5 Best Sights in Tokyo, Japan

Ichibangai Shopping Street

The most famous of Kawagoe’s old streetscapes, Ichibangai (“first street”), is lined with historic, black- and white-plastered warehouses and dark wooden merchant residences that today house all sorts of places to shop or stop for a snack. Souvenir-wise, you’ll find stores selling incense, jewelry, glass beads, and fashion accessories, while the street snacks vary from tofu donuts to traditional sweets designed to be taken with green tea. More than anything, Ichibangai is just a pleasant place to stroll and take in the old vibe.

Kashiya Yokocho

Another of Kawagoe’s historic enclaves, this cobblestone side street translates as “candy store alley.” It’s a great stop for anyone with a sweet tooth, thanks to its roughly 30 confectionery shops that sell colorful hard candies, honeycomb toffee, and more traditional Japanese treats such as dango (rice dumplings) and senbei (savory rice crackers).

Motomachi 2-chome area, Saitama-ken, 350-0062, Japan

Monzen-machi

Many important temples around Japan developed temple-front streets full of restaurants and inns to serve the needs of pilgrims. Monzen-machi, meaning "gate-front town," is what’s left of that for Jindai-ji Temple. It’s a lovely, rustic street lined with small soba noodle shops and places selling souvenirs and snacks, such as steamed buns.

5-11-2 Jindaiji-motomachi, Chofu, Tokyo-to, 182-0017, Japan

Recommended Fodor's Video

Taishakuten Sando Shopping Street

Katsushika-ku

This several-hundred-meter shopping street between Shibamata Station and Taishakuten Temple has retained an old-Tokyo vibe, its wooden buildings having escaped the heavy bombing that flattened much of Tokyo at the end of World War II and the subsequent post-war redevelopment. Although the street developed as the approach to Taishakuten, its connection to the temple takes a back seat for most visits to the street snacks sold here. The Sando is lined with small, family-run stores selling traditional snacks, such as savory senbei (rice crackers), dorayaki (sweet pancakes), kuzu-mochi (sticky rice cakes), and the Shibamata classic that is kusa-dango (sticky rice dumplings on skewers that appear a deep green because they include mugwort in the mix). For the latter, stop by Monzen Toraya.

7-7-5 Shibamata, Tokyo, Tokyo-to, 125-0052, Japan

Yanaka Ginza Shopping Street

Taito-ku

It used to be that every neighborhood in Tokyo had its own small shopping street, but with the rise of supermarkets and convenience stores in the 1980s, they began to vanish. Thanks to a forward-thinking shopkeepers' and residents' association, Yanaka Ginza not only survived but has flourished. The street is now an interesting mix of shops selling groceries and other goods for locals, as well as sweets, snacks, and crafts.

3 Yanaka, Tokyo, Tokyo-to, 110-001, Japan