Harajuku & Aoyama
Tokyo鈥檚 grandest Shint艒 shrine is dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and Empress Sh艒ken, whose reign (1868鈥1912) coincided with Japan's transformation from鈥
Getty Images/Flickr RF
Harajuku is one of Tokyo's biggest draws thanks to its grand shrine, 惭别颈箩颈-箩颈苍驳奴. It's also Tokyo's real-life catwalk, a world-renowned shopping destination where the ultra-chic (and chic in training) come to browse and be seen. Many boutiques here have been designed by influential architects 鈥 another draw. Neighboring Aoyama is a shopping and dining district for the city's fashionable elite.
Harajuku & Aoyama
Tokyo鈥檚 grandest Shint艒 shrine is dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and Empress Sh艒ken, whose reign (1868鈥1912) coincided with Japan's transformation from鈥
Harajuku & Aoyama
If it鈥檚 a sunny and warm weekend afternoon, you can count on there being a crowd lazing around the large grassy expanse that is 驰辞测辞驳颈-办艒别苍. You'll鈥
Harajuku & Aoyama
This broad, tree-lined boulevard is lined with boutiques from the top European fashion houses. More interesting are the buildings themselves, designed by鈥
Harajuku & Aoyama
Nezu Museum offers a striking blend of old and new: a renowned collection of Japanese, Chinese and Korean antiquities in a gallery space designed by鈥
Ukiyo-e 艑ta Memorial Museum of Art
Harajuku & Aoyama
This small museum (where you swap your shoes for slippers) is the best place in Tokyo to see ukiyo-e. Each month it presents a seasonal, thematic鈥
Harajuku & Aoyama
This is Tokyo鈥檚 famous fashion bazaar. It's an odd mixed bag: newer shops selling trendy, youthful styles alongside stores still invested in the trappings鈥
Harajuku & Aoyama
Had enough of the Harajuku crowds? Exit, stage right, for Cat Street, a meandering car-free road with a mishmash of boutiques and a little more breathing鈥
Harajuku & Aoyama
This boulevard inside Jing奴-gaien (the public outer gardens of 惭别颈箩颈-箩颈苍驳奴) is lined with gingko trees. For a couple of weeks around late November and鈥