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Discover Tokyo
As a modern city Tokyo, capital of Japan, could
be described as too good to be true. People dress in the latest
gear, excellent restaurants serve up delicious food of all
varieties, and the trendiest nightclubs keep things hopping.
The public transport system is punctual and one of the most
efficient in the world; and shops and vending machines provide
necessaries and luxuries both day and night. Best of all, experiencing
the best of what this city has to offer is inexpensive and
often free.
All this is achieved in a city that is home to
12 million people, amid the confusion of bumper-to-bumper
traffic, flickering neon signs and a crush of humanity packing
subways
and sidewalks. In the crush and rush Tokyo remains, remarkably,
one of the world’s safest cities with a low crime rate
and local people who are only too willing to spare the time
and effort to assist a stranger.
With such a dense population,
Tokyo is an urban maze of buildings that jostle for space
in an unplanned jumble of grey concrete,
which makes it ugly and drab. The city fills a huge area that
seems to go on forever, with no specific city centre, but rather
a succession of districts grouped together. In the back streets,
where timber houses line narrow lanes, there are reminders
that this is exotic Japan: kimono-clad women prune bonsai trees
and
colourful neighbourhood festivals take place.
The more one explores
Tokyo the more it becomes obvious that one cannot judge a
book by its cover. Inside the modern buildings
the cultural life of Japan is very much alive and well. Interiors
reflect the tranquil minimalist oriental style and taste
of Japan.
The city is an exuberant experience for visitors.
It also hosts many museums and is the largest repository
of Japanese
art
in the world. Then, of course, it would take forever to
exhaust the shopping possibilities in this megalopolis.
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