Local Guide
The location of the Shinjuku Prince Hotel in the heart of Shinjuku / Kabuki-cho, one of Japan's largest entertainment districts and home to many major department stores, offers everything a visitor could want, for business, tourism, or entertainment.
Find using Zenrin MapsAt the Shinjuku Prince Hotel, the Bell Captain Desk (1st floor) provides guests with information on local tourist attractions and access information.Please do not hesitate to ask for assistance.The Bell Captain Desk also has tickets available for purchase for tours of Tokyo and admission to various leisure facilities.
Attractions around the Shinjuku Prince Hotel
Shinjuku Milano
This cinema is about a 3-minute walk from the Shinjuku Prince Hotel.One of the largest cinemas in Japan, it offers a powerful cinematic experience that is unmatched elsewhere.
- Access
- 3-minute walk from the Shinjuku Prince Hotel
Hanazono Shinto Shrine
This shrine was important as the general guardian shrine for Shinjuku from even before the start of the Edo Shogunate under Tokugawa Ieyasu (1603).It is thought that the shrine was established by bringing a deity from the Yoshino mountains in the Yamato Province before 1590, when Tokugawa Ieyasu received the Musashi province.The shrine was called Inari from the Edo period, but as the name Inari is most often used to refer to the Fushimi Inari Shrine, on January 25th 1916, a Shinto priest named Torii, a representative of shrine parishioners named Sakata, and thirteen others petitioned the governor of Tokyo prefecture to change the name of the shrine.Permission to change the name was granted on February 26th 1916, and the shrine became the Hanazono Inari Shrine.In 1965, the shrine finally became known as the Hanazono Shinto Shrine when the deity from the subordinate Ootori Shrine was enshrined there at the time of the rebuilding of the Ootori Shrine.
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Tokyo Metropolitan Government Office
The Tokyo Metropolitan Government Office is comprised of three main buildings, Tokyo Metropolitan Main Building No.1 (48 stories, 3 basement levels), Tokyo Metropolitan Main Building No.2 (34 stories, 3 basement levels), and the Metropolitan Assembly Building.On a clear day, you can see Mt. Fuji from the viewing platform on the 45th floor of Tokyo Metropolitan Main Building No.1.
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Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden
In 1906, Shinjuku Gyoen was constructed as a garden for the Imperial Household on the site of a private mansion belonging to Lord Naito, a daimyo(feudal lord) of the Shinshu Takato Clan of the Edo era.It became a national garden open to the public in May 1949, and it has remained so to this day.Combining the style of a traditional Japanese garden with the styles of a French formal garden and an English landscape garden, Shinjuku Gyoen is an expansive green oasis in the middle of Shinjuku.
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