special ward in the Tokyo Metropolis in Japan

Location of Taito in Tokyo

Taitō (台東) is a northeastern ward of Tokyo. Talk to a Tokyoite about "downtown" (下町 shitamachi), and he will think of the Taito district: the train station of Ueno, where migrants from the deep north first arrived in their search for a better life, and the temples of Asakusa, once a boom town full of prostitutes and gangsters, but long past its prime now. Stuck in a low-rent post-war time warp, here Japan's hypermodernity takes a bit of a breather, with such quaint oddities as bustling street markets and even the occasional wooden house.

Understand

edit

Two districts of Taito have their own articles:

  • Asakusa, known particularly for Sensō-ji Temple (Asakusa Kannon).
  • Ueno, packed full of museums and Tokyo's best-known cherry blossom viewing spot.

Tourist Information Site

edit

Visit Authentic Tokyo is the ward's English language guide site.

The ward has another Japanese-only guide site with integrated Google Translate and different sets of contents, including downloadable pamphlets in many languages.

Get in

edit
Map
Taito (with Ueno shaded green and Asakusa shaded red)

Ueno Station is the major hub, connecting together northbound Shinkansen passengers with the JR Yamanote line, the subway Ginza and Hibiya lines, and the Keisei trains to Narita.

If visiting Tokyo University in Bunkyo, the Hongō Sanchōme Stations of the Marunouchi and Ōedo subway lines are the most convenient.

  • 1 Asakura Museum of Sculpture (朝倉彫塑館), 7-16-10 Yanaka ( JR Yamanote line to Nippori, north exit). Tu W F-Su 09:30-16:30. Must visit! Sculptor Asakura Fumio (Artist name Kōso 1883-1964) designed this atmospheric house himself. It combined his original Japanese home and garden with a large studio that incorporated vaulted ceilings, a 'sunrise room' and a rooftop garden with wonderful neighbourhood views. It's now a reverential museum with many artist's signature realist works, mostly of people and cats, on display. This is a wonderful place to stroll and contemplate the meaning of life. You must remove footwear before entering the museum, but cannot go barefoot, so you must wear socks. Adult ¥500, student ¥250. Asakura Museum of Sculpture (Q11517304) on Wikidata Asakura Museum of Sculpture on Wikipedia
  • SCAI The Bathhouse, Kashiwayu-Ato 6-1-23 Yanaka. Closed Su, M, holidays. A small gallery showing the work of contemporary artists, the building is a former sento, or bathhouse.
  • 2 Shitamachi Museum Annex (下町風俗資料館付設展示場, shitamachifū-shiryōkan-fusetsu-tenjijō), 2-10-6 Ueno-Sakuragi, +81 3-3823-4408. Tu-Su 09:30-16:30, closed M, also Tu following a holiday. Closed until March 2025 for renovations. Many buildings scattered around the Yanaka district survived the bombings of World War II, including this former sake store built in 1910. Characteristic of Meiji-era architecture, the building now houses a small museum of sake and beer equipment. Free. Shitamachi Museum Annex (Q59268117) on Wikidata
  • 1 Iwasaki's Ganso Shokuhin Sample-ya, 3-7-6 Nishi Asakusa (400 m WNW of Tsukuba Express Railway's Asakusa Station, exit A2; Tobu Railway's Asakusa Station is 1 km away), . 10:00–17:30. Make your own replica food or sample food (sampuru) out of wax. This shop, in Tokyo's Kappabashi restaurant supply district, offers onsite workshops and at-home DIY kits to make food from wax. Workshops are usually conducted in Japanese. If you don't want to make it yourself, then you can buy the company's readymade options from the store, or order some of the more elaborate pieces for delivery. A souvenir keychain, made from a durable plastic by the company's artisans, will set you back ¥1,000–2,000.
  • 1 Kappabashi (かっぱ橋). A more offbeat shopping option, it is best reached from Tawaramachi station on the Ginza line. This is Tokyo's restaurant wholesale district, which sells plastic food, metal spatulas, deep fryers and an immense variety of affordable crockery. Some shops sell only in wholesale quantities, but many are happy to sell single items and factory-made Japanese pottery (which to the casual eye is indistinguishable from the handmade kind) can sell for as little as ¥100 a piece. Another bargain is high-quality Japanese kitchen knives, which are generally much cheaper in Japan. Many stores here are closed on Sundays.
    • 2 Dengama (田窯), at the corner of Kappabashi-dori and Asakusa-dori. A particularly good boutique specializing in handmade Japanese pottery. The discount racks outside are downright cheap at several hundred yen a pop, but more expensive items on the second floor may run into tens of thousands of yen. Don't miss the trays of wacky decorative chopstick holders.
  • Asakusabashi (浅草橋), two stops south on the Toei Asakusa Line, is a wholesale district which these days is known for its shops specializing in bead craft supplies. There are also many stores selling traditional Japanese festival and party supplies.
    • Kiwa Seisakusho (貴和製作所), Asakusabashi 2-1-10. M-Sa 09:30-18:30. 5 floors of plastic baubles of all shapes and sizes. Three shops in Asakusabashi alone, the largest near exits A4 and A2 of the metro.
  • Okachimachi (御徒町) area, to the southeast of JR Okachimachi station, is known for jewelry industry - about 2,000 shops, wholesalers and workshops concentrate in the area.

