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Japan
Spring Journey

Japan

Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka — three civilisations on one island chain

Duration9 Days
DepartureTokyo
RegionEast Asia
Overview

About This Journey

Japan does not reveal itself immediately. It requires a particular kind of attention — the willingness to slow down, to look twice, to follow the smell of cedar incense through a gate that appears to lead nowhere and find a thousand-year-old temple on the other side. This journey moves through three cities that are, in almost every way, three completely different civilisations occupying the same island chain. Tokyo first — the largest city on earth, which has somehow made enormity feel navigable, where the train system runs to the second and the ramen shop in the basement of a Shinjuku office tower has been serving the same broth since 1968 and has a Michelin star. Then Kyoto — the city that Japan built to be its spiritual and aesthetic centre and that has, against considerable odds, remained both: the bamboo groves of Arashiyama at dawn from the Suiran's private deck on the Oi River, the 10,000 vermillion torii gates of Fushimi Inari before the crowds arrive, the Zazen meditation in a private room that has been closed to the public for four centuries. And finally Osaka — the city that Japan built to eat in, where the Dotonbori neon reflects in the Shinsaibashi canal and the Waldorf Astoria sits above it all with the kind of calm authority that the best hotels bring to the loudest cities. Seven nights. Eight days. Japan at the pace it deserves.

What's Included

All private airport and city transfers
Shinkansen Green Car, Tokyo to Kyoto
Local specialist guides throughout (Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka)
TeamLab Borderless private entry and Fushimi Inari private dawn tour
Private Zazen meditation session, Kyoto
Fully hosted Michelin-starred kaiseki dinner, Kyoto
All temple and attraction admissions, IC transit cards loaded
Accommodation as listed (Park Hyatt Tokyo, Suiran Luxury Collection, Waldorf Astoria Osaka)

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Days 01
Arrival in Tokyo — Tokyo

Arrival in Tokyo

Tokyo

Arrive at Narita or Haneda International Airport where a private English-speaking driver meets the flight at the arrivals gate — luggage handled, IC transit cards loaded with ¥3,000 per person, and the transfer to Park Hyatt Tokyo in Shinjuku by private vehicle. Tokyo arrives on the way in: the scale of the city, the elevated expressways, the density of light and signage, the particular sensation of a city that is functioning at maximum capacity without visible friction. Check into the Park Hyatt on the 39th floor and spend the first evening at the New York Bar on the 52nd — the bar that Sofia Coppola filmed in 2003 and that has been exactly what it was then ever since: jazz, city views in every direction, and the understanding that Tokyo at night is a different city from Tokyo in the day.

Narita or Haneda private arrivalIC card per personPark Hyatt Tokyo 39th floorShinjuku Park TowerFloor-to-ceiling city viewsNew York Bar 52nd floorJazzMount Fuji clear morning viewFirst Tokyo evening
AccommodationPark Hyatt Tokyo
Days 02
Tokyo — The Ancient and the Electric — Tokyo

Tokyo — The Ancient and the Electric

Tokyo

A full private day in Tokyo with a specialist local guide. The morning begins at Tsukiji Outer Market — the original fish market neighbourhood where the outer stalls, the tamagoyaki vendors, the sea urchin and the sashimi breakfast counters remain on their original street, and where the correct way to start a Tokyo morning is to eat standing up at a counter that has been there since before you were born. Then Asakusa: the Senso-ji Temple — Tokyo's oldest, founded 645 AD — approached through the Kaminarimon Gate and the Nakamise shopping street of craft stalls; the neighbourhood behind the temple where the rickshaw operators and the craft studios and the oldest restaurants in Tokyo operate in buildings that survived the war. After lunch, the afternoon moves forward several centuries: Tokyo Skytree, the 634-metre broadcasting tower with observation decks at 350 and 450 metres, and then Shibuya — the scramble crossing, the youth fashion quarter, the Omotesando boulevard of flagship architecture where Tadao Ando, Herzog and de Meuron, and Toyo Ito all have buildings within 400 metres of each other. Dinner reservation at a Shinjuku restaurant of your choice — your concierge will arrange.

Tsukiji Outer Market private morningTamagoyaki vendorsSea urchin sashimi breakfast counterSenso-ji Temple 645 ADKaminarimon GateNakamise craft streetAsakusa rickshawTokyo Skytree 450m observationShibuya scramble crossingOmotesando flagship architectureShinjuku dinner reservation
AccommodationPark Hyatt Tokyo
Days 03
Tokyo — Art Without Borders — Tokyo

Tokyo — Art Without Borders

Tokyo

A day designed around two of the most significant cultural experiences in contemporary Tokyo. The morning is flexible — the optional Nikko day trip (Toshogu Shrine, Futarasan, Tamozawa Imperial Villa, one hour from Asakusa), the Okutama wilderness canoe and chopstick-making workshop, or a Kamakura day trip to the Great Buddha and Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine by coastal railway. The afternoon and evening are fixed: TeamLab Borderless at Azabudai Hills — the world's most visited digital art museum, reopened in 2024 in the new Azabudai Hills development, where 10,000 square metres of permanently shifting, interconnected digital art has no rooms, no boundaries, and no map. The work moves between floors and around visitors; the visitors are inside the work. Pre-booked timed entry, private guide for the visit, two hours minimum. Dinner at the Park Hyatt's Girandole or the New York Grill — the latter serving the steaks and the city views and the jazz that it has been serving on the 52nd floor since 1994.

