Twelve years since last in Tokyo - what's changed?
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: London, UK
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Twelve years since last in Tokyo - what's changed?
Hi. I'm hoping more regular visitors to Tokyo can give some useful info on what's changed there for visitors over the last decade or so. Anything from useful new tech/apps to connectivity to getting around to booking events to paying for things to - well anything at all really. I'm not off till October, just looking ahead right now. Thanks in advance
#2
Join Date: Mar 2016
Location: Southern Cali
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Posts: 1,813
Hi. I'm hoping more regular visitors to Tokyo can give some useful info on what's changed there for visitors over the last decade or so. Anything from useful new tech/apps to connectivity to getting around to booking events to paying for things to - well anything at all really. I'm not off till October, just looking ahead right now. Thanks in advance
#5
Moderator: Luxury Hotels and FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Palo Alto, California,USA
Posts: 17,629
New rail and subway lines -- Fukotoshin line and Ueno/Tokyo line (which goes more places than just those) immediately spring to mind. There are others as well.
#7
Join Date: Sep 2009
Programs: UA GS>1K>Nothing; DL GM 2MM; AS 75K>Nothing
Posts: 9,171
The things I've noticed in order of impact..
Amazon
Uber/GoTaxi apps
Google/Apple Maps
Higher cellular data speeds
Suica/Pasmo, etc. more prevalent
Everyone, everywhere is taking pictures all the time
More dogs
Amazon
Uber/GoTaxi apps
Google/Apple Maps
Higher cellular data speeds
Suica/Pasmo, etc. more prevalent
Everyone, everywhere is taking pictures all the time
More dogs
#8
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: NYC / TYO / Up in the Air
Programs: UA GS 1.5MM, AA 2MM, EK, BA, SQ, CX, Marriot LT, Accor P
Posts: 5,429
I'll add one from a Gaijan perspective -- over the last decade there has been a remarkable difference in the usage of English on signs everywhere -- from the highway to products in the grocery store... I credit the Olympics for that -- Tokyo is MUCH more navigable for foreigners than ever.... When I first moved here I couldn't find much English at all in train stations, supermarkets, or department stores -- now it is everywhere! And I can use my phone to ride the train instead of having to recharge my Suica all the time -- so much easier and convenient. Even the taxis are easier -- S.Ride and Go Pay make paying for taxis so much easier as well....
#10
Join Date: Mar 2007
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Posts: 4,117
If you were last in Tokyo in 2011, when the yen was like 75-80 to the dollar, everything in Japan will now seem ridiculously cheap, as the exchange rate now hovers around 130-140 and consumer prices have not gone up that much.
#11
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Germany
Posts: 3,120
To me, by far the biggest change is having Google Translate on your smartphone - this way, you can translate and read all Japanese inscriptions. You are no longer illiterate in Japan! This takes away the excitement of pointing at menu items without having a slightest idea what they mean and hoping to get something edible, but it's a huge improvement overall.
People seem to bow a lot less than they did 12 years ago. The beautiful Harajuku station building has been demolished and replaced with an awful looking glass and concrete monster.
But overall, Tokyo hasn't changed that much.
That's an interesting perspective.
My first time in Japan was 2005, and Tokyo was quite navigable with English back then already (Osaka on the other hand was pure hell - it was the only Japanese city where I got lost).
People seem to bow a lot less than they did 12 years ago. The beautiful Harajuku station building has been demolished and replaced with an awful looking glass and concrete monster.
But overall, Tokyo hasn't changed that much.
My first time in Japan was 2005, and Tokyo was quite navigable with English back then already (Osaka on the other hand was pure hell - it was the only Japanese city where I got lost).
#13
FlyerTalk Evangelist
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To their credit, they did not really demolish it. They took it apart, built a (much needed) new one, and are putting the main hall of the old station back in place in the next year (or two).
#14
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 968
Do you like mediocre experiential art designed exclusively to be an Instagram post and, important note, you have to get wet to do it? And it's also going to be very busy with the most obnoxious tourists?
Oh, and they tore down the Okura and Nakagin Capsule Bld.
Oh, and they tore down the Okura and Nakagin Capsule Bld.