KAWAGOE
#4
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Denver, CO
Programs: UA MP Club (no status)
Posts: 152
If you have a Rail Pass (I assume you do), just hop on a train and look around, and when you feel like getting off, do. ^_^
If you REALLY want some names, try Shimokitazawa. It was featured on a TV show (Shimo Kita Sundays).
A lot of the northern half of the Yamanote loop is actually older, especially the stations in between key interchanges. Komagome is often overlooked.
Kawagoe seems to me to be really not all that different from non-Minato-ku parts of Tokyo, really, but if you want to try your luck, along the Keihin-tohoku line you'll find Ouji and Akabane (that might be too new), and further south you could try Tsurumi. (Oomori is nice too, but again, might be too new.)
If you REALLY want some names, try Shimokitazawa. It was featured on a TV show (Shimo Kita Sundays).
A lot of the northern half of the Yamanote loop is actually older, especially the stations in between key interchanges. Komagome is often overlooked.
Kawagoe seems to me to be really not all that different from non-Minato-ku parts of Tokyo, really, but if you want to try your luck, along the Keihin-tohoku line you'll find Ouji and Akabane (that might be too new), and further south you could try Tsurumi. (Oomori is nice too, but again, might be too new.)
#5
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota,USA
Programs: UA, NW
Posts: 3,752
Kawagoe seems to me to be really not all that different from non-Minato-ku parts of Tokyo, really, but if you want to try your luck, along the Keihin-tohoku line you'll find Ouji and Akabane (that might be too new), and further south you could try Tsurumi. (Oomori is nice too, but again, might be too new.)
For a view of working class Tokyo, take the last remaining streetcar line from Otsuka (on the Yamanote line) or Waseda (on the Tozai subway line) to Minowa.
I had been told that the island of Tsukudajima in Tokyo Bay retained some of the flavor of yesterday, but evidently I saw it too late. The builders of high rises have already arrived. It does, however, seem like a cohesive community and has a couple of side streets that have so far escaped the developers.
Otherwise, one of my favorite activities in Tokyo is to pick one of the major "named" streets, such as Waseda-doori or Eitai-doori or Kasuga-doori and walk as much of its length as I can. I always find something of interest. I forget which such walk it was, but I once encountered a neighborhood of shops devoted to selling every conceivable kind of brush, from paintbrushes to floor-sweeping brushes.




