You arrived at the Tokyo House yesterday (~4:15 PM). First full day. Eight nights into the trip — jet lag is largely resolved. Energy will depend on how the Shinkansen day went, but this should feel like a real day, not a survival day.

Base: Ikebukuro (west side), Toshima-ku Check-in: April 14, 4:00 PM ✅ Check-out: April 20, 10:00 AM


April 14 Evening (Landing)

The Shinkansen arrives Tokyo Station at 15:33. You’re at the Tokyo House by ~4:15 PM.

TaskNotes
Unpack and orientNote train station exits, nearest konbinis, local layout
Local konbini runStock breakfast items, drinks, snacks for the house
Walk the immediate block15 min — get your bearings without committing to anything
Dinner near baseIkebukuro has dense ramen, tonkatsu, izakaya options within walking distance — no transit needed
Early nightTomorrow is a real day; the Shinkansen is tiring even when it’s comfortable

Don’t push tonight. Ikebukuro has enough within a 5-minute walk to make a good first evening without effort.


April 15 — How to Read the Day

Before committing to anything, run through the Daily Decision Helper:

  1. Energy? Moderate is the target. If low, stay Ikebukuro-local.
  2. Weather? Clear → outdoor temple/shrine options open. Mixed or rain → neighborhood clusters and indoor anchors.
  3. Split or together? First Tokyo day is a good calibration day — see how the group feels before committing to a full cluster.

Options by Energy Level

Low — Stay in Ikebukuro

Ikebukuro is walkable and fully self-contained. No transit needed.

  • Sunshine City — Ana: J-World, Animate, Namja Town. Mall complex with food court, shops, indoor gaming. Good rainy-day anchor.
  • Ikebukuro Station area — Seibu and Tobu department stores, covered passages, bookstores, second-hand shops
  • Ramen Alley — multiple ramen shops within 5 min; low commitment lunch
  • East exit vs. West exit — different vibes; east side is more commercial, west side quieter for a morning walk

Moderate — First Neighborhood Push

One short transit hop to an adjacent cluster. Return to base by mid-afternoon.

  • Asakusa (~25 min by Metro from Ikebukuro via Marunouchi Line) — Senso-ji Temple, Nakamise shopping street, Kappabashi kitchen supply street for Jeff. Manageable 3-4 hour visit.
  • Shinjuku Gyoen (~15 min by Metro) — Late-blooming cherry varieties (yaezakura) may be at peak in mid-April. Calm, large garden. Opens 9 AM, ¥500. Check Cherry Blossoms - April for bloom status.
  • Shimokitazawa (~25 min by Keio Inokashira Line) — Vintage, record shops, cafés. Compact and walkable. Ana’s territory. Low pressure.

High — First Big Cluster

If energy is good and the group wants to set the tone:

  • Shibuya + Harajuku — Crossing, Meiji Shrine, Takeshita Street. Half-day or full-day. Jeannette: Loft Shibuya. Ana: character shops and Harajuku fashion.
  • Akihabara (~30 min) — Electronics, anime, Yodobashi Camera. Dense and busy; better on a day you want stimulation.

April 15 Decision Framework

WeatherEnergyGo Here
ClearLowIkebukuro walk + Sunshine City
ClearModerateShinjuku Gyoen (cherry blossoms) or Asakusa
ClearHighShibuya + Harajuku or Asakusa full day
RainAnySunshine City, Ikebukuro station complex, Nakano Broadway (covered)
MixedModerateShimokitazawa or Akihabara

Cherry Blossom Check

Mid-April is yaezakura season — the later-blooming double-petaled variety. Shinjuku Gyoen has the best concentration in Tokyo. Check Cherry Blossoms - April and look up live reports via the Sakura Checker app before heading out.


Tips for the First Tokyo Day

  • Get a Pasmo or confirm Suica balance — IC card needed for all Metro and private rail lines in Tokyo
  • The Ikebukuro station complex is large and confusing at first; give yourself an extra 5 min the first time you navigate exits
  • Tokyo convenience stores (7-Eleven, FamilyMart, Lawson) are within 1 min of the house — stock up on the first night
  • Don’t overplan day 1. Tokyo has 5 full days. Leave room for the trip to tell you what it wants to be.