A Tokyo Skytree Tour

“Shitamachi” Shopping Streets

Society Culture Lifestyle

Paul Warham [Profile]

The completion of the Tokyo Skytree has brought new crowds flocking to the well-preserved shitamachi neighborhoods of the surrounding area. For these streets, whose chief appeal lies in their old-fashioned atmosphere and vibrant local flavor, this influx represents both an opportunity and a challenge.

Hato-no-Machi: Keeping the Past Alive

A few minutes away in Higashi-Mukōjima, another shitamachi shopping street has launched an ambitious project to attract creative young people to the area in an attempt to revitalize the neighborhood and ensure that its unique qualities survive.

At first glance, the Hato-no-Machi Shopping Street looks like a place where time has stood still. A narrow network of alleys lined with rusty bikes and neglected vending machines, Hato-no-machi has a history that goes back almost 80 years—practically ancient history in Tokyo terms. This was one of the few areas of the city to survive the fire bombings of 1945 more or less unscathed.

A view down the Hato-no-Machi shopping street.

Close to the entrance stands a blue water pump, dwarfed by the looming figure of the Skytree behind it. The pump collects rainwater from the roofs of local houses and provides water for use in the event of fires and other emergencies. The alleys here, barely two paces wide, are too narrow for fire trucks to pass. The only traffic noise comes from the occasional whirring click of a shopping bike. Low-volume music leaks across the street from someone’s radio. From a kindergarten playground on the street corner comes the sound of children skipping.

Postwar Boom Years

Although it is hard to imagine today, in the immediate postwar years Hato-no-machi was a lively red light district, one of several areas where the Occupation authorities turned a blind eye to prostitution. The area’s name (which means “Street of Doves”) is said to come from a slang term for the women who worked here. Several of the former houses of assignation survive, distinguishable by the tiles that line their exteriors and give them the appearance of bathhouses turned inside out. On one, bright pink and green tiles cover the extravagant pillars and eaves around the boarded-up entrance, where a discarded plastic umbrella leans against the doorway.

An eerie quiet now hangs over what was once a red-light district. The distinctive tiled exterior is a clue that these buildings once housed bordellos. On the right, a survivor from an age before smartphones.

From the eaves of the wooden building next door a sign advertises “Telephone and Telegram Services Available Here.”

The Eden gets its name from “East of Eden,” the classic movie adaptation of the Steinbeck novel. Not much has changed inside since James Dean’s day.

 

The owner serves another helping of the daily special.  An old phone and abacus sit by the entrance.

The Eden Coffee Shop and Restaurant has been in business since 1959, dating back to the area’s boom days. “Back then, you had to watch your back,” the owner remembers with a smile. “There were still lots of these guys around then,” he says, drawing a finger across his cheek in a gesture that signifies ‘yakuza.’ “But they all moved on a long time ago; only the good guys are left here now.” Many of Eden’s regulars have been coming for decades, and the café serves as a place for locals to gather and shoot the breeze. “What day is it today anyway?” asks an elderly man at the counter as his plate of the daily special arrives.

Matsuhashi Kazuaki: “We want to preserve our unique atmosphere and history.”

“The history of the Hato-no-Machi shopping street goes back almost 80 years,” says Matsuhashi Kazuaki, proprietor of the Cut Bank hair salon and chairman of the local traders’ association. “After the red light district closed down in the 1950s, the street thrived as a regular shopping area specializing in fresh produce. For a while the geisha establishments  and traditional restaurants of neighboring Mukōjima were the biggest customers. But once those places fell out of favor with the big-wig politicians and businessmen, the area fell into decline. The local population was getting old, and a lot of businesses pulled down the shutters for good.”

Attracting a New Generation

Today, though, the neighborhood’s well-preserved air holds an exotic charm of its own for a new generation. Matsuhashi believes this may be the key to revitalizing the neighborhood and preserving it for the future.

A view of the Suzuki-sō building.

