Asakusa & Sumida River
Tokyo鈥檚 most visited temple enshrines a golden image of Kannon (the Buddhist goddess of mercy), which, according to legend, was miraculously pulled out of鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Tokyo鈥檚 most visited temple enshrines a golden image of Kannon (the Buddhist goddess of mercy), which, according to legend, was miraculously pulled out of鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Tokyo's history museum documents the city's transformation from tidal flatlands to feudal capital to modern metropolis via detailed scale re-creations of鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Belonging to the esoteric Shingon sect, at this active temple you can attend one of the city's most spectacular religious rituals. Goma (fire rituals)鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Tokyo Skytree opened in May 2012 as the world鈥檚 tallest 鈥榝ree-standing tower鈥 at 634m. Its silvery exterior of steel mesh morphs from a triangle at the鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
The woodblock artist Hokusai Katsushika (1760鈥1849) was born and died close to the location of this museum, which opened in 2016 in a striking aluminium鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Founded in 1627, this shrine is famous as the birthplace of the sumo tournament. Around the back of the main building is the yokozuna (sumo grand鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
The highlight of this museum is a fascinating collection of Japanese folk articles, mainly patched clothing and pieces of fabric, known as boro, gathered鈥
Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo (MOT)
Asakusa & Sumida River
For a primer in the major movements of post-WWII Japanese art, a visit to the permanent collection gallery here should do the trick. Temporary exhibitions鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
The 厂别苍蝉艒-箩颈 temple precinct begins at this majestic gate, from which hangs an enormous ch艒chin (lantern); look under this to see a beautiful carved鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
One of Tokyo's most picturesque retreats, Kiyosumi-teien started out in 1721 as the villa of a daimy艒 (domain lord; regional lord under the shoguns)鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
This subtemple of 厂别苍蝉艒-箩颈 dates to the late 17th century. The deity enshrined here is a guardian of women and the temple is the site of a curious ancient鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
At the end of 厂别苍蝉艒-箩颈's Nakamise-d艒ri, this gate is flanked by two fierce guardian deities. On the gate鈥檚 back side are a pair of 2500kg, 4.5m-tall鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Asakusa-jinja was built in honour of the brothers who discovered the Kannon statue that inspired the construction of 厂别苍蝉艒-箩颈. Deep red in colour, the鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
For visitors with a keen interest in Japanese sword-making 鈥 an art that continues to this day 鈥 this museum, which relocated to a new building in 2018,鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
During the Edo period (1603鈥1868), Fukagawa was a typical working-class neighbourhood, with narrow alleys and tenement homes. You can get an idea of what鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Worth searching out is this quirky 40-sq-metre exhibition space in an unmarked old house, hiding down a narrow alley. It's run by contemporary art curator鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Senso-ji's eastern gate is one of the temple complex's rare, Edo-era buildings: it's been standing since 1618. Though it appears minor today, this gate鈥
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'鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
There are hundreds of drums from around the world here, including several traditional Japanese taiko. The best part is that you can actually play most of鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
On the grounds of 厂别苍蝉艒-箩颈, this 53m-high, five-storey pagoda is a 1973 reconstruction of a pagoda built by Tokugawa Iemitsu in 1648. The current鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
On the ground floor of Ry艒goku Kokugikan stadium, this small museum displays pictures of all the past yokozuna (top-ranking sumo wrestlers), or, for those鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
Originally built in 1774, this bridge was once the point of departure for boat trips to the Yoshiwara pleasure district, north of Asakusa.
Edo Shitamachi Traditional Crafts Museum
Asakusa & Sumida River
Asakusa has a long artisan tradition, and changing exhibitions of local crafts 鈥 such as Edo-kiriko (cut glass) 鈥 are on display at this museum in a鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
This late-17th-century stroll garden offers beautiful views across its central tidal pond and is well worth a visit if you're in the area. It used to take鈥
Asakusa & Sumida River
This large temple offers peace and quiet inside the main hall. The temple was founded in the 17th century; the current building is a reconstruction from鈥