LINE
Takanawadai
Sengakuji
Ebisu
Yoyogi-
Koen
Meiji-
Jingumae
Kita-
Sando
Omotesando
Hiroo
Gaienmae
Shibuya
Nogizaka
Akasaka
Tameike-
Sanno
Akasaka-Mitsuke
Nagatacho
Aoyama-
Itchome
Roppongi
Roppongi-
Itchome
Azabu-
Juban
Shirokanedai
Meguro
TOKYU DEN-EN-TOSHI LINE
KEIO INOKASHIRA LINE
Meiji-jingu Shrine
Yoyogi Park
Tokyo Metropolitan
Teien Art Museum
Tokyo Metropolitan
Museum of Photography
Sengakuji
Temple
Aoyama
Cemetery
Nogi-jinja Shrine
Ebisu Garden
Place
Japan
Folk Crafts
Museum
Togo-jinja
Shrine
Ukiyo-e Ota Memorial
Museum of Art •
•
•
•
•
ODAKYU LINE
JR CHUO LINE
SEIBU SHINJUKU LINE
•
•
•
SHINKANSEN
Shiba
Rikyu
Garden
SEIBU IKEBUKURO LINE
Kokuritsu-
kyogijo
Yamate-dori Av.
Okubo-dori Av.
Ome-Kaido Av.
New
National
Theater,
Tokyo
Koshu-Kaido Av.
Olympic Stadium
Yoyogi Sports Center
•
NHK Hall
Kanze
Nohgakudo
Tamagawa-dori Av.
Mejiro-dori Av.
•
•
•
•
•
Aikido World Hq.
Japan Foundation
Meiji-dori Av.
National
Stadium
Jingu
Baseball
Stadium
Aoyama-dori Av.
Ohararyu
Ikebana
School
•
•
Gokokuji Temple
St. Mary`s
Cethedral
Waseda-dori Av.
Okubo-dori Av.
Shinjuku-dori Av.
Geihinkan
(State Guest
House)
Meiji Memorial
Picture Gallery
Sogetsu
Kaikan
Gaien higashi-dori Av.
Prince Chichibu
Rugby Ground
International
House of Japan
•
Roppongi Hills
Mori Art Museum
Arisugawanomiya
Memorial Park
Institute for
Nature Study
•
Meguro-dori Av.
Hatakeyama
Memorial Museum of Fine Art
Shinobazu-dori Av.
Koishikawa
Botanical
Garden
Hakusan-dori Av.
Kasuga-dori Av.
Sotobori-dori Av.
Yasukuni-dori Av.
Science Museum
Imperial
Household
Agency
•
Supreme
Court
Takarazuka Theater
•
Okura
Shukokan
Museum
TOKYO MONORAIL
TOHOKU
MAIN LINE
Hongo-dori Av.
Kodokan
Judo Hall
•
Yushima
Tenjin Shrine
Tokyo Dome City
•
YWCA
•
• Tokyo Regional
Immigration
Bureau
Shimbashi
Embujo Theater
World Trade
Center Bldg.
• Tekeshiba Pier
•
Hinode Pier •
• Harumi Pier
Shibaura Pier •
NEW TRANSIT “YURIKAMOME”
Shinagawa
Pier
•
Tokyo
Customs
•
Museum of
Maritime Science
Diver City
Tokyo Plaza
Meiji-dori Av.
Showa-dori Av.
Edo-dori Ave.
Nihombashi
Bridge •
Tokyo Int`l Forum
Mitsuo Aida Museum
Kiyosumi-dori Av.
Harumi-dori Av.
•
Toyosu Pier
Gas
Science
Center
•
Lalaport
Toyosu
Ariake
Colosseum
•
Tokyo Water
Science
Museum
•
Kototoi-dori Av.
Asakusa-dori Av.
Eitai-dori Av.
