Narita Hotels
Find a hotel in Narita, Japan. Get the best discounts on Narita hotels - up to
70% off the regular rate. Make reservations online. Japan travel information.
Mercure Hotel Narita
The rambling temple complex of Naritasan Shinsho-ji is the main attraction at the
pilgrim town of NARITA , some 60km northeast of Tokyo, and a fine place to stop off on
your way to or from Narita Airport. Every year, millions of people visit this
thousand-year-old temple, which is an important landmark in the Shingon sect of
Buddhism, but it's such a vast place that, as long as you're not here on one of the main
festival days (New Year and Setsubun on February 3 or 4), you won't notice the crowds.
To find Naritasan Shinsho-ji , follow the central shopping street, Omotesando, which
is to the left from the plaza in front of the station. Head north for ten minutes,
turning downhill when it forks beside a small triangular paved island and you'll reach
the souvenir stalls lining the approach to the temple's ornate Nio-mon gate. Many of the
buildings inside the complex are modern reproductions, but in front of the Great Main
Hall is a colourful, three-storey pagoda, dating from the eighteenth century and
decorated with fiersome gilded dragon heads snarling from under brightly painted
rafters. Behind the main hall, the temple's gardens include small forests and ornamental
ponds and rivers.
While you're in this area, it's worth checking out the National Museum of Japanese
History (Tues-Sun 9.30am-4.30pm; ¥400), in Sakura , a town four stops before Narita on
the Keisei line. Set in wooded grounds a ten-minute walk east from Keisei Sakura
Station, this huge museum houses a great collection of Japanese arts and crafts,
including 10,000 BC Jomon pottery figurines (which look as though they could be
sculptures by Picasso), detailed models of temples, towns and settlements through the
ages, and an extensive range of colourful cultural artefacts. An English pamphlet and
taped commentary will help guide you around.