Éléments | Shimbashi Hidden Izakaya Tour with a Government Licensed Guide
Shimbashi Hidden Izakaya Tour with a Government Licensed Guide
(7) Avis
Shinbashi
Informations importantes
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Accessible aux fauteuils roulants
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Les nourrissons et les jeunes enfants peuvent voyager dans une poussette ou un landau
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Animaux d'assistance autorisés
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Des options de transport en commun sont disponibles à proximité
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Les options de transport sont accessibles aux fauteuils roulants
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Toutes les zones et surfaces sont accessibles aux fauteuils roulants
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Adapté à tous les niveaux de condition physique
Politique d'annulation
Pour un remboursement complet, annulez au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de départ prévue.
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Pour un remboursement complet, vous devez annuler au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience.
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Les délais limites sont basés sur l'heure locale de l'expérience.
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Si vous annulez moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience, le montant que vous avez payé ne sera pas remboursé.
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Cette expérience nécessite un nombre minimum de voyageurs. Si elle est annulée parce que le minimum n'est pas atteint, on vous proposera une autre date/expérience ou un remboursement intégral.
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Toute modification effectuée moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience ne sera pas acceptée.
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Most tours of Tokyo's drinking culture show you where to eat. This one explains why any of it matters.
I'm Ken — a licensed National Guide-Interpreter (held by roughly 0.02% of Japan) and a working corporate professional in Tokyo. This isn't a tour I perform; it's a life I live.
We meet at Shimbashi — the neighborhood Japanese media still call "the Mecca of salarymen." Over 2.5 hours, we decode it: the Showa-era Shimbashi Ekimae drinking towers, the yakitori alleys under the JR tracks, and the backstreet lanes between Shimbashi and Yurakucho where middle managers actually drink.
Three stops, four dishes, four drinks (non-alcoholic options throughout). And a real conversation about the six...
Points forts
2 heures et 30 minutes
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
2 heures et 30 minutes
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
4 drinks — Japanese sake, craft beer, local shochu (non-alcoholic pairings available)
4 dishes — yakitori, seasonal izakaya plates, and a signature Shimbashi bite
Guide local agréé parlant anglais
Additional drinks beyond the included 4 (¥600–¥900 each if you'd like more)
Transportation to Shimbashi Station
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
SL Square (Shimbashi Station West Entrance Square)
Please don’t worry — we’ll exchange our contact information in advance through WhatsApp or another app.
Retour
Shimbashi Hidden Izakaya Tour with a Government Licensed Guide
(7) Avis
Shinbashi
À propos
Most tours of Tokyo's drinking culture show you where to eat. This one explains why any of it matters.
I'm Ken — a licensed National Guide-Interpreter (held by roughly 0.02% of Japan) and a working corporate professional in Tokyo. This isn't a tour I perform; it's a life I live.
We meet at Shimbashi — the neighborhood Japanese media still call "the Mecca of salarymen." Over 2.5 hours, we decode it: the Showa-era Shimbashi Ekimae drinking towers, the yakitori alleys under the JR tracks, and the backstreet lanes between Shimbashi and Yurakucho where middle managers actually drink.
Three stops, four dishes, four drinks (non-alcoholic options throughout). And a real conversation about the six...
Points forts
2 heures et 30 minutes
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
2 heures et 30 minutes
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
4 drinks — Japanese sake, craft beer, local shochu (non-alcoholic pairings available)
4 dishes — yakitori, seasonal izakaya plates, and a signature Shimbashi bite
Guide local agréé parlant anglais
Additional drinks beyond the included 4 (¥600–¥900 each if you'd like more)
Transportation to Shimbashi Station
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
SL Square (Shimbashi Station West Entrance Square)
Please don’t worry — we’ll exchange our contact information in advance through WhatsApp or another app.
Retour
Itinéraire
1
SL Square
We meet at the iconic steam locomotive in front of Shimbashi Station — the exact spot where Japanese TV crews film the "typical salaryman" interview you've seen a hundred times. Before we enter any venue, I'll set the frame: why this station, why this era, and why every Japanese corporate dinner you'll ever attend traces back to rituals that happen in the 500 meters around us.
15 minutes
2
Karasumori Shrine
Before we enter a single venue, a 200-meter detour south to Karasumori Shrine — the small, almost-hidden shrine where Japanese salarymen still stop before a big work decision. We'll do exactly what they do: bow, clap twice, and quietly wish tonight's tour goes well together. It takes three minutes. But it tells you something Japan doesn't put in business guides: even in 2026, Tokyo's most corporate neighborhood starts its evening with a quiet sacred pause.
10 minutes
3
New Shimbashi Building
A 1971 Showa-era tower packed floor-to-ceiling with tiny bars, cafes, and standing-room-only eateries — a living museum of the Japanese post-war middle class. I'll show you why it has never been redeveloped, and what that tells you about Japanese landholding culture, salaryman loyalty, and why modern Marunouchi employees still walk ten minutes south every night to drink here.
10 minutes
4
新橋ガード下横丁
Our first real stop — a counter-only yakitori place under the JR tracks, where salarymen have been drinking since the 1950s. Over two skewers and a drink, we go into the heart of the tour: how seating order works, why "reading the air" is a real skill not a metaphor, and the unwritten relationship between the boardroom meeting and the izakaya table. You'll leave this stop with a completely different frame for interpreting your next Japanese business dinner.
1 heure
5
新橋駅前ビル1号館
Our final venue — a sit-down izakaya inside one of the 1960s-era towers that define Shimbashi's after-hours map, literally 30 seconds from Shimbashi Station. Two more dishes, two more drinks. This is where we move from decoding corporate rituals to decoding corporate language: why "no" is never said, what the second round really means, and how the last-train ritual shapes every workday backwards from 11 PM. I'll hand you a printed one-page field-notes handout — the six concepts to carry home — and walk you to your train platform.