Latest news with #HotelGajoenTokyo


Metropolis Japan
15-07-2025
- Metropolis Japan
Café Lounge Pandora at Hotel Gajoen Tokyo
To the right of the garden at Café Lounge Pandora at Hotel Gajoen Tokyo, a placard reads: Forbes Travel Guide—verified as one of the finest properties in the world. Walk past 21 hand-carved panels, golden fans painted with bijin (beautiful women) overhead, and a floral-patterned kimono hung in elegant display. Follow an indoor stream beneath the gold tie-adorned Daimon gate into a glass-ceiling atrium. Cross a discreet footbridge and watch marble-colored koi swirl below. The in-house eatery, Café Lounge Pandora, doesn't accept reservations by phone; arrive at 10 a.m. for a window seat by the waterfall. Sunlight filters through the atrium glass as birds nest in the trees beyond. Many linger over ornate afternoon tea sets, but I'm content with Assam tea and financier cake, savoring the view. For a taste of Japan, try the premium gyokuro or the anmitsu with kuromitsu syrup. Even the powder room vestibule, inlaid with mother-of-pearl, is worth a pause—another quiet moment, perfectly placed.


SoraNews24
20-06-2025
- Entertainment
- SoraNews24
Riot of Demons actually a great reason to visit one of Tokyo's most beautiful hotels this summer
Historical section of Tokyo's 'museum hotel' to be overrun, beautifully, by oni. Everyone's got their own personal preferences, but it's a pretty safe bet that, when it comes to hotel amenities, 'partially overrun by demons' isn't going to be seen as a positive 99 times out of 100. That rare exception is coming up soon, though, at the Hotel Gajoen Tokyo. Also known as Meguro Gajoen, the property bills itself as Japan's only 'museum hotel,' on account of its roughly 2,500 paintings and other works of Japanese art. The hotel is most famous for its Hundred Steps Staircase, a preserved corridor with opulently appointed exhibition rooms off its sides. This summer they'll be serving as the venue for the Wano Akari x Hyakudan Kaidan: A Riot of Demons event. The most dynamic piece is an illuminated representation of an oni (demon) done in the style of the floats of the Nebuta Festival of Japan's northern Aomori Prefecture, something that can rarely be seen in Tokyo. In fact, the Hotel Gajoen is displaying its Nebuta-style oni for the first time in six years. The hotel is promising 'a gathering of hundreds of oni,' from 38 different artists, in paintings, ceramic figures, and both traditional crafts and contemporary art forms. Not all of them will be quite so fearsome as the Nebuta oni, if this preview image is anything to go by. Then there's the first part of the Wano Akari x Hyakudan Kaidan: A Riot of Demons exhibition name. 'Wano Akari' translates to 'light of Japan,' and there will be immersive illuminated works of non-oni art to enjoy too. ▼ The event's preview video Tickets for the exhibition are priced at 1,400 yen (US$9.65) for adults and can be made online here. However, if the Hundred Steps Staircase's architecture has you wanting to dress in a similarly traditional style, the Hotel Gajoen is also offering a new Yukata Plan, with prices starting at 18,000 yen that includes a yukata summer kimono fitting, lunch, afternoon tea, or dinner at the hotel, and a half-off discount on admission to the exhibition. The kimono is even yours to keep and take home with you, and Yukata Plan reservations can be made here (both men's and women's yukata are available). Wano Akari x Hyakudan Kaidan: A Riot of Demons runs from July 4 to September 23, and the Yukata Plan from July 4 to August 31. Related: Hotel Gajoen Tokyo official website Source: PR Times, Hotel Gajoen Tokyo Top image: PR Times Insert images: PR Times, Hotel Gajoen Tokyo (1, 2, 3) ● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter! [ Read in Japanese ]


Japan Times
10-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Japan Times
Miniatures bring hidden worlds to life at Tokyo cultural site
An exhibition of various kinds of miniatures is being held at a cultural property site on the premises of Hotel Gajoen Tokyo, featuring crafts from 17 artists and collectors. "The appeal of miniatures, including the fun of seeing familiar things on a smaller scale as well as the world of elaborate technology and playful spirit, transcends time and borders with the power to captivate people," Hotel Gajoen said. The event will run through March 9 at the historic Hyakudan Kaidan wooden building, a Tokyo Metropolitan Government-designated tangible cultural property.