Enjoy nature all through the seasons! A whole family can enjoy the day camping and outing by the riverbank.
One of the largest canal parks in Tokyo Metropolis where you can find a wide variety of aquatic plants such as irises.
A historical building originally built as a bonded warehouse when the Port of Yokohama was opened. In 2002, it was renewed and opened to the public as a cultural and commercial facility.
Right in front of the West Exit of Ikebukuro Station! Enjoy one-stop shopping at our store which boasts a great selection of goods!
One-stop purchase of popular Japanese products.
A 2-minute walk from Godanta station. A Japanese suit brand offering a variety of popular items, including non-iron shirt, washable suits, pajama suits and a wide selection of business attire for both men and women.
An art center open to all where you can enjoy exhibitions, workshops, and a variety of other events.
One of two Daihonzan (head temples) of the Soto school of Zen Buddhism, with modern buildings in the spacious temple grounds. You can practice Zen meditation here.
An archaeological park in Minato Ward, Tokyo with a reconstructed pit-house from the latter Jomon Period (approximately 4,000 years ago).
Pola Museum of Art, built in the forests of Hakone, is a glass-encased space where you can enjoy art and nature together.
The Noge Otsuka Tumulus is the largest tumulus of the Noge Tumulus Cluster. Excavations have unearthed objects like armor, stone tools, and grave goods made out of beads.
Only 150min from Tokyo on the Tohoku expressway! One of the biggest snow resorts in the Tokyo region, which is fun for all!
The Tumulus cluster dates back to the latter of the Kofun (tumulus) period (250 - 538). Excavations unearthed horse tack like bits for horses, Sue ware (type of unglazed pottery made from the middle of the Kofun era through the Heian era), Haji ware (plain, unglazed, reddish-brown Japanese pottery made from the Kofun era through the Heian era), and haniwa (clay figures from the Kofun period).
Indoor ski & snowboard park open throughout the year!
Pick up your items at the airport counter upon arrival in Japan.
This art museum, which opened its doors in 1983, is out of ordinary among other museums in Tokyo. Located in the middle of the city, the museum harmonizes its art exhibitions, which utilize the former official residence of Asaka-no-miya (a branch of the Japanese Imperial Family) constructed in the early Showa period employing an Art Deco style, and the lushly green garden. After improvement of the old building, and an extension for a gallery and a cafe was added, the museum was re-opened in November 2014. In front of the art museum, there is a wide spread of lawn. You can put down a mat and eat your meal on this lawn.
*Currently closed
An alley roughly 300 metres from Ningyocho, named Amazake Yokocho after a shop selling sweet sake.
It is a stone statue of an owl that was made into a landmark in the yard of the Ikebukuro Station when the JR (Japan Railways) was launched.