Markets

edit
Yanaka Ginza
Old house in Nezu

Collectively called Ya-ne-sen, Yanaka (谷中), Nezu (根津) and Sendagi (千駄木) are adjacent low-key commercial and residential neighborhoods full of traditional, quirky little shops, particularly along the very tongue-in-cheek Yanaka Ginza (谷中銀座) shopping street. The area is best reached on the Metro Chiyoda line to Sendagi or the JR Yamanote Line to Nippori.

  • Chaho Kanekichi-en (茶舗金吉園), Yanaka 3-11-10. An old-school tea shop near the entrance to Yanaka Ginza, just follow the smell of roasting tea. They prepare their own blends, which are uniformly excellent: try the slightly bitter Snow Plum (雪の梅 Yuki-no-Ume, ¥600 per 100g) or the unusual Yanaka Midori (谷中みどり, ¥600-1000 per 100g), a mix of roasted tea stems (the cheapest tea) with tea-ceremony grade matcha (the most expensive tea). Ask to see the private garden and if they're in a good mood they just might let you have a peek.
  • Gotō no Ame (後藤の飴). Closed Wednesdays. A traditional Japanese candy (ame) shop at the very end of Yanaka Ginza, everything sold here is made on premises and quite cheap (¥100+).
  • Aoi Marushin (葵丸進), 1-4-4 Asakusa, +81 3-3841-0110. 11:30-21:00. Tempura, Tempura, Tempura. Aoi Marushin is the largest tempura restaurant in Tokyo!
  • Bentenyama Miyakozushi Souhonten (弁天山美家古壽司), 2-1-16 Asakusa, +81 3-3844-0034. This is a very small, very expensive sushi restaurant in Taito. If you are a sushi buff this is that place for you, with fantastic sushi and great ambiance.
  • 1 Cigars & Cafe LWAN (ルワン), Matsugaya 1-11-3 (Near Tawaramachi on the Ginza Line), +81 3 6426-2170. Tu-F 11:00-21:00, Sa Su 12:00-20:00, national holidays 12:00-20:00. A cigar bar that serves coffee, alcoholic drinks, and desserts. There is a large cigar selection, in particular from the Dominican Republic.
  • Zakuro, 3-14-13 Nishi-Nippori (3 min directly west of JR Nippori North Exit), +81 3-3822-1543. Located in the heart of the traditional Yanaka neighborhood, this Persian/Turkish restaurant goes all-out on the "dining experience": you sit on the carpeted floor, they make you wear middle-eastern garb, and dessert includes a hookah (water-pipe) to puff on! And all the while, the owner wanders from table to table making wisecracks in Japanese. The set dinner course (¥2000) is guaranteed to leave anyone stuffed.

Drink

edit

Sleep

edit
Remnants of the "water trade"

Why is there so much cheap lodging near Minami-Senju and Minowa? The answer is the quiet nearby neighborhood of Senzoku 4-chōme, once the legendary red-light district of Yoshiwara, the sole licensed area for pleasures of the flesh during the Edo era. At its peak, Yoshiwara was home and prison to over 9,000 prostitutes, many of whom had been sold into debt bondage when as young as 7, and with only the most successful managing to buy their way out. Thrice wiped out by a fire in 1913, an earthquake in 1923 and Allied bombing in 1945, Yoshiwara finally gave up the ghost when prostitution was outlawed in 1958. Some low-rent soaplands still struggle on, but by and large the action has long since shifted elsewhere.

Taito has Tokyo's best range of cheap to midrange accommodation. The listings below cover only more far-flung bits of the district, see Asakusa and Ueno for listings of hotels in the immediate vicinity of the two central stations.

Budget

edit

The area around Minami-Senju (南千住) near the northern end of the Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line, formerly known as San'ya (山谷), has some of Tokyo's cheapest budget accommodation. The typical room is an individual tatami flat of 2 square-meters, with television and air-conditioning. The bedding is Japanese style (futon set and pillow).

