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Nihonbashi Ward Guide,Chuo Ward Neighbourhoods: 日本橋



Nihonbashi (日本橋, in a real sense "Japan Bridge") is a city region of Tokyo, only north of Ginza and upper east of Marunouchi and Tokyo Station. The extension, after which the area is named, has been the kilometer zero marker for Japan's public expressway network since the early Edo Period.


Some time ago a wooden scaffold, the Nihonbashi was reproduced in stone during the Meiji Period, and was canvassed by a freeway during the 1960s. You can cross a fractional 1:1 reproduction of the first wooden scaffold in the Edo-Tokyo Museum in Ryogoku, while a half estimated copy of the extension interfaces the fourth and fifth floors of the International Terminal at Haneda Airport.


ACCESS



AVERAGE RENT near Nihonbashi, Chuo


Apartment Type Average Rent


1R / 1K ¥ 900,000


1LDK / 2K / 2DK ¥ 180,000


2LDK / 3K / 3DK ¥ 240,000








As the "focal point of Japan", the Nihonbashi region has delighted in much business success throughout the long term, and the region has thrived with clamoring shops covering the roads and delivery waterways (the vast majority of which have been filled in meanwhile). Many shops with very long term accounts are as yet working in the locale today and make for lovely walks. During the Edo Period (1600-1867), the Mitsui family, perhaps the most impressive dealer family, opened a profoundly effective material shop, the Echigoya, in Nihonbashi. Its replacement, the Mitsukoshi Nihonbashi, turned into Japan's first retail chain and still stands in the area's middle.


Late redevelopment projects have revived the Nihonbashi region with classy new increments. A feature is the Coredo Muromachi complex with its three exquisite high rises that component shopping and feasting in a cutting edge, yet customary plan enlivened by the Edo Period legacy of the shipper locale. Large numbers of its shops have practical experience in customary artworks or neighborhood food sources from across Japan, like lacquerware, gold leaf, blades, chopsticks, purpose, katsuobushi, kelp and desserts.


FAMOUS LOCATIONS


Nihonbashi Bridge 日本橋



The bridge is said to have been worked in 1603 at the request for Tokugawa Ieyasu. The following year, it was made the beginning stage of the Gokaido, or five significant streets and turned into the image of the prosperous city of Edo, the focal point of Japan. The current twin curve span made of stone was finished in 1911. The kirin sculpture under the scaffold light in the focal point of the extension portrays the success of the city of Tokyo when it was made, and the shishi sculptures at the four corners portray assurance. The Nihonbashi was assigned as an Important Cultural Property of Japan.


You can see a progression of creature sculptures along the scaffold yet the must-see components are the winged serpents in the focal point of the extension. Winged serpents are supposed to be an image of thriving and the ones on this scaffold were made to guarantee Tokyo turned into a fruitful city. The current scaffold with mythical beasts was worked in 1911.



Fukutoku Shrine 福徳神社



Despite the fact that it is indistinct concerning when this altar was assembled, in view of synopsis accounts, reverence had effectively occurred here somewhere in the range of 859 and 876 AD.


The first principle building was brilliant, and the sanctum grounds covered a huge region encompassed by backwoods and fields in a piece of far off wide open meagerly populated by ranchers. It was cherished as a hallowed place revering Inari (a Japanese god of foxes and fortune) for the Fukutoku town of the Musashino provincial local area, so that is the place where it took its name from.


Its area makes it advantageous for office laborers to come in to offer their appreciation at whatever point they can make the time, previously or after work. Visiting a sanctum regularly requires an entire day relying upon your area, yet Fukutoku Shrine, concealed in the humming business region of Nihonbashi, is an ideal spot to stop by among work and shopping.


Fukutoku Shrine is adoring Ukanomitama-no-mikoto, additionally called Oinari-san. During the Edo time frame, Hidetada Tokugawa devoted the holy place to Benzaiten, a goddess of favorable luck who dwelled in Edo Castle. Ukanomitama-no-mikoto is the lord of business thriving and Benzaiten is the divine force of abundance in business, making it an ideal counterpart for Nihonbashi, the monetary center of Japan.



University

  • Graduate University Supreme Hall


Gyms (24 hour)

  • Anytime Fitness Nihonbashi Honcho


*Simple selection of the area.



SUPERMARKETS

  • Seijo Ishii Nihonbashi 1-chome store

  • KINOKUNIYA entrée Nihonbashi Takashimaya S.C.

  • Maruetsu Petit Nihonbashi Honcho store


*Simple selection of the area.


Department Stores

  • Nihonbashi Takashimaya

  • Nihonbashi Coredo Muromachi


* Simple selection of the areas



Useful Information:


Police Station:


Central Police Station Nihonbashi Police Box


Address: 1-9-1, Nihonbashi, Chuo-ku


TEL: 03-5651-0110


Website:

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