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Japan’s high-tech capital has a varied cultural landscape full of futuristic skyscrapers, centuries-old temples, sophisticated hotels, and enticing
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Travel + Leisure: Natural light floods the atrium lobby on the top floor of this gleaming tower. We love the thoughtful details, from the washi-paper lamps to the kimono-inspired wall patterns.
Travel + Leisure: Even if you don’t check in here, drinks at the hotel’s New York Bar are a must. The 177 rooms, five restaurants, and indoor pool all share stunning cityscape vistas.
Travel + Leisure: The Hong Kong–based hotel group brings its tech-savvy sensibility to the Ginza. Vanities are equipped with nail dryers and in-room VoIP phones let guests make free international calls.
Travel + Leisure: Crowning the Tokyo Midtown Tower complex, the Ritz puts guests in the heart of Roppongi. Guest rooms channel old-world glamour with mahogany desks and oversize armoires.
Travel + Leisure: At the 202-room Shangri-La, Chinese touches (gold-lacquered panels; silk embroidery) offset a more modern aesthetic (blond wood; statement chandeliers).
Travel + Leisure: Understated Japanese style pervades at the 52-year-old Hotel Okura. Don’t miss the on-site art museum, with more than 2,000 Buddhist works.
Travel + Leisure: It doesn’t get more authentic than the New Otani, with its 400-year-old garden, tea ceremonies, and restaurant’s traditional teppanyaki cuisine.
Travel + Leisure: Earthy elements such as gray aji stones at this 290-room property evoke the neighboring Imperial Palace grounds. Ask for a balcony room facing the royal residence.
Travel + Leisure: Among the highlights at this revamped hotel, in Marunouchi: Edwardian architecture and sunlit rooms that look out on to Tokyo Station’s ornate plaster cupolas.
Travel + Leisure: This offbeat shop is a souvenir-seeker’s dream, chock-full of unique finds such as brass necklaces made with tiny lightbulbs and tote bags in the shape of Do Not Disturb signs.
Travel + Leisure: Samurai showdowns, damsels in distress, spirited shouts from the audience—all in a day’s performance of Japanese dance drama. Watch an entire show or buy same-day balcony seats and catch a single act.
Travel + Leisure: Set in Roppongi’s Mori Tower, this museum is a hub for global contemporary talent. Tickets include admission to the Tokyo City View observation deck—a 52-story-high outlook above the city.
Travel + Leisure: At Nezu Museum, you'll find Asian antiques emphasizing Buddhist and tea-ceremony artifacts, a moss-covered Japanese garden filled with teahouses, winding stone paths, and maple-shaded koi ponds.
Travel + Leisure: More than 12,000 ukiyo-e Japanese woodblock prints are housed in a diminutive gallery in Shibuya, representing such masters as Hokusai and Hiroshige—only about 100 are on display at any given time.
Travel + Leisure: In the 18th century, 47 ronin avenged their lord’s death before committing hara-kiri. Their stone graves are well preserved at this Zen Buddhist temple, as is their armor in the small on-site museum.
Travel + Leisure: Takahashi Harutaka's first restaurant, a 10-seat sushi-ya loved as much for its exceptional raw fish as for its laid-back vibe, has earned a loyal following among local chefs.
Travel + Leisure: Here, Zaiyu Hasegawa blends authentic cooking techniques with playful presentations (a mascarpone dessert, for one, is served with ground-tea-leaf “dirt" on a spade with a pair of gardening gloves.
Travel + Leisure: Park Hyatt's 40th-floor restaurant is a lavish introduction to Japanese fine dining, where a kimono-clad waitstaff serves chef Kenichiro Ooe’s simple yet refined dishes on handmade pottery.
Travel + Leisure: This popular chain’s flagship specializes in tonkatsu—panko-breaded pork cutlet that’s fried golden and drizzled with an addictive sweet-tart sauce. Get the kurobuta (Berkshire pork).
Travel + Leisure: In Minami Aoyama, the imaginative dishes of Yoshihiro Narisawa draw a diverse crowd of Converse-clad Europeans and ladies who lunch. Seasonal courses pay homage to regional ingredients.
Travel + Leisure: Locals form long lines to sample market-fresh fish at Sushi Dai, but there are plenty of other options. Enjoy sashimi at Nakaya, oyako donburi at Torito, or croissants at Orimine Bakers.
Travel + Leisure: Devotees line up at this no-frills, eight-seat joint for its ramen—made with an intense pork- and clam-based broth. The dish topped with thin slices of chashu pork and nori is a house specialty.
Travel + Leisure: Find the tastiest yakitori in town at this gem, where hinai-jidori chicken is used to make everything from liver pâté to tender skewered thighs. Don’t miss the smoked duck and soft-boiled quail eggs.
Travel + Leisure: Japan’s craft-beer scene is having a moment; at this cellar bar, you’ll find a wide variety of local brews on tap. Try the Shiga Kogen Miyama Blonde, made in Nagano.
Travel + Leisure: There are no menus at this tiny space in the Ginza. Instead, the bartender recommends cocktails with telepathic precision: a Moscow Mule, say, chilled with diamond-shaped ice cubes.
Travel + Leisure: Yamamoto’s seasonal creations (such as peach- and wasabi-infused shochu) use ingredients sourced from farmers across the country and are served on a 500-year-old Japanese oak counter.
Travel + Leisure: This department store, spread out over eight buildings in Shinjuku, stocks a great selection of international products (French macarons; German cakes) in its basement food hall.
Travel + Leisure: Shibuya’s iconic Shinto shrine, near Harajuku Station in the Shibuya neighborhood, is the perfect place to learn about Japanese history and culture.
Travel + Leisure: For a dose of edgy Tokyo street fashion, head to Tatsuro Motohashi’s boutique in Harajuku, which specializes in homegrown labels, including Tokyo’s Exist and the Osaka-based Roggykei.
Travel + Leisure: After work, it’s great to unwind with a cocktail at the chic lounge on the Palace Hotel Tokyo’s sixth floor, in Marunouchi; order a martini and take in the skyline view.