Much of the accommodation here was originally designed to cater to itinerant day laborers looking for a cheap place to crash, but many have pivoted to serving foreign travellers instead. All hotels listed here cater regularly to backpackers and have some English ability. Just hop out at Minami-Senju and walk down south towards Meiji-Dori (Main road) on Route 464. The further away from the train station you walk the cheaper it gets. About ¥3,500 down to ¥2,100 for single, also ¥1,500 for dorms are available all along this street (Route 464).

  • 1 Juyoh Hotel (ホテル寿陽), 2-15-3 Kiyokawa (10 min walk south from Minami-senju Station), +81 3-3875-5362, fax: +81 3-5603-5775. Very nice cheap hotel, prices ranging from ¥3200 for a single (¥2980 with a discount coupon printable from their web page, includes cleaning service every other day) to ¥6400 for a double (¥5960 with coupon). Internet access available in the lobby, five PC's and Macs available; wireless and ethernet support for laptops.
  • 2 New Koyo (ホテルニュー紅陽), 2-26-13 Nihonzutsumi, +81 3-3873-0343. Do not expect too much from this hotel. Usually a line for the shared showers. Single room for ¥2900, Double room for ¥5200.
  • 3 Tsukuba Hotel Ueno (ツクバホテル), Moto-Asakusa 2-7-8 (1 min from Metro Ginza Inaricho stn, 8 min from JR Ueno), +81 3 3834-2556. Old but functional business hotel offering small but cheap rooms. Free wireless, free PCs, coin laundry, used to dealing with foreigners. Western-style singles ¥5250, Japanese-style tatami rooms with shared bath from ¥4000.
  • 4 Hotel Villa Fontaine Tokyo Ueno Okachimachi (ホテルヴィラフォンテーヌ東京上野御徒町), 2-4-4 Kojima, +81 3 5339-1200. Mid-range hotel. Rooms have en-suite toilet. Staff speaks English. Simple breakfast included. Free internet (through LAN cable) in rooms. Rooms are quiet and pleasant. 5 minutes walk from Shin-Okachimachi Station. ¥7900.

Mid-range

edit
  • 5 Andon Ryokan (行燈旅館), 2-34-10 Nihonzutsumi (5 min walk from Minowa subway station), +81 3-3873-8611, fax: +81 3-3873-8612. Run by the same family as New Koyo, this is a well-kept ryokan north of Ueno. ¥8190 for double/twin.
  • 6 Annex Katsutaro Ryokan (アネックス勝太郎旅館), 3-8-4 Yanaka (near Sendagi Metro Exit 2 - from the top of the stairs turn left, cross Shinobazu-dori just past Lawson's and continue straight for 50 more meters; or from Nippori station follow Yanaka Ginza to the end and turn left), +81 3-3828-2500, fax: +81 3-3821-5400. Smallish Japanese-style tatami rooms with en suite bathrooms and A/C in a modern (2001) 3-story building (elevator available) on a quiet residential street. English spoken. WiFi; free use of computer in the lobby; coin washer/drier (ask for detergent at front desk). 1 person ¥6300, 2 people ¥10,500.
  • 7 Sawanoya Ryokan (旅館 澤の屋), 2-3-11 Yanaka (7-min walk from Nezu station no 1 exit, 10 min taxi from Ueno station or 25- to 30-minute walk), +81 3-3822-2251, fax: +81 3-3822-2252, . Well-known and popular ryokan, all rooms Japanese style with tatami floors. 2 rooms with bath, the 10 others share two Japanese-style baths and showers. Good neighborhood to simply wander and look at the houses and gardens. Free internet and LAN points in all rooms. Coin operated laundry. Really friendly helpful staff. Closed 29 Dec-3 Jan. Quote from book by owner "I stay here not because it is cheap but because it is friendly". Single ¥4935-5250 without bathroom, double ¥9240/9870 without/with bath, triple ¥12600/14175 without/with bath.

Connect

edit

Go next

edit
  • Asakusa is a district of eastern Taito
  • Sumida ward is to the east, across the Sumida River
  • Ueno is a district of western Taito
Routes through Taito
Nagano Takasaki ← Kumagaya  N  S  Tokyo/Chiyoda
Niigata Takasaki ← Kumagaya  N  S  Tokyo/Chiyoda
Sendai Nasu ShiobaraUtsunomiya  N  S  Tokyo/Chiyoda
Ōmiya UrawaAkabane  N  S  Tokyo/Chiyoda
Tokyo/Shibuya Tokyo/Chiyoda  W  E  Tokyo/Sumida Chiba
Iwaki MitoKashiwa  N  S  END
END  W  E  Keisei Funabashi Narita
Tsukuba KashiwaMisato  W  S  END
END  N  S  Honcho → into Ginza


This district travel guide to Taito is a usable article. It has information for getting in as well as some complete entries for restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.
  翻译: