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  1. Japan, Asia. Tokyo. Ōte-mon, meaning 'great hand gate', was the main entrance to Edo-jō and would have had a guard of 120 men. It is now the main gate to the Imperial Palace East Garden. Suggest an edit to this attraction.

    • Asakusa: Laid Back, Souvenir Strolling
    • Ginza: Glitz and Glam
    • Kuramae: Original Arts
    • Kōenji and Kichijōji: Kooky Bits
    • Daikanyama and Naka-Meguro: Books, Boutiques and Bohemian
    • Shibuya: Hip Haunts
    • Shimo-Kitazawa: Vintage and Vinyl
    • Harajuku and Aoyama: Believe The Hype
    • Shinjuku: Something For Everyone
    • Akihabara: The Otaku Hub

    TheAsakusa neighborhood was once the heart of Edo’s low city, home to artisans and merchants. Travelers still flock here in droves to see Sensō-ji, Tokyo’s oldest Buddhist temple, but the small lanes and winding alleyways are full of surprises, including the vintage curios at Tokyo Hotarudo and the ceramics and lacquerware atYamakichi. For straight...

    Ginza is one of Tokyo’s most affluent shopping districts, home to upmarket boutiques and gleaming department stores, such as the classic Mitsukoshi and avant-garde Dover Street Market Ginza. There’s also the glitzy high-fashion mall,Ginza Six, with the delightful Imadeya Ginza sake store, the “Liquor Beacon of Ginza,” located in the basement (you c...

    Once a drab warehouse district along the Sumida-gawa (Sumida River), Kuramae has been refashioned as the place for young artisans to set up shop. Check outCamera for leather goods (and coffee);Maito for clothes colored with traditional, natural dyes; andKakimori, where you can design your own notebook and ink color. Stroll around the district and y...

    Just west ofShinjuku, Kōenji is a bastion of counterculture with lots of secondhand shops and unusual finds. Don't miss the collection of street fashion stores inside the ramshackle Kita-Kore Building and the coveted vintage goods at easy-to-missSokkyō. Travel further west on the Chūō line to hit Kichijōji, which is a popular place to trawl for hom...

    Daikanyama is a residential enclave of cafes and boutiques, full of fashion and accessories specialists such as Okura, which sells garments colored with traditional indigo dyes. Bibliophiles should head toDaikanyama T-Site – the store is a maze of literary genres, and has a great collection of photobooks and English-language novels by Japanese auth...

    Shibuya is a fountain of teen trendiness in Japan. Anyone older than Gen Z might feel a little out of their depth here, but just cruise and amuse yourself in the madness. Music shops and cheap, outrageous apparel are everywhere, as are the hip kids who come to primp and pose. Check out the youth-focused fashion atShibuya 109, underground designers ...

    Southwest of Shibuya is the small neighborhood of Shimo-Kitazawa (aka Shimokita), a favorite haunt of students and arty types, with quirky shops, izakaya (pub-diners) and hole-in-the-wall bars. Stroll the narrow streets here to discover Tokyo's highest concentration of vintage-clothing stores – Haight & Ashbury, iot, Lost Boy Tokyo and the Desert S...

    The twin neighborhoods ofHarajuku and Aoyama are home to the youthful shopping strip Takeshita-dōri and the stylish boulevard ofOmote-sandō. Sophisticated high fashion rules the Aoyama end of Omote-sandō, while the experimental hipsters of Harajuku layer haute couture with vintage goods. And then there is Ura-Hara, the maze of backstreets behindOmo...

    Shopping in Shinjuku can be a little overwhelming. From the moment you step out of the train station, the lights and noise make the whole neighborhood seem like the interior of a bustling pachinko parlor, but there are some great shops amid all the chaos. Here you'll find Isetan, one of Tokyo’s most revered department stores; the something-for-ever...

    Akihabara is known as Tokyo's Electric Town district and it’s easy to see why with stores likeAkihabara Radio Center, an organized scrapyard of electrical components, and Yodobashi Akiba, which is believed to be the largest electronics store in the world. The neighborhood is also a center for otaku (geeks) and their penchant for anime, manga and Ja...

  2. Shinjuku & Northwest Tokyo. Shinjuku is a whole city within the city; developed in the latter half of the 20th century, it's become widely synonymous with Tokyo itself. The breadth and scale are simply awesome – over three million people a day pass through the train station. To the west of the station is Nishi-Shinjuku, a planned district of ...

  3. Isetan is Tokyo's most fashion-forward department store. Head to the 2nd-floor Tokyo Closet and 3rd-floor Re-Style boutiques in the main building, and the… Y. & Sons

  4. Start your morning at Kayaba Coffee, a classic kissa (first-wave coffee shop). Once happily caffeinated, stroll – admiring the miscellany of tiny temples en route – in the direction of Yanaka Ginza, a mid-20th century market street. Also worth a visit here: the Asakura Museum of Sculpture, which is among the city’s most charming ...

  5. Asahi Super Dry Hall. Asakusa & Sumida River, Tokyo, Japan, Asia. Asakusa & Sumida River. This jet-black, inverted obelisk, part of Asahi Beer's headquarters, was designed by Philippe Starck and completed in 1989; atop it sits a 'golden flame' meant to symbolise Asahi's passion for brewing. It's a landmark structure, though one locals are known ...

  6. 2021年8月8日 · To answer those questions and more, here are some of the essential things you should know before packing your bags and heading to Tokyo. 1. Prep your drugstore essentials. You can buy almost anything in Tokyo, but it often won’t be the same brand you have at home and the packaging is unlikely to be printed in English.

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