Shinjuku Neon & Gardens Walk
🚶7 mapped stops
From the busiest train station in the world to serene Japanese gardens, Shinjuku compresses the full spectrum of Tokyo into a single neighborhood. Skyscrapers give way to cherry trees, and robot restaurants sit next to 400-year-old shrines.
Arrêts de ce circuit (7)
- 1 Shinjuku Station South Exit The busiest train station on Earth -- 3.5 million passengers pass through daily, more than the entire population of some countries
- 2 Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden A 144-acre sanctuary combining Japanese, English, and French garden styles behind walls that once enclosed a feudal lord's estate
- 3 Golden Gai Six narrow alleys crammed with nearly 300 tiny bars, most seating fewer than ten people -- a postwar black market turned drinking village
- 4 Hanazono Shrine A Shinto shrine older than Edo itself, founded in the mid-17th century and now sandwiched between skyscrapers and karaoke parlors
- 5 Kabukicho Gate Tokyo's largest entertainment district, named after a kabuki theater that was planned but never built after the 1945 firebombing
- 6 Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building Kenzo Tange's twin-towered city hall with a free observation deck at 202 meters -- on clear days, Mount Fuji floats above the skyline
- 7 Omoide Yokocho (Memory Lane) A smoky alley of yakitori stalls that survived the postwar bulldozers, still grilling chicken skewers over charcoal the same way since the 1940s
Prêt à explorer ?
Téléchargez Nara et commencez ce circuit gratuitement — la narration GPS se lance automatiquement.
Le contenu des circuits est fourni à titre de divertissement et d’information générale uniquement. Vérifiez les détails pratiques de manière indépendante. Ne remplace pas les conseils officiels.