The Ginza (銀座) is Tokyo's most famous upmarket shopping, dining and entertainment district, featuring numerous department stores, boutiques, art galleries, restaurants, night clubs and cafes.
One square meter of land in the district's center is worth over ten million yen, making it one of the most expensive real estate in Japan. It is where you can find the infamous $10 cups of coffee and where virtually every leading brand name in fashion and cosmetics has a presence.
Chuo Dori street on a weekend afternoonFrom 1612 to 1800, today's Ginza district was the site of a silver coin mint (Ginza means "silver mint" inJapanese), after which the district was eventually named. The Ginza evolved as an upmarket shopping district following the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake.
Most shops in the Ginza district are open everyday of the week. A visit is most pleasant on a weekend afternoon, when the central Chuo Dori street gets closed to traffic and become a large pedestrian zone. The closure takes place from 14:00 to 17:00 on Saturdays and from 12:00 to 17:00 on Sundays (until 18:00 from April through September).
Points of Interest
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Ginza Wako |
Shops: 10:30 to 18:00
Restaurants: 10:30 to 21:00 (some variation between restaurants) |
Built in 1932, the clock tower of the Ginza Wako building is the symbol of the Ginza, standing at the northwest corner of the district's centrally located Ginza 4-Chome junction of Chuo and Harumi Dori. Inside the building, jewelry and luxury items are sold. |
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Sony Building |
Showroom and shops: 11:00 to 19:00
Restaurants: typically 11:30 to 21:30 |
The newest products by Sony, including DVD recorders, televisions, cameras, audio sets, mobile phones, computers and Play Station products, are displayed to the public in the showrooms in this building. There are also a few shops,restaurants and cafes. |
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Kabukiza Theater |
Undergoing reconstruction and closed to the public until 2013 |
Kabuki pieces were performed in this theater until April 2010. The theater is now being torn down and rebuilt at the base of a new skyscraper. The facade and interior of the new theater will resemble the previous structure. The new theater is scheduled to open in spring 2013. |
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Police Museum |
10:00 to 18:00
Closed: Mondays (or following day if Monday is a national holiday)
Admission: Free
English: None (a free informative English booklet is available, however) |
Located just outside of the Ginza area to the north, the four floor Police Museum is operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department and is free of charge. Although there are no English explanations, displays such as historical uniforms and equipment can be easily understood. |
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Department Stores
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Mitsukoshi |
Shops: 10:00 to 20:00
Restaurants: typically 11:00 to 23:00 |
The Ginza store of the Mitsukoshi department store chain was opened in 1930 and offers goods and services on twelve floors. Mitsukoshi's history reaches back to the year 1673. |
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Matsuya |
Shops: 10:00 to 20:00
Restaurants: typically 11:00 to 20:00 |
The Ginza store of the Matsuya department store chain offers fashion, foods, household goods, a pet shop, a travel agency and an exhibition hall on its eleven floors. |
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Matsuzakaya |
10:30 to 19:30 (some lower floors open until 20:00) |
The Ginza store of the Nagoya based Matsuzakaya department store chain offers goods and services on ten floors. Matsuzakaya has a history that reaches back to the year 1611. |
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Printemps |
11:00 to 20:30 (until 19:30 on Sundays) |
The Ginza store of the Paris based Printemps department store chain offers fashion, accessories, wines, foods and restaurants on ten floors. Printemps Ginza was opened in the year 1984. |
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Hankyu |
Yurakucho Hankyu: 11:00 to 20:30 (until 20:00 on Sundays)
Mosaic Ginza Hankyu: 10:30 to 21:00 |
Osaka based Hankyu operates the "Yurakucho Hankyu", a conventional department store in the Yurakucho Marion Building and "Mosaic Ginza Hankyu", a collection of fashion and lifestyle stores. |
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Marronnier Gate |
Daily 11:00 to 21:00 (restaurants operate until 23:00) |
The 12 floor Marronnier Gate shopping mall was opened in 2007 close to Yurakucho Station. Clothing stores are located from the basement to the fourth floor, while the top three floors are taken up by 13 restaurants. From the fifth floor to the ninth floor, the building is occupied by the Ginza branch of the popular Tokyu Hands department store. |
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