An eastern Tokyo neighbourhood most tourists skip — the specialty-coffee roastery district where Blue Bottle chose to open its first Japan branch, Kiyosumi Garden where you cross the pond on stepping-stones, the MOT contemporary art museum, and a recreated Edo town you can actually walk into.
Picture a district of old canal-side warehouses in east Tokyo that quietly became the destination for the city's coffee lovers. The turning point came when Blue Bottle Coffee chose it for its first branch in Japan (and its first store outside the US) in February 2015, converting an old warehouse into a high-ceilinged roastery-café. Specialty coffee shops followed all over the area, because rents were cheaper than central Tokyo and the warehouse spaces had room for roasting machines. Today you'll pass several roasteries within a few blocks, and people call this place Tokyo's "coffee town."
But Kiyosumi-Shirakawa is about more than coffee — there's Kiyosumi Garden, a circuit-style Japanese garden you can cross on stepping-stones (isowatari), the MOT contemporary art museum, one of the largest of its kind in Japan, and the Fukagawa Edo Museum, which recreates an Edo town indoors that you can genuinely walk into. The whole district sits around one station, all within walking distance, making it a perfect relaxed half-day away from the crush of Shibuya and Shinjuku.
Kiyosumi-Shirakawa Station has two lines running through it — the Hanzomon Line (orange) direct from Shibuya-Otemachi, and the Oedo Line (magenta) from Shinjuku-Roppongi. Step out and Kiyosumi Garden and the Fukagawa Edo Museum are just a ~3-minute walk away.
| From | Line | Approx. time | Fare | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ShibuyaShibuya | Hanzomon | ~20 min | ~210 yen | Direct, no transfer |
| OtemachiOtemachi · central | Hanzomon | ~12 min | ~180 yen | Connects from Tokyo Station |
| ShinjukuShinjuku | Oedo | ~25 min | ~280 yen | Oedo loop line, direct |
| RoppongiRoppongi | Oedo | ~20 min | ~220 yen | Straight from Roppongi |
| AsakusaAsakusa | Transfer | ~20 min | ~260 yen | Change at Oshiage/Sumiyoshi |
| Haneda AirportHaneda | Transfer | ~40–50 min | ~600 yen | Keikyu → transfer into town |
This district plays on three things that go together better than you'd expect — specialty coffee, a Japanese garden, and art-and-history. You can do the whole area in a comfortable half-day.
🌳 Japanese Garden1
A circuit-style ("walk-around-the-pond") Japanese garden laid out by the Iwasaki family (founders of Mitsubishi) in the Meiji era. The highlight is the stepping-stones (isowatari) arranged as a path across the pond, where you can get close to the carp and turtles below, alongside reflections of trees and decorative rocks brought from all over Japan. A full loop takes about 30–40 minutes.
Tokyo Attractions →The heart of what made this area famous — Blue Bottle Coffee's first branch in Japan opened here in February 2015, in a high-ceilinged old warehouse converted into a roastery-café. Other specialty roasters then followed all over the district, so within a few blocks you'll pass shop after shop hand-dripping fresh coffee. Perfect if you want to spend the day café-hopping.
Japan Café Guide →One of the largest contemporary art museums in Japan, set in Kiba Park. It first opened in 1995 and reopened after a major renovation in March 2019, and the building and its walkways are themselves a piece of architecture people love to photograph. It runs both a permanent collection and rotating special exhibitions across many genres, from contemporary art to design.
Tokyo Attractions →An indoor museum that recreates a late-Edo neighbourhood (around the 1840s) at full scale — you can walk into the alleys, houses, shops, an inn and a boat landing. A light-and-sound system simulates the times of day, from morning to evening, and at times volunteers tell stories of Edo life (some speak English). Great for anyone who loves history and wants a tangible sense of how Edo people lived.
Tokyo Attractions →The largest Hachiman shrine in Tokyo, founded in 1627 and the birthplace of commercial sumo (kanjin-zumo) in the Edo period. In the grounds you'll find stone monuments to yokozuna and ozeki, and most Sundays there's an antique market of around 120 stalls — a laid-back spot to browse for collectables.
Tokyo Attractions →The real charm here is simply wandering between cafés — small canals and a river cut through, and independent galleries, ceramic shops, bakeries and second-hand bookstores hide down the side streets. This is a genuine residential neighbourhood of east Tokyo, so it has a "real life" feel that tourist districts don't.
Japan Café Guide →Coffee is a given in Kiyosumi-Shirakawa — but the area also has its own traditional Fukagawa dishes to try. You can sip and snack your way around all day.
Start at Blue Bottle's first Japan branch, then walk on to the other roasters in the district — most hand-drip cup by cup and roast their own beans. To understand why Japanese coffee is so meticulous, read our Japan café guide alongside it.
This area is known for "fukagawa-meshi" — rice topped with miso-simmered clams, or a clam soup poured over rice, the everyday dish of Edo's fishermen. You'll find it at long-running restaurants around Monzen-Nakacho. For the bigger picture of Japanese food, see our Japan food guide.
Stylish bakeries and patisseries are tucked in among the roasteries, and there are old-school Japanese sweet (wagashi) shops near the shrine. They pair perfectly with a cup of coffee and a sit-down break between the garden and the museum.
Kiyosumi-Shirakawa itself doesn't have many hotels, because it's a residential area. Most people base themselves in a larger, better-connected district and ride the train in for a half-day.
Our pick of recommended Tokyo hotels for every budget, with real locations and prices — choose a base that connects easily to Kiyosumi-Shirakawa.
See Top Tokyo Hotels →The whole-city overview — which areas to stay in, what to see, where to eat, and how to get around. Everything before you plan the trip.
Tokyo Guide →Compare stays across Tokyo on Agoda, filtered by budget, location and reviews — find the right room before it fills up.
Search on Agoda →Everything is within walking distance of Kiyosumi-Shirakawa Station — start at Kiyosumi Garden, head to the Fukagawa Edo Museum, sip coffee along the way, then carry on to the MOT in Kiba Park, all in an easy half-day.
The Meguro River, waterside cafés and design shops — another grown-up, easy-going area coffee lovers like to stroll.
Nakameguro Guide →Old back streets in north Tokyo — traditional shops, temples, and a Showa-era mood you rarely find in the big city.
Yanaka Guide →Senso-ji temple, Nakamise street, and old Tokyo — an easy train ride from Kiyosumi-Shirakawa.
Asakusa Guide →The old Tsukiji fish market and the new Toyosu market, morning sushi and street food — close by on the east side.
Tsukiji-Toyosu Guide →Japan's coffee culture, old-school kissaten, and the specialty-coffee wave — why it's all so meticulous.
Japan Café Guide →The whole-city overview — which areas to stay in, what to see, where to eat, and how to get around before you plan.
Tokyo Guide →Slot Kiyosumi-Shirakawa in as a relaxed half-day on your Tokyo trip. Open the Tokyo city guide to plan the other districts, or start looking early for a well-placed hotel with easy train access to this area.