TOKYO (SANGENJAYA,) JAPAN ART: HISTORICAL STREET MARKER

This is a historical street marker for Sangenjaya (三軒茶屋) — the area’s name literally means “Three Tea Houses.”

The upper part is a tile relief in an ukiyo-e style, showing Edo-period travelers stopping at a tea house — a nod to how this area looked when it was a major rest stop on the old roads leading in and out of Edo (Tokyo).

The lower metal plaque explains the history of Sangenjaya, including:

The area once had three famous teahouses (三軒茶屋):

Kado Chaya, Iseya, and TanakayaTravelers on the Setagaya road would rest here, eat, drink tea, and continue toward Futako-Tamagawa or Shibuya. • The spot became a lively stopover town, eventually growing into today’s Sangenjaya.

You’re basically looking at a heritage marker showing what Sangenjaya used to be — a busy Edo-period roadside tea-house district — before it became the cool, crowded neighborhood it is today.

It’s a cut-out…it’s not a painting. Like a 3-D effect, I guess?

15november2025

TOKYO (SHIBUYA,) JAPAN STREET ART: TAKEFUSA KUBO


Adidas brings sport and street culture together:
A large-scale statue or “monument” of Takefusa Kubo has appeared in the Dogenzaka area of Shibuya, Tokyo. It blends athlete, brand and city.

8november2025

TOKYO (NAKA-MEGURO,) JAPAN: QUAINT

Meguro River – famous for cherry blossom viewing – right now, the autumn foliage is doing it for me 🍁
This image sums up its laidback café/eatery vibe
There is a business district
There is art

Post-war, it was a working class area, but now it’s grown into an exhalation for the more central chaos…

8november2025