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Mount Daisen
Lost and found on the highest mountain in western Japan.
Toyama Memorial Museum
The Toyama Memorial Museum is a collection of buildings founded by prominent businessman Gen-ichi Toyama as a home for his mother...
Shinsekai
Shinsekai, or New World, was constructed in 1912 as a hip neighborhood of the future but quickly forgotten after World War II...
Samurai Museum
You'll find tons of exhibits and museums about samurai in Japan, but it can be difficult to find ones that cater to tourists who don’t speak Japanese...
Sendai
Japanese cities are known for being endlessly chaotic concrete jungles...
Sengaku-ji Temple
Sengaku-ji Temple is often overlooked by travelers coming to Tokyo...
Arima Onsen
Compact enough to be explored entirely on foot, Arima’s main Taiko-dori shopping street forks into narrow cobblestone pathways, flanked by Edo-style wooden houses and free ashi-yu (foot bath) spots...
Yokohama Red Brick Warehouse
It's called Aka Renga Soko, or Red Brick Warehouse, and it’s worth a walk around its open grounds to relive a bit of the past...
Hase-dera Temple
Hase-dera temple in Kamakura was constructed to hold a massive, gold-gilded, wooden statue of Kannon, the god of mercy...
Shuzenji Onsen
If you’re looking for an outstanding onsen (hot spring) town, then head to Shuzenji Onsen, a few hours’ train ride from Tokyo in the prefecture of Shizuoka...
Obuse Town
Since the Edo Period, Obuse Town in Nagano Prefecture has been an important art and cultural hub...