5 Best Sights in Tokyo, Japan

Nakano Broadway

Nakano-ku Fodor's choice

When Nakano Broadway opened in 1966, it was as a luxury complex, akin to the Tokyo Midtown or Ginza Six of its day. Since then, it has morphed into a center for all things otaku, its 13 floors home to roughly 300 stores largely focused on manga, anime, gaming, and related collectibles and goods that run from figurines to cosplay outfits. Japan’s largest manga- and anime-related retailer alone has close to 30 stores in Nakano Broadway, all divided by specialty. Down in the basement are plenty of places for lunch or a quick snack, including the stomach-busting Daily Chico, which does an eight-scoop soft-serve ice cream. It’s like a trip to Akihabara, but with everything under one roof.

Daikanyama T-Site

Shibuya-ku

A bookstore and then some, T-Site was designed to be a “library in the woods” for major bookseller Tsutaya but has ended up being a fashionable meeting place for the Daikanyama area. The three wings of the complex house a Tsutaya store full of arty, intellectual tomes, but there are also cafés and restaurants here, including the plush Anjin Library and Lounge, where you can ease into a comfy chair with a coffee or cocktail while surrounded by 30,000 vintage magazines from the 1960s and ‘70s. Don’t miss taking a look at T-Site’s dog salon too: it’s where some of Daikanyama’s most pampered pooches come for styling.

Gee Store

Akihabara

Located upstairs from cosplay mecca, Cospatio, this store houses more than 450 mini vending or "gachapon" machines. Insert a coin and a figurine pops out. The thousands of prizes include everything from underpants for your phone to sexy Statue of Liberty figurines. Quirky, cheap, and addictively fun.

3–15–5 Soto-Kanda, Tokyo, Tokyo-to, 101-0021, Japan
03-3526–6877

Recommended Fodor's Video

Hillside Terrace

Shibuya-ku

Designed by famed architect Fumihiko Maki, the Hillside Terrace helped shape Daikanyama as a chic neighborhood after it was opened in 1967 and as it was subsequently expanded over the next three decades. Spread over multiple low-rise buildings, it mixes cafés and restaurants with offices, design and fashion stores, and small galleries. It's been overtaken in the public consciousness by T-Site in recent years, but the contemporary art at Art Front Gallery, coffee at Hillside Cafe, and all its other outlets still make it worth a browse.

Palette Town

Odaiba

This complex of malls and amusements is located at the east end of the island. The uncontested landmark here is the 377-foot-high Palette Town Ferris wheel, one of the world's largest and modeled after the London Eye. Just opposite is Mega Web, a complex of rides and multimedia amusements that's also a showcase for the Toyota Motor Corporation. You can ride a car (hands off—the ride is electronically controlled) over a 1-km (½-mile) course configured like a roller coaster but moving at a stately pace. You can drive any car you want, of course, as long as it's a Toyota. Plan ahead if you want to stop by teamLab Borderless, billed as the world's first digital art museum, which is home to dozens of mindblowing interactive digital installations.

1–3–15 Aomi, Tokyo, Tokyo-to, 135-0064, Japan
03-5500–2655
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Ferris wheel ¥900, Daily 10–10