Optional Nikko day trip Toshogu UNESCOOptional Kamakura Great BuddhaOptional Okutama canoe workshopTeamLab Borderless Azabudai Hills 2024 reopening10,000 sqm digital artNo rooms no boundaries no mapPre-booked timed entryNew York Grill dinner 52nd floor
AccommodationPark Hyatt Tokyo
Days 04
Shinkansen to Kyoto — The Cultural Capital — Kyoto

Shinkansen to Kyoto — The Cultural Capital

Kyoto

A morning check-out from the Park Hyatt, taxi to Tokyo Station, and the Shinkansen Nozomi in Green Car — the two-and-a-half-hour bullet train journey that passes Mount Fuji on the left side at approximately 40 minutes from Tokyo on a clear day, and arrives at Kyoto Station in the cultural heart of Japan. A private specialist guide meets the platform and the afternoon tour begins immediately: Kiyomizu-dera Temple, founded 778 AD on the eastern hills, its wooden stage cantilevered 13 metres over the hillside with views across the city to the mountains beyond; then Gion — the lantern-lit streets of Kyoto's historic geisha district, the wooden machiya townhouses, the Gion Kagai Art Museum where geiko and maiko culture is documented and interpreted in the only facility in the world dedicated to it. A walk through Hanamikoji Street as the evening begins. Check into Suiran in Arashiyama — a 30-minute taxi through the western city to the river — and dinner at the hotel restaurant overlooking the Oi River.

Tokyo Station Green Car Shinkansen NozomiMount Fuji left window 40 minutesKyoto platform guideKiyomizu-dera Temple 778 ADWooden stage 13mGion lantern-lit streetsMachiya townhousesGion Kagai Art Museum geiko maikoHanamikoji Street eveningSuiran Arashiyama arrivalOi River dinner
AccommodationSuiran, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Kyoto
Days 05
Arashiyama — Bamboo, River and Zen — Kyoto

Arashiyama — Bamboo, River and Zen

Kyoto

The morning Suiran was built for. A private Zazen meditation session at a temple in the surrounding hills — 90 minutes in a private room normally closed to the public, with a priest who prepares the matcha himself and answers questions about Zen practice with the directness that the tradition requires. Then the Arashiyama neighbourhood on foot: Tenryu-ji Temple and its 14th-century garden, one of the finest strolling gardens in Japan and a UNESCO World Heritage site; a shojin ryori lunch at a local restaurant — the traditional Buddhist vegetarian cuisine of seasonal vegetables, tofu, and mountain plants that Arashiyama's temple kitchens have been producing for six hundred years; and the Chikurin bamboo grove, where the path through the towering stalks filters the light into a green column and produces the silence that has made this the most photographed landscape in Japan. An afternoon at leisure at Suiran — the private onsen, the river view from the room, the garden.

Suiran private morningZazen meditation 90 minutes private temple roomPriest-prepared matchaTenryu-ji Temple UNESCO 14th century gardenShojin ryori vegetarian lunchTofu and mountain plantsChikurin bamboo groveGreen light filtered silenceSuiran private onsenOi River room view afternoon
AccommodationSuiran, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Kyoto
Days 06
Fushimi Inari at Dawn and the Nishiki Kitchen — Kyoto

Fushimi Inari at Dawn and the Nishiki Kitchen

Kyoto

A 5:00 AM departure from Suiran for the most important single experience in this itinerary. Fushimi Inari Taisha at dawn — the Shinto shrine at the base of the Inari mountain, famous for its 10,000 vermillion torii gates that line the mountain paths for four kilometres to the summit. The gates were donated by Japanese businesses over centuries; each one bears the donor's name in black ink on the back. At dawn, before the city wakes and before the first tour buses arrive, the path through the gates is empty — the red corridors receding up the mountain in the dark, the lanterns still lit, the foxes that are Inari's sacred messengers occasionally visible on the path above. A private guide leads the ascent to the Yotsutsuji intersection at 233 metres, where Kyoto appears below in the early light. Return to Suiran for breakfast. The afternoon moves to Nishiki Market — Kyoto's covered food market, 400 metres long, 400 years old, the condensed version of everything the Kyoto kitchen produces — with a local food guide. The evening: a fully hosted TBB dinner at a Michelin-starred Kyoto kaiseki restaurant — the full seasonal tasting sequence at the table your concierge has reserved and TBB has paid for entirely.

