I walked around in search for an ATM machine and thereby passed the "Tokyo Dome" and the amusement park "Tokyo Dome City Attractions". with a roller coaster in the middle of a busy intersection. In the attached Tokyo Dome Hotel I was able to get information about an ATM accepting foreign ATM cards and found the banking center in the nearby shopping mall.
My search for an Internet Cafe took quite some time .... Finally I found one of those gaming places I had heard so much about. They are a mix of Internet Cafe, gaming center, coffee shop and cheap hotel. You can rent a cube with a computer, or with a full fledged DVD set or even a bed couch to stay over night. The places are usually open 24 hours.
The biggest challenge for me was next to the absolutely incomprehensible language and writing the sheer number of people. It is so busy all the time and I am not really that good with large crwods. Especially during rush hour and late at night, shortly before the last metro it is absolute utter madness. Everybody is running around to me hecticly, many people checking their SMS while walking and then everubody pushes to get into the train. I almost got lost several times simply because I had a hard time orienting myself within this tidal wave of people.
The roller coaster of the "Tokyo Dome City Attractions", right on the corner of a busy street intersection.
There are actually quite a few channels running through Tokyo, a fact I was not aware of.
Flashing neon advertisements everywhere, it created a strange, somewhat surreal atmosphere. Later we would visit Shybuya Station, an area which was even more crazy.
The plaza in front of Shybuya Station, big advertisement screens all around you, lots and lots of people running around. A little hard to see on this photo, but thousands of people wait for the light to turn green and then rush to whatever destination they might have.
Space management, in a city as crowded as Tokyo a gas station might be a little different. Here the pump is operated "from above", you pull down the hose from the ceiling.
Tokyo has lots and lots of very interesting architecture. Well, I was traveling with an architect and so we visited many interesting buildings. Hey, but don't expect me to remember everything Alex told me.
Alex and myself on security camera in the biggest electronics superstore I have ever been to. Just the selection of photo cameras was amazing, everything from Nikon to Leica and Hasselblad.
More architecture .... the "Tokyo International Forum" an amazing building that reminds you a little of a beached whale. Alex and I had a heated discussion about "function versus design", with my support of the idea that good architecture should be a combination of both.
USB memory sticks in form of sushi ..... absolutely hilarious.
The "Maison Hermes" (see http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/hermes/index.htm for more) building, constructed only from glass blocks, no pillars ..... quite amazing.
The Prada flagship store in Tokyo .... it cost a whooping $ 80 million .... it is beautiful, but not very functional, no columns, pretty much no storage space, but simply amazing to look at during the night.
Reflexions in the glass blocks of the Prada store ....
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