This week I went to Japan for 4 days to attend another
conference, the FPD (flat panel display) International conference. I also
managed to get quite a bit of sight-seeing in as well. It was a busy 4 days.
Arriving in Japan
The day we arrived in Tokyo was a long one. Our ride to the
airport was leaving at 3:00am even though the flight wasn’t until 11:05am. So
after only a few hours of sleep I was up and in a packed minivan full of other
students on their way to the airport. The drive to Incheon airport from where I
live is about 2 hours so it wasn’t a very pleasant trip.
After sitting around the airport lobby for 5 hours we were
finally through all the airport security checkpoints and boarded the plane. The
flight was only about an hour and forty-five minutes. On the plane I was
reading an article in the Northwest Airlines magazine about Tokyo and a 3 day
agenda of things you should see while you’re in Tokyo. How perfect. I tore it
out and brought it with me when we landed.
We landed at Narita airport just outside Tokyo so we took a
shuttle bus in to our hotel that was closer to downtown. The hotel we stayed at
was called the Shinagawa Prince Hotel. This place had everything. There were
about 15 restaurants in the hotel and the surrounding area, an 80 lane bowling
alley, an aquarium with hourly dolphin shows, tennis courts, swimming pools and
a small mall. If I didn’t leave the
hotel for the whole 4 days I don’t think I would have been able to do
everything that it had to offer.
By the time I was settled in the hotel room it was close to
6pm so I watched the sun set behind a mountain on the horizon and then headed
for a place to eat.
FPD International
Conference
The FPD Conference was interesting. This year’s theme was “ambient”
and “green.” Ambient meaning that the day is coming when the objects around us
– walls, windows and desktops for example – can display information on demand,
becoming part of the environment we live and work in. With more displays
popping up in areas where they weren’t before it’s important that they’re energy
efficient. This is where “green” comes in.
The exhibition floor was full of companies showing off their
newest display technology. There were even a few companies showing their ideas for
towns to be completely powered by renewable energy sources. There was a small
town that was being powered by an array of solar panels. A few of the companies
that attended were LG Electronics, Samsung Electronics and Nikon.
Unlike the IMID conference we didn’t attend any lectures. We
stayed on the exhibition floor for a few hours until everyone had a chance to
see what they wanted to and then we left. After leaving the conference we
explored the surrounding water-front area. It reminded me of Toronto’s water-front.
People were walking dogs, fishing and homeless men were sleeping under trees.
Roppongi Hills
Constructed by the architect Minoru Mori, this area incorporates
office space, apartments, shops, restaurants, cafes, movie theatres, a museum,
a hotel, a TV studio, an outdoor amphitheatre, and a few parks. In the center
of it all is the 54-story Mori Tower where you can go to the roof and get the
best view of Tokyo in the city. The area is an ultra-modern view of Tokyo’s
future. The idea behind the design was to incorporate all of these things into
one complex so people could live, work and play in the same area without
commuting.
It’s very impressive as you’re walking around the area
although it’s very easy to get lost. There seems to be no logical layout to it
and people lacking perfect mental navigation would easily find themselves lost
by the maze of walkways.
We spent a long time wondering the area before stopping at a
restaurant for dinner. We wanted to try something new – some authentic Japanese
cuisine – instead, we had hamburgers and fries. I have to say though, it was
one of the best hamburgers that I’ve ever had. OK, maybe that’s a little dramatic, but it was
good.
After dinner we went to the rooftop of the Mori tower. By this
time it was night so there were lights as far you could see. You really got an
idea up there about how big the city actually is. In all 360 degrees around you
the lights went on to the horizon. We also went into the Mori Art Museum which
has to be the strangest thing I encountered in Tokyo. The first thing we saw
when we walked in was dead animals and birds hanging from the ceiling by strings
with stuffed (toy) animal heads put over their heads. There was one bird
wearing a Care Bear head. One of the other displays was an intricate system of
ropes and pulleys that were being pulled by some motors behind a wall
somewhere. The strange thing was that the ropes were tied to more stuffed
animal looking things with sharp claws that were being dragged around the floor
and being pulled up towards the ceiling. It reminded me of a nightmare.
Sensoji Temple
Sensoji Temple is the oldest in Tokyo. According to legend,
a statue of the Kannon (Goddess of Mercy) was found in the Sumida River in 628
by two fishermen, the brothers Hinokuma Hamanari and Hinokuma Takenari. The
chief of their village, Hajino Nakamoto, recognized the statue and enshrined it
by remodelling his own house into a small temple in Asakusa, so that the
villagers could worship the Kannon.
