Picture walking out of one of Japan's three most beautiful gardens, crossing a bridge into a samurai-era castle, then coming face to face with an optical-illusion swimming pool inside a contemporary art museum — all in one neighbourhood you can cover on foot. This is the heart of Kanazawa, and you can do it in half a day.
Straight up: if you only have half a day in Kanazawa, come to this one district and you've already got your money's worth — because it packs the city's best into a single walkable radius. There's Kenrokuen Garden, ranked among Japan's three most beautiful gardens; Kanazawa Castle, the white stone-walled seat of the Maeda clan who ruled the Kaga domain — the wealthiest after the shogun himself; and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, home to an optical-illusion swimming pool that's famous worldwide. Everything sits just a few hundred metres apart.
On this page we'll walk you through it the way people actually do it — start at the garden, cross the bridge to the castle, drop by Oyama Shrine with its oddly Western-looking gate, and if you've still got the legs, carry on to the Nagamachi samurai quarter with its golden earthen walls. We'll give you the entry fees, the opening hours, and exactly which bus to catch from the station.
The district sits about 2.5 km from Kanazawa Station. Catch a bus from the east exit (the Kenrokuen Exit) — around 15–20 minutes, get off at the same stop, and walk to everything. You've got three lines to choose from. 2025 fares may change.
| Bus line | Fare | Time | Get off at | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kanazawa Loop Buscity loop (LL/RL) | ~¥200 | ~20 min | Kenrokuen / Castle | hitting several city sights on a round loop |
| Hokutetsu Buslocal bus | ~¥220 | ~15 min | Kenrokuen-shita | the most direct — a quick walk up to the garden |
| JR Buscovered by JR Pass | ~¥210 | ~15 min | Kenrokuen-shita | JR Pass holders ride free · departs every ~15 min |
| On footfrom the station | Free | ~35–40 min | — | walkers who want to browse shops on the way |
Listed in the order that's easiest to walk — start at the garden, cross to the castle, drop down to the museum and shrine, then finish at the samurai quarter. Everything's within walking distance, so you won't need to catch another bus.
🌳 Japanese Garden1
The star of the district and the city — one of Japan's three most beautiful gardens. The name means "a garden combining the six attributes of an ideal garden" (spaciousness, seclusion, careful artifice, antiquity, water, broad views). Look for the Kasumiga-ike pond, the two-legged Kotojitoro stone lantern, and the yukitsuri ropes strung into cones over the pines in winter. It really is beautiful in every season.
Kanazawa Guide →
🏯 Castle2
Cross the bridge from Kenrokuen and you're there in 5 minutes. This was the seat of the Maeda clan, who ruled the Kaga domain — the richest after the shogun. The photo to take is the Ishikawa-mon gate with its black-and-white diamond-pattern stone walls and silvery lead-tiled roofs. Inside is the Gyokusen-inmaru garden, with a central pond and a circular path — calm and never crowded.
Kanazawa Attractions →
🏊 Contemporary Art3
A round glass building you can walk into from any direction. The highlight is Leandro Erlich's "The Swimming Pool" — from above it looks like people are standing underwater, but it's really only ~10 cm of water on a glass pane above a blue room you can walk down into. It's fun to photograph from both angles. The outer ring is free; the exhibition zone with the pool charges admission.
Kanazawa Guide →
⛩️ Shrine4
A shrine built to honour Maeda Toshiie, founder of the Kaga domain. Its standout is the three-tier Shinmon gate, built in 1875 in a mixed Western-Chinese style by a Dutch designer working with local carpenters. The top tier is fitted with stained glass that once served as a beacon for boats at night — strange enough to become an Important Cultural Property of Japan.
Kanazawa Guide →A mansion in one corner of Kenrokuen, built in 1863 by the 13th lord of Kaga (Maeda Nariyasu) for his mother. Inside is the vivid blue "Ultramarine Room," delicate Kaga-style flower-and-bird paintings, and Western-style glass (gyaman) — exquisitely fine work. It's a corner many people skip even though it more than earns its entry fee.
Kanazawa Attractions →
🏘️ Samurai Quarter6
About 10 minutes' walk on from Korinbo and you step into quiet lanes hemmed by golden earthen walls (dohei) and stone paving. This was once home to mid-ranking Edo-era samurai, with a period atmosphere the castle can't give you. The Nomura-ke house is open to visitors and has its own small garden — a slow, easy way to close out the district.
Kanazawa Attractions →Get off at the Kenrokuen-shita stop and follow this order — top to bottom, no looping back, finishing at the samurai quarter right before you head back into town.
Start at Kenrokuen early while it's quiet (arrive before opening and it's free), catch the Kotojitoro lantern, then drop into Seisonkaku right next door. From there cross the bridge to Kanazawa Castle and walk the Gyokusen-inmaru garden — about 2.5–3 hours all up.
Head down to the 21st Century Museum for the illusion pool (remember it's closed Mondays), grab lunch nearby, then walk on to Oyama Shrine for the stained-glass gate. Around 2 hours together.
Finish at Nagamachi, walking the earthen-walled lanes and stopping at the Nomura-ke samurai house — about an hour. From here you can walk back to Korinbo for a bus to the station, or carry on to Omicho Market for a bite.
This district has a lot of walking, so there's plenty to refuel on — from a museum café to a fresh market. Kanazawa is known for super-fresh seafood and gold leaf. See the full list of recommended spots in the food guide.
You can see just how close the garden, castle, museum and shrine sit — all within a few minutes' walk of each other, with no need to catch another bus.
The geisha quarter of Edo-era wooden teahouses, gold leaf, and Kazue-machi along the river — an easy walk on from here.
Higashi Chaya District →All the city's top sights together — the garden, castle, geisha quarters, Omicho Market, and the corners you shouldn't miss.
Kanazawa Attractions →Omicho Market kaisen-don, gold leaf, jibuni, and the best spots across the city, with prices and locations.
Food Guide →The most convenient base of all — 15 minutes by bus to the Kenrokuen district, with reviews and booking links.
See Recommended Hotels →The whole-city overview — where to stay by area, what to see, itineraries, and how to get there from Tokyo/Osaka.
City Guide →Visa · eSIM · IC card · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Pick a well-placed stay around Kanazawa Station or the Korinbo area — just 15 minutes by bus to Kenrokuen and the castle. Open the city guide for hotels, sights, and transport, or compare hotel prices right now.