This taiyaki (fish-shaped dessert) specialty shop offers a shaved ice treat called Asayake, ...
Located down an alleyway by Kaminarimon Intersection, Takajo Kotobuki specializes in game and ...
If you were having trouble distinguishing between Khaosan's multiple Asakusa backpacker ...
Run by the same group behind Iriya's Toco. Tokyo Heritage Hostel, this friendly Kuramae hostel ...
Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu commissioned this famous Asakusa shrine in 1647, enshrining the three ...
With over 30 million visitors a year, Senso-ji holds a special place in local hearts. Otherwise ...
Hanayashiki has been in business since 1883 and still draws crowds. There are around 20 rides, ...
This large museum’s outlandish architectural style may not appeal to everyone, but the building ...
Found on one of the less busy shopping arcades just west of Asakusa's Sensoji, this otherwise ...
Located just behind Sensoji in Asakusa, Yadoroku is the oldest onigiri specialist in Tokyo. ...
For an introduction to Japanese-style desserts, this unpretentious Asakusa sweet shop is the ...
The shopping complex that sits atop Asakusa's Tobu line station was restored to its early ...
It's taken a surprisingly long time for word to spread about the 13th floor restaurant at ...
Acclaimed stage actor Nakamura Kanzaburo XVIII oversees this temporary kabuki theatre, whose ...
As a dojo (a coldwater fish) speciality restaurant, its history dates back to the mid-Meiji ...
Comfort food in a funky wooden shack, within easy walking distance of Asakusa’s tourist sights. ...
The speciality at this Japanese restaurant is rice cooked with barley and served with a bowl of ...
Barely 30 seconds from Asakusa’s market and temple complex, yet surprisingly peaceful, the ...
Chanko-nabe is the legendary food of sumo wrestlers, said to help them put on those extra ...
This smart, modern ryokan is wonderfully situated five minutes’ walk from Asakusa’s temple. ...
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