Tokyo International
Exhibition Center
(Tokyo Big Sight)
TFT
Globe
Tokyo
Meiji-jingu Shrine
Treasure House
Japan
Youth Hostels
Kita
Nohgakudo
Nijubashi
Bridge
Yarai
Nohgakudo
Hie-jinja
Shrine
Shiba
Park
Hosho-
Nohgakudo
Yushima
Seido
Temple
Ginza
Nohgakudo
Rainbow Bridge
Kaneiji Temple
•
Tokyo National Museum
• Tokyo City
Air Terminal
Decks Tokyo Beach
Odaiba
Park
•
•
Tokyo Joypolis
Hilton Tokyo
Odaiba
Kokugikan Hall / Sumo Museum
Hamacho
Garden
Kitanomaru
Park
Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Hall
TOBU TOJO LINE
TOKYU MEGURO LINE
•
Omotesando
Hills
Shibuya Hikarie
Hara Museum of
Contemporary Art
Yurakucho
Shibuya Mark City
•
•
Nakameguro
TOKYU IKEGAMI LINE
JR SAIKYO
LINE
Yamatane
Museum of Art
•
Nezu
Museum
Meiji Shrine
Outer Garden
KEIO LINE
JR KEIYO LINE
Hibiya-dori Av.
•
SHINKANSEN
KEIKYU LINE
KEISEI LINE
Tokyo
Skytree®
Asakusa
Hibiya
Park
Uguisudani
Japanese
Sword Museum
•
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
INDEX
SHRINES & TEMPLES
Atago-jinja Shrine............................................. D-5
Gokokuji Temple................................................C-2
Hie-jinja Shrine................................................. D-5
Higashi-Honganji Temple.................................. F-2
Meiji-jingu Shrine.........................................A, B-5
Nogi-jinja Shrine................................................C-5
Sengakuji Temple.............................................. D-7
SensojiTe mple.................................................. G-2
Togo-jinja Shrine ...............................................B-5
Yasukuni Shrine ............................................... D-3
Yushima Tenjin Shrine.......................................E-3
Zojoji Temple.................................................... D-6
PALACE, PARKS & GARDENS
Chidorigafuchi Park.......................................... D-4
Geihinkan (State Guest House)..........................C-4
Hama Rikyu Onshi Garden................................E-6
Hibiya Park ........................................................E-5
Imperial Palace..............................................D, E-4
Imperial Palace East Garden..............................E-4
Institute for Nature Study...................................C-7
Kitanomaru Park ............................................... D-4
Koishikawa Korakuen Garden.......................... D-3
Rikugien Garden ............................................... D-1
Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden......................B-4
Ueno Park........................................................... F-2
Yoyogi Park...................................................A, B-5
MUSEUMS & ART GALLERIES
Edo-Tokyo Museum.......................................... G-3
Hara Museum of Contemporary Art ................. D-8
Hatakeyama Memorial Museum of Fine Art .....C-7
Idemitsu Museum of Arts ..................................E-5
Japan Folk Crafts Museum ............................... A-5
Japanese Sword Museum.................................. G-3
Miraikan(National Museum of Emerging Science
and Innovation) .................................................. F-8
Mitsuo Aida Museum.........................................E-5
National Art Center, Tokyo ................................C-5
National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo...........E-4
National Museum of Western Art ...................... F-2
National Museum of Nature and Science .......... F-2
Nezu Museum ....................................................C-5
Shitamachi Museum........................................... F-2
Sumo Museum .................................................. G-3
Suntory Museum of Art .....................................C-5
Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum ...................... F-2
Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum.............C-7
Tokyo National Museum.................................... F-2
Ukiyo-e Ota Memorial Museum of Art .............B-5
THEATERS & HALLS
Globe Tokyo.......................................................B-3
Kabukiza Theater...............................................E-5
Kokugikan Hall................................................. G-3
National Noh Theater.........................................B-4
National Theater................................................ D-4
New National Theater, Tokyo ........................... A-4
NHK Hall.......................................................... A-5
Nippon Budokan Hall ....................................... D-3
Suntory Hall...................................................... D-5
Shimbashi Embujo Theater................................E-5
Tokyo Bunka Kaikan Hall ................................. F-2
Tokyo International Exhibition Center
(Tokyo Big Sight) ............................................ G-8
Tokyo International Forum ................................E-5
OTHERS
