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博物館 · SUMIDA CITY
Edo-Tokyo Museum
江戸東京博物館
The Edo-Tokyo Museum is the definitive museum for understanding Tokyo's transformation from the Edo period through modern times, with life-size reconstructions of Edo-era streetscapes and Meiji-era buildings that no other museum replicates at this scale.
The Edo-Tokyo Museum occupies a distinctive elevated building in Ryogoku, adjacent to the sumo arena and the Japanese Sword Museum, and it is the most comprehensive museum in Japan dedicated to the history of Tokyo from the Edo period (1603-1868) through the modern era. The permanent exhibition is organized chronologically and built around life-size reconstructions — a full-scale replica of the Nihonbashi bridge, Edo-period merchant houses, a Meiji-era newspaper office, and postwar reconstruction scenes — that make the history physically tangible in a way that artifact-only museums cannot.
The museum has been undergoing a major renovation, so visitors should check the official site for current opening status before traveling. When open, the full visit takes 2-3 hours and pairs naturally with a Ryogoku half-day that includes the sumo arena (during tournament months) and the nearby Japanese Sword Museum. Audio guides are available in English, Chinese, and Korean, and the physical scale of the exhibitions means they reward visitors who do not read Japanese just as much as those who do.
Practical info
- Address: 1-4-1 Yokoami, Sumida City, Tokyo 130-0015
- Hours: Check official site (renovation in progress)
- Admission: Typically 600 yen (adults); discounts for students
- Nearest station: Ryogoku Station (JR Sobu line), 3-minute walk
I · KNOW BEFORE YOU GO
実用情報

- カテゴリー
- 博物館
- 住所
- 1-4-1 Yokoami 130-0015
- Area
- Tokyo
- Last verified
- 2026年4月15日
II · GALLERY
ギャラリー

III · TAGS
Also of interest.
関連スポット
IV · SOURCES



