Welcome to Tokyo…
The Japan’s capital with skyscrapers, museums, the Imperial Palace & Meiji Shinto Shrine

Here are top 12 best sights to visit in Tokyo

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12. Tokyo Disney Resort
The Tokyo Disney Resort is a theme park and vacation resort located just east of Tokyo in Urayasu, Chiba.
The Oriental Land Company owns and operates the resort under a license from The Walt Disney Company, which built and designed the resort and its various attractions.
The resort first opened as a single theme park on April 15, 1983, and later expanded to include a second theme park, five Disney hotels, six non-Disney hotels, and a shopping complex.
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11. Tokyo Disneyland
We’re still here
The Tokyo Disney Resort’s Tokyo Disneyland is a 115-acre theme park.
It was the first Disney park outside of the United States.
WED Enterprises built the park in the same style as Magic Kingdom in Florida and Disneyland in California.

10. Tokyo DisneySea
Tokyo DisneySea is a Tokyo Disney Resort theme park.
It opened on September 4, 2001, for 335 billion yen.
The park is owned by The Oriental Land Company, which licenses intellectual property from The Walt Disney Company.
As of 2020, Tokyo DisneySea is the world’s fourth-most visited theme park and the second-most visited in Japan, trailing only Tokyo Disneyland.

9. Tokyo Skytree
Sumida’s Tokyo Skytree is a broadcasting and observation tower.
It became Japan’s tallest structure in 2010 and reached its full height of 634 meters in March 2011, making it the world’s tallest tower, displacing the Canton Tower, and the world’s third tallest structure.
Skytree was finished on Leap Day, February 29, 2012, and opened to the public on May 22, 2012.

8. Sensō-ji
Senso-ji is an ancient Buddhist temple in Tokyo’s Asakusa neighborhood.
It is Tokyo’s oldest and most significant temple.
It was previously affiliated with the Tendai sect of Buddhism before becoming independent after World War II.
With over 30 million visitors per year, it is the most visited spiritual site in the world.
The Kaminarimon is the larger of two large entrance gates leading to the Senso-ji.
Tourists flock to the gate, which features a lantern and statues.

7. Tokyo Tower
The Tokyo Tower is a communications and observation tower in Tokyo’s Shiba-koen district.
It is Japan’s second tallest structure.
To comply with air safety regulations, the structure is an Eiffel Tower-inspired lattice tower painted white and international orange.
Tourism and antenna leasing are the tower’s primary sources of revenue. The tower has been visited by over 150 million people.

6. Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden
Shinjuku Gyo-en is a large park and garden in Tokyo’s Shinjuku and Shibuya neighborhoods.
During the Edo period, it was a residence of the Nait family. It was later turned into a garden managed by the Japan Imperial Household Agency.
It is now a national park overseen by the Ministry of the Environment.

5. Roppongi Hills
Roppongi Hills is a Tokyo development project and one of the country’s largest integrated property developments.
The mega-complex, built by building tycoon Minoru Mori, includes office space, apartments, shops, restaurants, cafés, movie theaters, a museum, a hotel, a major TV studio, an outdoor amphitheater, and a few parks.
Mori believes that the project will improve leisure time, quality of life, and Japan’s national competitiveness.

4. Ueno Zoo
The Ueno Zoo is a 14.3-hectare zoo in Tait, Tokyo, Japan, managed by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government.
It is Japan’s oldest zoo, having first opened on March 20, 1882. huhs!…
It is a five-minute walk from Ueno Station’s Park Exit, with easy access to Tokyo’s public transportation system.

3. Meiji Jingu
Meiji Shrine, located in Shibuya, Tokyo, is a Shinto shrine dedicated to the deified spirits of Emperor Meiji and his wife, Empress Shken.
The emperor’s grave, which is located in Fushimi-momoyama, south of Kyoto, is not housed in the shrine.

2. Ueno Park
Ueno Park is a large public park in Tait, Tokyo’s Ueno district.
The park was founded in 1873 on land that had previously belonged to the Kan’ei-ji temple.
It was one of the country’s first public parks, established in the western model as part of the early Meiji period’s borrowing and assimilation of international practices.
Ueno Park, which is home to a number of major museums, is also known for its cherry blossoms in the spring.
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1. Yoyogi Park
Yoyogi Park is a park in Tokyo’s Shibuya neighborhood.
It is close to Harajuku Station and Meiji Shrine.
The park is a popular Tokyo destination, especially on Sundays, when Japanese rock music fans, jugglers, comedians, martial arts clubs, cosplayers, and other subculture and hobby groups congregate.

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