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| | Tokyo : Getting to Know : Neighborhoods in Brief | Frommers.com |
 | | Although Tokyo's younger generation favors less staid districts like Harajuku, Shibuya, and Shinjuku, the Ginza is still a good place to window-shop and dine, especially on Sundays, when several major thoroughfares are closed to vehicular traffic, giving it a festive atmosphere. |
 | | Ueno Located just west of Asakusa, on the northern edge of the JR Yamanote Line loop, Ueno retains some of the city's old shitamachi atmosphere, especially at its spirited Ameya Yokocho food and flea market, which is spread underneath the Yamanote train tracks. |
 | | Ueno is most famous, however, for Ueno Park, a huge green space comprising a zoo, a concert hall, a temple, a shrine, and several acclaimed museums, including the Tokyo National Museum, which houses the largest collection of Japanese art and antiquities in the world. |
| www.frommers.com /destinations/tokyo/0085020048.html (1810 words) |
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