This hotel is huge! Every time I walk around, it feels like I'm in a maze. There are so many shops and restaurants, you could spend all day exploring and still not see everything!
Hotel New Otani Tokyo | Review by 屋婷婷
Other Reviews by 屋婷婷
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Niigata Soshinju Hakusan Shrine
Hakusan Shrine is located in central Niigata City and is affectionately known by locals as “Hakusan-sama.” As Niigata’s guardian shrine with a history spanning more than 1,000 years, it draws many visitors who come to worship. The shrine’s main enshrined deity, “Hakusan-sama,” is also known as Kikuri-hime-no-Okami. Based on the story in which she mediated a quarrel between the married deities Izanagi and Izanami and helped reconcile them, she is widely revered as a match-making deity.
Now I get why they call it the guardian shrine—its vibe is incredibly steady. The second I walked in, my mood instantly lifted.
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Todaiji Temple
In the Nara period (710-794), Emperor Shomu had the Rushana Daibutsu (Great Buddha) built at his request, and a memorial service was held in 752. This temple is one of the representative temples of Nara. It took nearly 40 years to build the temple complex.
This is the largest bronze Buddha in the world, weighing 380 tons! With a history of 1,200 years, it's also a UNESCO World Heritage site.
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Tsutenkaku Tower
A steel tower which looks like the Eiffel Tower and 75 meters high was built In 1912, on top of a building which was the motif of the Arc de Triomphe, and named “Tsutenkaku” meaning “A building reaching the heaven'' by Nangaku Fujisawa, a Confucian in the early Meiji period. After being broken down due to a fire, citizens lobbied for rebuilding and the current 2nd Tsutenkaku was built in 1956.
The century-old fugu restaurant in front of Tsutenkaku Tower closed last year, so you probably won't see the iconic pufferfish lantern street view anymore.
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