3 minutes walk from JR Shinjuku Station South Exit, Shinjuku Expressway Bus Terminal
In the Edo period, the residence of the lord of Shinshu Takato, Mr. Naito, was located, and Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden was born in the 39th year of Meiji (1906). It was built as a garden for the imperial family, but after the war it became a national park and was opened to the public. The garden, which skillfully combines French-style orthopedic gardens, English landscape gardens and Japan gardens, is a representative modern Western garden of the Meiji era and one of the few masterpieces of landscape gardens in Japan.
Address | 11 Naito-cho, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 160-0014 |
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Opening hours | 9:00-16:00 (closes at 16:30) |
Closed Days | Every Monday (or the following weekday if Monday is a holiday), New Year's holiday (December 29th to January 3rd) *From March 25th to April 24th and from November 1st to 15th, the park will be open on Mondays as well. |
Access | Approximately 15 minutes on foot |
Admission fee | Adults 200 yen, elementary and junior high school students 50 yen, infants free *Discounts available for groups of 30 or more (150 yen for adults, 25 yen for elementary and junior high school students) *No prior application required Annual passes are also available for purchase. |
URL | http://fng.or.jp/shinjuku/ |
[Lowest Price Guarantee BEST RATE] Booking through the official website is the best deal
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