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  2. Excelsior Caffé - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excelsior_Caffé

    The company was created in 1999 by Doutor Coffee. Its first location opened in July of that year in Seavans A Mall in Shibaura. [1] Doutor was a more grab-and-go coffeehouse without any baristas, using machines instead.

  3. Kotsubo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kotsubo

    Kotsubo is easily accessed by bus from either Kamakura or Zushi. It normally takes about 15 minutes. Taxis from both places take about 10 minutes, except in July and August when sometimes travel can take an hour because beaches are visited by thousands of people every day.

  4. Araki (restaurant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Araki_(restaurant)

    Image of Araki restaurant. Araki (Japanese: あら輝, Hepburn: Araki) was a sushi restaurant run by Japanese chef Mitsuhiro Araki (荒木水都弘) in the Ginza neighbourhood of Tokyo, Japan. It received a three-star rating in the 2011 edition of the Michelin Guide for Tokyo, Yokohama and Kamakura. [1]

  5. Kamakura Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamakura_Station

    Kamakura Station opened on 16 June 1889 as a station on a spur line from Ōfuna on the Japanese Government Railways (JGR), the pre-war predecessor to the Japan National Railways (JNR) to serve the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal and related Imperial Japanese Navy facilities at Yokosuka. This line was renamed the Yokosuka Line in October 1909.

  6. Quintessence (restaurant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quintessence_(restaurant)

    Quintessence is a Michelin 3-star Japanese French fusion restaurant in Shinagawa, Japan. [1] It is difficult to reserve a table in the restaurant and has been listed as among the 50 best restaurants in Asia by CNN. [2] [3] [4] The head chef is Shuzo Kishida from Aichi Prefecture. Kishida worked for L'Astrance in Paris and studied French ...

  7. Shōfuku-ji (Higashimurayama) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shōfuku-ji_(Higashimurayama)

    Despite major reconstruction in 1407, Shōfuku-ji's Jizō hall is held to be one of the most representative and intact examples of Kamakura architecture. [8] Though 50 kilometers from Kamakura, this area marked the northern extent of what was considered the outer sphere of the Kamakura defenses. [9]

  8. Hōkoku-ji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hōkoku-ji

    The original of a statue of Sho Kan'non is on display at the Kamakura Museum of National Treasures. [2] The temple is sometimes called Takuma-dera after the artist of a statue of Kashyap which was destroyed by a fire in 1891 in an adjacent hall. [2] The temple is No. 10 on the Kamakura 33 Kannon pilgrimage. [3]

  9. Kamakurakōkōmae Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamakurakōkōmae_Station

    Kamakurakōkōmae Station was opened on 20 June 1903 as Nissaka Station (日坂駅, Nissaka-eki).It was renamed to its present name on 20 August 1953. In 1997, it was selected as one of the "100 Top Stations in the Kantō Region" (関東の駅百選, Kantō no eki 100 sen) by a selection committee commissioned by the Japanese Ministry of Transportation.