During World War II the original temple was destroyed by air
raids, after the war the temple that now stands was built.
The day we were at the temple there were Monks visiting. We
had a chance to see them as they left. We walked around the grounds for awhile.
Beyond the entrance gate are street vendors in stalls that line the alleys and
streets in the surrounding area selling traditional Japanese sweets, souvenirs,
etc...
An older man started talking to us as we were looking at the
coy fish in a pond. He insisted that before we left the area we had to see the
two famous plastic food shops that provide the plastic food for the displays in
much of the restaurants in Tokyo. We went to Ueno Park instead.
Ueno Park
Ueno Park is similar to Central Park in New York City. It’s
a large park in the center of Tokyo where people go to walk around, sit on a
bench to relax or play with the stray cats. There are a lot of stray cats. There
are a lot of stray people for that matter. It’s the only place in Tokyo I saw
homeless people other than the one near the water-front. I guess if I was
homeless in Tokyo it’s where I would want to be too. It’s a very peaceful place
in the middle of a very busy city. Plus, it has a zoo.
We walked around here for a few hours in the afternoon
before setting off for Shinjuku, the Times Square of Tokyo.
Shinjuku
Before getting into the heart of the Shinjuku area we
stopped off at Takeshita Street. A small pedestrian only street lined with
cafes and fashion boutiques. Most places seemed to be tiny independently owned
shops. It was a pretty cool place. Mostly teenagers were walking around here. I
figured it was an alternative shopping district to the one that ran directly parallel
to Takeshita Street. That’s where all the high end stores were, everything from
Louis Vuitton to Burberry.
Once we got into the main area it was neon sign heaven.
Everything was lit up. It was sensory overload, people were everywhere. This is
what I had always pictured Tokyo as being. We walked around the area for a few
hours and stopped at a small restaurant for dinner. The place was literally as
wide as a train car. It was on a street that was packed with similar such restaurants
side-by-side.
After dinner we wanted to find the bar that the film Lost In
Translation was filmed in. The guide I had torn out of the airline magazine
gave us the name and hotel. It’s the New York Grill in the Park Hyatt Hotel.
New York Grill? Sounds casual, right?
We spent about an hour or more trying to find the Park Hyatt
Hotel. The building the hotel is in is 64 storeys high, the hotel occupies
floors 34 to 64, and the rest of it is office space. We went into the lobby but
could not figure out how to enter the hotel. There were three separate banks of
elevators, each of them intended for a certain range of floors, the floors the
hotel were on were not listed anywhere. We had to ask a security guard how we
could get to the hotel, he showed us to a dimly lit back corner of the lobby
that was completely hidden from everything else. We walked up a flight of
stairs and got in the first elevator. This elevator took us up to floor 34, we
got off to find no one at all around. The whole place was empty. We were in
another lobby, but the fanciest lobby I have ever been in. We continued on to
find another elevator that only went up another 4 floors and exited into a
white table cloth dining room area. We
asked the hostess how to get to the New York Grill, she told us how to get to yet
another elevator that went to the top of the hotel where it was. Finally!
We took the last elevator the remaining 15 or so floors to
the top. When the doors opened there was a host at a desk directly in front of
us that showed us to our table. We asked for a table in the bar area. This
place was immaculate. There was a jazz band playing, the lights were dimmed to
almost being off and people were sipping on martinis. There we were in our
jeans that we’ve been wearing all day, I felt very out of place. The New York
Grill to me was a very misleading name. This was the fanciest bar / restaurant
I’ve ever been in. The host mentioned while seating us that there was a 2000
Yen (about 25 dollars Canadian) table charge per person just to sit down. I
started to sweat.
We looked at the menu, the cheapest draft beer they had was
1400 Yen (about 17 dollars). I started doing some quick mental math and figured
we were looking at close to 80 dollars for two beers!! I don’t think I could live with that, no
matter where I was. I made the suggestion that we get up and leave with our
tails between our legs – and so we did. They even thanked us for coming on the
way out.
The four days we spent in Tokyo were amazing. I’m very
thankful to have such an opportunity. Everyone we met, from waiters to people
on the street, were exceptionally polite and went out of their way to help us.
One man we asked directions to didn’t speak English so he found someone who did
and ran after us after we had walked away so we could ask that person. I would
love to return to the city in the future to stay a little bit longer to really
look around.