Here goes.
Odaiba
On our first day in Japan, we spent the afternoon in Odaiba, a large artificial island in Tokyo Bay that has recently developed into a shopping and entertainment hub. My first thought on looking out over the Rainbow Bridge (after, of course, the sudden desire to play Mario Kart) was that the scene looked eerily familiar. Apparently, someone else thought so, too, and erected a mini-sized Statue of Liberty on the bayside waterfront.
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Our main attraction in Odaiba was the Decks Tokyo Mall, which featured two entire floors called "Little Hong Kong," reconstructed to mimic the newly-rebuilt entertainment districts of Tokyo as they looked in the 1950s-1960s.
Tokyo Disneyland
Because Tokyo Disneyland was almost 100% exactly like the Magic Kingdom in Orlando, I'm not going to spend much time on it here. However, I will note that certain attractions were half-translated, which made for a very strange effect. Take The Country Bears, for example. Most of the dialogue was in Japanese, as were most of the songs . . . except for when Big Al starts howlin' about "blood on the saddle, blood on the ground, a great big puddle of blood all around." Imagine sitting through ten minutes of Japanese bluegrass, then snapping out of your daze to hear that. Nightmares.
But the good news is that the Haunted Mansion in Japanese is still really cool.
Tokyo Sea Life Park
Our first stop on the day after Tokyo Disneyland was the Tokyo Sea Life Park, a living natural history exhibit dedicated to the wildlife of Tokyo Bay with a small but eclectic aquarium housing sea life from around the world.
Architecturally, the aquarium was pretty cool. You entered from the roof, which was covered by a large, shallow pool. The "sails" you see below are actually the tops of picnic tents out by the reed marshes at ground level. Pretty cool effect. Of course, the weather helped!
These seahorses may have stolen the show--yes, those are seahorses, not clumps of seaweed. Pretty cool, eh?
After the aquarium, the tour pressed on to Meiji Shrine in Shibuya, a major downtown shopping district where we also took some free time. Meiji Shrine, where Emperor Meiji and his wife are interred, has become one of the central sites of Shintoism, even though the shrine only dates to the 1920s (and the current version of the building was rebuilt after WWII).
For Westernes, Emperor Meiji is probably best known as the creepy kid in white from the movie The Last Samurai. For Japanese, Emperor Meiji is alternately seen as the benevolent force who modernized Japan and abolished the Tokugawa Shogunate in a revolution known as the Meiji Restoration, or as the fellow who slaughtered the noble samurai class of warrior-poets and set the stage for the rise of Japan's military-industrial complex . . . and we all know how that story turned out. (The truth, of course, is somewhere in between: most regular people saw everyday life get better as a result of the Meiji Restoration, but there is a direct link between the philosophies and policies of the Meiji Restoration and the military cabal that started WWII in Asia.)
The shrine itself was a really cool complex. Not only did we get a glimpse of a Shinto wedding (Note: I'd be somber, too, given the stereotypical state of matrimonial romance in Japan), we also got a strong sense of how greatly Japanese architecture differs from Korean.
Some larger design elements are different, too. Note the high "saddle" roof on the main shrine building. In Korea, most high buildings like this have double-tiered eaves. The Japanese design actually looks a lot like a helmet, whereas the Korean design looks like you lopped off the top of a pagoda. Neat.
No pictures from this stop, but it's certainly worth noting. The Tokyo-Edo Museum, located in Asakusa, where we spent the last couple days of the trip, details the history of Tokyo (as the city was called after the Meiji Restoration) and Edo (Tokyo's name under the Shogunate). The museum, which includes ample signage in English, features massive scale models of historical Tokyo streets which allow visitors to visualize in one grand sweep Tokyo's transition from a giant medieval garrison town to a modern 19th-century metropolis. If you're ever in the neighborhood, it's well worth an afternoon.
Tokyo Government Observatory
The impressive Tokyo City Government buildings feature the best views in town from either of its two top-floor observatories. There's no better place to get a sense of Tokyo's scale. Below, you see a shot of the city stretching away to the foothills of Mt. Fuji, obscured by clouds.
Asakusa
We ended our trip in the neighborhood of Asakusa, which has an older feel to it than most of Tokyo, seeing as much of the city was leveled during the war. Asakusa is home to a bustling market district and to Tokyo's oldest temple, Senso-ji, which dates to 645 AD, though the current buildings are much newer. Senso-ji, a Buddhist temple, sits adjacent to a Shinto shrine, and the fact that one of Tokyo's major Shinto festivals centers on Senso-ji indicates the coexistence of the two religions in Japan.
The main temple building below is still relatively simple compared to other examples of East Asian Buddhist architecture, though it does incorporate some features common in China and Korea, such as the tiered roof and the red ornamental details. The smoke you see is from visitors burning prayer scrolls dipped in incense.
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