Japan Youth Hostels.......................................... A-5
National Diet Building...................................... D-5
Roppongi Hills...................................................C-6
Tokyo Opera City.............................................. A-4
Tokyo Tower ..................................................... D-6
Tokyo City Air Terminal (TCAT) ...................... F-4
Tokyo Midtown..................................................C-5
Tokyo Skytree® ................................................ G-2
YWCA ..............................................................E-3
ACCOMMODATIONS
Akasaka Excel Hotel Tokyu ......................... D-5
ANA Intercontinental Tokyo ........................ D-5
ANdAZ Tokyo .............................................. D-5
Asakusa View Hotel ..................................... G-2
Cerulean Tower Tokyu Hotel.........................B-6
Conrad Tokyo ................................................E-5
Courtyard by Marriott Tokyo Ginza ..............E-5
Courtyard by Marriott Tokyo Station ............E-4
Dai-ichi Hotel Annex.....................................E-5
Dai-ichi Hotel Tokyo .....................................E-5
Dai-ichi Hotel Tokyo Seafort........................ D-8
Diamond Hotel ............................................. D-4
Ginza Creston ................................................ F-5
Gran Pacific Le Daiba ...................................E-8
Grand Prince Hotel New Takanawa...............C-8
Grand Prince Hotel Takanawa ...................... D-7
Hilltop Hotel (Yamanoue Hotel)....................E-3
Hilton Tokyo................................................. A-4
Hotel Asia Center of Japan ............................C-5
Hotel Edoya ...................................................E-3
Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo .................................C-2
Hotel Grand Palace....................................... D-3
Hotel JAL City Tamachi Tokyo .................... D-7
Hotel Metropolitan.........................................B-1
Hotel Metropolitan Edmont.......................... D-3
Hilton Tokyo Odaiba .....................................E-8
Hotel Okura Tokyo ....................................... D-5
Hotel Ryumeikan Ochanomizu Honten.........E-3
Hotel Sunroute Plaza Shinjuku..................... A-4
Hotel Villa Fontaine Roppongi..................... D-5
Hotel Villa Fontaine Shiodome .....................E-5
Hyatt Regency Tokyo ................................... A-4
Imperial Hotel Tokyo.....................................E-5
Keio Plaza Hotel Tokyo................................ A-4
Mandarin Oriental Tokyo............................... F-4
Marunouchi Hotel..........................................E-4
Palace Hotel Tokyo........................................E-4
Park Hyatt Tokyo.......................................... A-4
Rihga Royal Hotel Tokyo ..............................C-2
Royal Park Hotel ........................................... F-4
Shangri-La Hotel Tokyo ................................E-4
Sheraton Miyako Hotel Tokyo.......................C-7
Shinagawa Prince Hotel................................ D-8
Shinjuku Prince Hotel....................................B-3
Sunshine City Prince Hotel............................C-1
Super Hotel JR Ueno-Iriyaguchi ................... F-2
The New Otani...............................................C-4
The Peninsula Tokyo .....................................E-5
The Prince Park Tower Tokyo ...................... D-6
Tokyo Central Youth Hostel ......................... D-3
Tokyo Dome Hotel ........................................E-3
Toyoko Inn Asakusa Senzoku....................... G-2
Tourist Information
Center
National
Art Center,
Tokyo
Suntory Museum of Art
Tokyo
Midtown
•
•
•
Miraikan
NIPPORI-TONERI LINER
TSUKUBA EXPRESS
Imperial Palace
Ginza © TCVB
Rainbow Bridge in Odaiba © Bureau of Port and Harbor, TMG
Guided Tours
It is not surprising that Tokyo, given its size and history, has
more than its share of attractions to intrigue the visitor of every
persuasion–from the imposing and grand to the subtle and
poignant.
Tour companies offer fine morning, afternoon, day and night or
special interest tours, with English-speaking guides. These are
particularly convenient for the visitor pressed for time or for a
first overall view of Tokyo.
JAPANiCAN.com
https://www.japanican.com/en/tour/
Club Tourism YOKOSO
Japan Tour
http://www.yokosojapan-tour.com
T el.03-6734-5115
Japan Holiday Tours
http://www.nbcw.co.jp/jht/index.html
Hato Bus Tour
http://www.hatobus.com/en/
Tel.03-3435-6081
Japan Gray Line Tour
http://www.jgl.co.jp/inbound/
Tel.03-5275-6511
Hama-rikyu Gardens © Tokyo Metropolitan Park Association
Tokyo National Museum
Tokyo Skytree® © TCVB
Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden
Omotesando © TCVB
Roppongi Hills Tokyo City View © TOKYO CITY VIEW
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