“We want to preserve our unique atmosphere and history, at the same time as revitalizing the area and making sure it stays viable into the future. That’s the idea behind the “Challenge Spot! Suzuki-sō” project, which we started in 2008. We decided the best way to bring new energy into the area was to encourage young people with fresh ideas to move here.” Several years ago, the local traders’ association took out the lease on the Suzuki-sō building—a disused apartment building that was scheduled for demolition. The association rents out the premises to young tenants with ideas for making creative use of the space. “We try to keep the rent to an absolute minimum. The idea is to have young people use the premises for crafts, small-scale art projects, anything creative, really . . .” Today, Suzuki-sō is fully occupied.

The Kami Kōbō Dōchidō paper shop.

One of the tenants is Kami Kōbō Dōchidō, a boutique-style paper shop. The stark, minimalist interior is lined with displays of original notebooks, paper, and postcards, many of them making creative new use of recycled packaging materials and other discarded fragments of paper. “It was my husband who had the idea,” says the young woman in charge. “He used to help out at the paper firm my parents run down the river in Ryōgoku. He kept picking up the fragments of paper from the floor, saying what a shame it was to let it all go to waste. So when we heard about this project, it seemed like an ideal opportunity.

Spot the Skytree!

“A lot of young artists, writers, and other creative people are moving into the neighborhood. The whole area gets really busy during special events like secondhand book fairs and flea markets. I think people are drawn in by the old-time aura and the special atmosphere. It’s something that’s hard to find in other parts of Tokyo.”

 

In the Shadow of the Skytree

The Koguma café occupies part of an old building that dates back to 1927.

Another local small business that has benefitted from the local initiative is Koguma, a stylish café that makes creative use of a wooden building that has stood on the site since 1927. The premises used to house a community drugstore, and old bottles of medicines still line the shelves in one corner of the interior. Customers sit at dark wooden school desks to enjoy old-timey classics like ice cream sodas and grilled curry on rice.

These old medicines were left behind when the pharmacy that used to occupy the premises closed down.

The young owners first visited the area as part of a theatrical group. “We were drawn in by the atmosphere of the neighborhood. It’s not typical Tokyo at all. There’s a real sense of community here. We’d been coming on and off for about three years when we heard that these premises were available. We leapt at the opportunity!”

As well as maintaining the building’s original features, the owners are working hard to preserve the distinctive atmosphere of the neighborhood and have made an effort to reach out to elderly residents as well as the younger crowd that visits on weekends.

“In our theatrical work, we used to perform outside in order to incorporate the natural sounds of the environment into the performance. We want to do something similar here, to preserve the inherent qualities of the place.

“Our friends told us we were crazy to think of starting a business in this part of town. But things have gone quite smoothly. The Skytree has helped to reinvigorate the area. I don’t see the age of the area as a drawback. In a way, it reminds me of the backstreets of Paris, or the hutongs in Beijing. It’s exciting to visit places like that as a tourist. You get a vivid sense that you are experiencing a slice of real life—something unique. I think that’s something we can offer people here.”

One of many wooden buildings on the street. “You get a vivid sense that you are experiencing a slice of real life.”

Matsuhashi says these efforts have already started to bear fruit. “Thanks to businesses like Koguma, we are gradually learning how to communicate our message to the outside world more effectively. Lots of young people have started to visit the area. In the future, I really hope we can continue to combine the knowledge and expertise of the older and younger generations. If the locals who have lived here for years and the more recent arrivals can continue to work together, I’m sure we'll be successful in building a new future for this special place.”

(Originally written in English. Photographs by Yamada Shinji.)

Related Tags

Tokyo shopping street Tokyo Skytree Sumida shitamachi shopping arcade megamall Mukoujima Oshiage Narihira Hikihune aging local fravor local community Kira-Kira Tachibana Hato-no-Machi

Paul WarhamView article list

Translator and editor, Nippon.com. First came to Japan in the late 1980s and has been a regular visitor ever since. After studying Japanese language and literature in England and the United States, joined Japan Echo Inc. in 2009. Has translated novels by Kitakata Kenzō, Hosaka Kazushi, and Seirai Yūichi. In his spare time, he enjoys running, reading, and exploring Tokyo’s izakaya, though not all at the same time.

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