On the north-west side of Ueno Park is an area called Yanaka, where you can still catch a glimpse of what Tokyo used to look like before the 1923 earthquake and (later) American bombers almost flattened the place. The problem for Tokyo was that a very large proportion of the houses here were wooden, so once the bombs fell, fires spread quickly and ruined what the bombs had missed. However, Yanaka was largely spared, and you can still find examples of wooden houses here.
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| Examples of original wooden houses in Yanaka. |
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| Examples of the wooden planks in Yanaka Cemetery. |
We then took another metro ride, this time to the downtown shopping district of Ginza, where the major department stores are located. You would be tempted to compare this area with Knightsbridge, until you see the prices, then you would realise that Knightsbridge is nothing but a cheap street market compared to this! I spotted a shirt in the Wako store (a sort of up-market Harrods) and quite liked it. It was linen, white with pale grey stripes, quite nice....£232! You could buy three Ralph Lauren shirts for that and have enough money left over for a modest supper for two! Needless to say, we made our excuses and left!
In the evening we had intended to go back to the observatory where Joe had taken us yesterday. He said that to see Tokyo at night from up there is quite something. The trouble was that by the time we were ready to go out, it had started raining and the mist had closed in, so we abandoned the idea and had a very pleasant supper (a mixture of Japanese and Korean cuisine) in a restaurant near the hotel.
Jenny's bit: I noticed that when we walked into the Wako store nobody approached us, I have heard that locals dress up to go there so, obviously, we didn't pass muster! Jx






Not been to Wako, but generally speaking in the big stores staff are incredibly polite and you never see the ' you can't afford it' attitude. Once we were trying to buy Michelle her favourite makeup ( which happens to be Kanebo). We asked for what we thought was the right item only to be presented with something roughly three times the usual price. A polite 'it's a little expensive' from me and the sales ladies looked mortified at their mistake, bowed profusely in apology, and immediately found what we were looking for at more-or-less the UK price. In Japan the customer is king/queen. Another good market to visit is Asakusa which is also near Senso-ji temple ( you have to try a couple of Japanese temples even if you're templed-out!)
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