Nakamise-dori

E238595

Nakamise-dori is the historic, souvenir- and snack-filled shopping street that leads up to Tokyo’s Senso-ji Temple and is one of the oldest commercial streets in Japan.

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Nakamise-dori canonical 9
Nakamise-dori approach to Sensō-ji 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historic street
shopping street
tourist attraction
associatedWith Senso-ji Temple
surface form: Senso-ji
city Tokyo
country Japan
culturalSignificance traditional approach to Senso-ji Temple
governedBy Taitō
surface form: Taito City
hasArchitectureStyle traditional Japanese storefronts
hasLanguage Japanese
hasLighting lanterns
hasMainAccess Asakusa Station NERFINISHED
Tobu Skytree Line
Toei Asakusa Line NERFINISHED
Tokyo Metro Ginza Line NERFINISHED
hasNearbyLandmark Hozomon
Kaminarimon
hasNumberOfShops over 80
hasSeasonalEvent New Year temple visits
cherry blossom season crowds
hasSignage Japanese signs
hasType pedestrian street
heritageStatus one of the oldest commercial streets in Japan
knownFor Japanese sweets
souvenir shops
street food
tourist shopping
traditional crafts
traditional snacks
leadsTo Senso-ji Temple
surface form: Senso-ji
locatedIn Asakusa
Taitō
surface form: Taito, Tokyo

Tokyo
pavedSurface stone
primaryUse retail
tourism
region Kanto
touristRegion Asakusa district
typicalProduct folding fans
manju
ningyo-yaki
omamori
senbei
ukiyo-e prints
yukata
typicalVisitor domestic tourists
international tourists

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (10)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Senso-ji Temple hasShoppingStreet Nakamise-dori
subject surface form: Senso-ji
Asakusa hasLandmark Nakamise-dori
Asakusa hasStreet Nakamise-dori
Asakusa Station nearby Nakamise-dori
Kaminarimon connectedTo Nakamise-dori
Thunder Gate leadsTo Nakamise-dori
Denpoin-dori near Nakamise-dori
Hoppy-dori nearbyArea Nakamise-dori
Hōzōmon locatedOn Nakamise-dori
this entity surface form: Nakamise-dori approach to Sensō-ji