The old neighbourhood beneath the Tsutenkaku Tower that froze time in the 1960s — alleys packed with neon, sizzling original kushikatsu, Billiken the god of good luck, and within walking distance you can carry on to Tennoji, Spa World, and the 300-metre Abeno Harukas, all in one day. Easy on the wallet, fun to wander.
Picture stepping out of a subway station and straight into a scene from a 1960s film — neon signs shaped like pufferfish, snakes, and tigers strung across the alley, the smell of frying kushikatsu drifting on the air, pachinko machines clattering away, and in the middle of it all the steel Tsutenkaku Tower standing tall. That's Shinsekai (新世界 · "New World"), a district built in 1912 as a mash-up of Paris and New York, where time then quietly froze in the Showa era right up to today.
The charm here is that it isn't dressed up to look retro for tourists — it's the real thing. The kushikatsu shops have been run for generations, and old-timers still come by to sip a drink in the afternoon. This page introduces you to Shinsekai and the adjacent Tennoji district in full — what to eat, which viewing decks to ride, how to get around, and how to pair them into a full day. It's for anyone who wants to see another side of Osaka beyond Dotonbori, and to travel light on the budget.
Three stations ring the area — pick the one nearest whatever you want to see first. Use Ebisucho for the tower, Dobutsuen-mae for the zoo and Spa World, and the big Tennoji hub for Tennoji and Abeno Harukas.
| Station | Line | Get off for | Walk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ebisucho恵美須町 | Metro Sakaisuji | Tsutenkaku Tower · the heart of Shinsekai | ~3 min |
| Dobutsuen-mae動物園前 | Metro Midosuji / Sakaisuji | Tennoji Zoo · Spa World · south side of Shinsekai | ~4–5 min |
| Tennoji天王寺 | JR / Metro / Kintetsu | Abeno Harukas · Shitennoji Temple · Tennoji Park | ~5–10 min |
| Shin-Imamiya新今宮 | JR Osaka Loop / Nankai | Shinsekai · transfers to Kansai Airport / Koyasan | ~5 min |
From riding a retro tower and eating deep-fried skewers to soaking in a city-centre onsen and standing 300 metres up — everything that makes this district fun without walking far.
🗼 Shinsekai1
A steel tower around 108 metres tall, the symbol of Shinsekai. The original (built in 1912, modelled on the Eiffel Tower) is gone; the current version went up in 1956. Head up to the observation deck to find Billiken, the wide-grinning god of good luck — rub his feet and make a wish — and there's a newly opened slide that drops you down from the tower if you fancy it.
Osaka Attractions →The heart of Shinsekai is simply walking around — neon signs shaped like animals, cartoon characters, tigers, and pufferfish hang thick across the alleys. The narrow Janjan Yokocho lane is full of drinking dens, pachinko parlours, and old shogi and go tables where elderly locals still gather to play. It's like stepping onto a 1960s film set.
Osaka Travel Guide →The dish that goes hand in hand with Shinsekai — meat, vegetables, prawn, and quail eggs skewered, coated in breadcrumbs, and deep-fried crisp, at roughly 120–150 yen a stick. Kushikatsu was born here around 1929, with Kushikatsu Daruma considered the original; today there are branches all over the district. Ordering stick after stick with a cold beer is the truest Shinsekai ritual.
Japanese Comfort Food (B-kyu) →A giant onsen complex next to Tennoji Park, with "European"- and "Asian"-themed bathing zones that swap between men and women each month, plus a swimming pool, saunas, and on-site lodging. It's an easy place to soak in hot water right in the city after a full day exploring Shinsekai, and it's open almost around the clock.
Osaka Travel Guide →A city-centre zoo open since 1915, covering around 11 hectares with some 1,000 animals across 170 species, known for habitat-style enclosures that mimic the real thing. It adjoins the leafy, wide-open Tennoji Park — perfect for taking the kids or resting your legs after Shinsekai, with the Tsutenkaku Tower as a backdrop.
Osaka Attractions →
🏙️ Tennoji6
A 300-metre skyscraper in Tennoji. The Harukas 300 observation deck on the 60th floor gives a 360-degree view of Osaka — on a clear day you can see as far as Kyoto, Kobe, and Osaka Bay. The building holds a huge Kintetsu department store, a museum, and a hotel, and for a while it was the tallest building in Japan.
Osaka Travel Guide →
⛩️ Tennoji7
Japan's first state Buddhist temple, founded in 593 by Prince Shotoku. The buildings have been rebuilt many times, but the original layout survives intact — the great gate, the five-story pagoda, and the main hall all line up in a straight axis. Inside it's shady and serene, a quiet contrast to the bustle of Shinsekai, and a calming pause within walking distance of the retro district.
Osaka Attractions →This district is heaven for cheap, snackable Osaka food — deep-fried skewers, braised beef-tendon stew, and retro drinking dens run for generations. Come hungry and graze your way through.
The number-one must-try — skewers coated in breadcrumbs and deep-fried, at ~120–150 yen a stick. Order a set and sip a beer, and don't forget the no-double-dip rule. Shops line the whole district, especially around Tsutenkaku · see more on Japanese comfort food in our B-kyu food guide.
Dote-yaki (beef tendon braised in sweet miso) is a district staple and superb with a beer, alongside takoyaki and okonomiyaki — Osaka classics found down every alley · for the bigger picture on Japanese food, drop by our Japan food guide.
The Janjan Yokocho lane and the alleys around it are packed with old-school drinking dens, stand-up bars, and spots where locals have been settling in since the afternoon — genuine and unpolished · to understand Japan's izakaya culture, read our izakaya guide.
Honestly, most people don't stay in Shinsekai itself — they base themselves around Tennoji or Namba, where the rooms are better and the transport is easier, then ride the metro a few stops over to visit.
The district is south of the city centre, and everything is within walking distance — the Tsutenkaku Tower and Tennoji are only a few minutes' walk apart, so you can plan one easy loop on foot.
The whole-city overview — top districts, where to stay, what to see, what to eat, and how to get around Osaka, all on one page.
Osaka Guide →The beating heart of Osaka — the Glico sign, the Dotonbori canal, street food, Shinsaibashi shopping, and the nightlife.
Namba Guide →The skyscraper district — the Umeda Sky Building viewpoint, big department-store shopping, and Osaka's largest rail hub.
Umeda Guide →Osaka Castle, Kuromon Market, the Kaiyukan Aquarium, and the best of Kansai you can see in a day.
Osaka Attractions →Hand-picked well-located hotels across Osaka — near Namba, Umeda, and Tennoji — with real prices and direct booking links.
Best Osaka Hotels →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · etiquette — everything to sort before you fly.
Travel Prep →Open the full Osaka travel guide to plan your whole trip, or start your search for a place to stay around Tennoji-Namba — just a few metro stops from Shinsekai, and both good value and convenient.