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After practically 4 years of wide-scale renovations, one in all Tokyo’s premier museums is lastly reopening this spring. The Edo-Tokyo Museum, which focuses on the historical past of Edo (what Tokyo was referred to as between 1603-1868) by means of the current day, is making its ballyhooed comeback on March 31, 2026.
This was the primary time in its practically 33-year historical past that the museum underwent any important restoration; the work began in April 2022, when COVID-19 nonetheless stored Japan’s doorways shut to worldwide vacationers.
Though the idea of an Edo-Tokyo Museum had been formally deliberate since 1981, Ryogoku was at all times a front-runner to host the power, on account of its connection to Edo tradition. Not solely was Katsushika Hokusai arguably the world’s most recognizable ukiyo-e (Edo-style woodblock print) artist from the neighborhood, however Ryogoku was additionally one of the crucial nigiwai (bustling) leisure districts of that period. To wit, sumo had been carried out in Ryogoku for the reason that 1700s; it’s no coincidence the museum sits subsequent to the Kokugikan, Japan’s largest sumo area.
Germán Vogel/Getty Photographs
Sarcastically, even earlier than opening its doorways in March 1993, the Edo-Tokyo Museum was making headlines. The avant-garde architect Kiyonori Kikutake designed the construction as a contemporary homage to the Edo interval takayuka-shiki souko (storehouses constructed on stilts). Along with the sumo stadium, it stood in sharp distinction to the in any other case low-key neighborhood.
The underlying aim of the museum is to let guests expertise how each day life has modified over the 420-plus years since Tokugawa Ieyasu was appointed shogun by emperor Go-Yōzei, establishing Edo as the brand new seat of presidency. Overseen by New York-based architect Shohei Shigematsu, the revamped constructing can have seen updates made all through its eight—one underground, seven aboveground— whole flooring. Moreover, come opening day, two all-new options will probably be making their debut.
The primary is modeled after an erstwhile monument to the iki (refined) buying district of Ginza of the Meiji interval (1868-1912). After a fireplace devastated its picket storefronts in 1872, Ginza remodeled right into a paragon of the industrialized West, with paved streets, gaslights, cafes, and high-end shops. In 1894, Kintarō Hattori, founding father of Seiko watches, commissioned a clocktower to be constructed within the coronary heart of Ginza; it shortly turned an emblem of the realm. As a paean to the unique, a full-scale 85-foot reproduction of the clocktower will probably be a star attraction.
Photographs of a few of the museum’s artifacts may even be displayed. This consists of every little thing from woodblock prints and work to housewares, sculptures, and images. The projections will seem on each ceilings and columns.
There have been periodic occasions to get individuals excited in regards to the reopening, to. Final month noticed a pop-up on the close by JR Ryogoku prepare station. Expressly used for occasions, the station’s Platform 3 morphed into the Edo-Tokyo Museum, full with exhibitions, illuminations, meals tastings, and the sense that each the Japanese capital’s previous and future have at all times been at dwelling in Ryogoku.
















































