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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Dec 14 2006, 4:33 PM EST (current) | Patty | 1 photo added |
| Dec 10 2006, 11:06 PM EST | Patty | 2 words added, 1 word deleted, 2 photos added |
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city guides
September 2006
TOKYO RISING
Japan’s ultramodern, bustling capital can make New York look like a sleepy backwater. Tokyo is back—and busier than ever following the country’s long economic slump.
Gazing down at this bayside megalopolis from atop Kenzo Tange’s colossal twin spires that serve as city hall, you can see the lights stretch from horizon to horizon, almost to the foot of snow-tipped Mt. Fuji, 62 miles away. The vast expanse of endless egg-carton buildings boggles the mind—Tokyo only begins to make sense at street level. Rebuilt from the ashes of World War II, it spreads out from the Imperial Palace, home to Japan’s elderly emperor and empress and the former site of Edo Castle, the largest fortress of the premodern world. Repeatedly devastated by disasters since samurai top dog Tokugawa Ieyasu made the city his capital in 1603, modern Tokyo’s roots can still be appreciated at the festive Sensoji Temple and the spectacular Kabuki theater, or simply by strolling through the old-fashioned neighborhoods of Shitamachi along the Sumida River.
Ever protean and always surprising, Tokyo refuses to be confined to the past, present or future. A city of surfaces and hidden interiors that is profoundly un-Western, Tokyo is a high-energy, super-dense, sensory overload trip into Japan’s modern heart. It can never be fully understood, but a taste always leaves visitors wanting more.
NEXT: What to see and do in Tokyo
tim hornyak is the author of Loving the Machine: The Art and Science of Japanese Robots (Kodansha International). Email Tim at editor@executivetravelmag.com.
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Inside the Tokyo Guide
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