5AM Fushimi Inari dawn departure10,000 vermillion torii gatesGates donor names black inkEmpty mountain path pre-dawnSacred foxes Inari messengersYotsutsuji 233m Kyoto panoramaSuiran return breakfastNishiki Market 400m 400 yearsLocal food guideTBB hosted Michelin kaiseki dinner fully paid
AccommodationSuiran, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Kyoto
Days 07
Nara's Sacred Deer and Osaka Arrival — Osaka

Nara's Sacred Deer and Osaka Arrival

Osaka

A morning check-out from Suiran and a private vehicle departure south toward Nara — Japan's first permanent capital, founded 710 AD, a city that has kept its deer because a Shinto deity arrived on a white deer in the 8th century and the deer have been sacred ever since. Nara Park: several hundred free-roaming deer that bow for the shika senbei rice crackers sold at the park gates and that treat the 1,300-year-old stone lanterns as furniture. Todai-ji Temple — the Great Hall that houses the 15-metre bronze Daibutsu, the largest bronze Buddha in Japan, inside the largest wooden building in the world. Lunch in Nara before the afternoon transfer to Osaka. Check into the Waldorf Astoria on Nakanoshima — the private arrival experience, the rooms above the Dojima River, the city below. An evening Dotonbori food tour with a private local guide: the takoyaki masters, the kushikatsu bars, the crab sign on Dotonbori canal, the Glico Running Man, and the ramen shops that Osaka considers its own.

Private vehicle Kyoto to NaraNara Park sacred deer bowingShika senbei rice crackersTodai-ji Temple 15m DaibutsuLargest wooden building worldNara lunchTransfer Nara to OsakaWaldorf Astoria Osaka Nakanoshima arrivalDotonbori private food tourTakoyaki kushikatsuGlico Running ManRamen shops
AccommodationWaldorf Astoria Osaka
Days 08
Osaka — The Craft and the City — Osaka

Osaka — The Craft and the City

Osaka

A full private day in Osaka built around three things the city does that no other city does in quite the same way. The morning begins at Kuromon Ichiba Market — Osaka's Kitchen, 600 stalls of fresh seafood, wagyu beef, pickled vegetables, and street food that the neighbourhood has been producing since 1902; a food guide walks the market with you, navigating the vendors and the seasonal produce and the sea urchin that costs half what it does in Tokyo. The late morning moves to a private craft workshop: a session in traditional Japanese ceramics at a century-old Osaka atelier where the instructor works through the hand-building and glazing of a sake set or tea bowl in the way the craft has been taught here for generations — you leave with the piece. After lunch at a concierge-reserved Osaka restaurant (Hajime for modern French-Japanese, or a Dotonbori counter of your choice), the afternoon continues with a private Ukiyo-e woodblock printing session at the Kamigata Ukiyo-e Museum — the only museum in Japan dedicated to Osaka-school woodblock printing, where a resident printmaker leads a hands-on session in the studio using traditional cherry-wood blocks and water-based ink, producing a print in the ukiyo-e tradition that Osaka developed independently from Edo. Optional: Abeno Harukas 300m observation deck before the evening or Osaka Castle park in the late light. Dotonbori by night — independently, with your concierge's map.

Kuromon Ichiba Market 600 stalls food guideWagyu fresh seafood seasonal producePrivate ceramics workshop century-old atelierHand-building sake set tea bowlTake-home ceramic pieceConcierge lunch reservation Hajime or DotonboriKamigata Ukiyo-e Museum private printmaking sessionCherry-wood blocks water-based inkOsaka-school ukiyo-e traditionOptional Abeno Harukas 300mOsaka Castle parkDotonbori evening independently
AccommodationWaldorf Astoria Osaka
Days 09
Departure — Osaka

Departure

Osaka

A final Japanese breakfast at the Waldorf Astoria before check-out. The morning is yours — a last walk through the Nakanoshima riverside gardens, a coffee at a Osaka kissaten (the old-style coffee shops that Osaka has been running since the 1950s and has never stopped), or a final browse of the craft shops near Shinsaibashi. Private vehicle transfer to Kansai International Airport in time for international departure. Kansai International connects directly to Singapore, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Taipei, and Seoul, with onward connections to the Gulf, Europe, and India via hub carriers. Return the IC transit cards in the prepaid envelope provided on Day 1 — posted from the airport post box before departure.

Waldorf Astoria final breakfastNakanoshima riverside morning walkOsaka kissaten old-style coffeeShinsaibashi craft shopsPrivate vehicle KIX transferKansai International AirportSingapore Hong Kong Bangkok directGulf Europe India onward connectionsIC card return prepaid envelope
AccommodationDeparture day

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