Day 3: Shibuya to Shinjuku – Art, Waygu & Cat Cafés


Digital Dreams, Ginza Dining & Cat Cafes

Day three in Tokyo was a mix of art, food, and unexpected surprises—from stepping into an immersive digital museum to strolling through Ginza and ending the evening with cats and sushi.


Breakfast at Cerulean Tower Tokyu Hotel

We started the morning once again at the Cerulean Tower Tokyu Hotel. With its expansive buffet at Caramelo, breakfast remained one of the highlights of our stay. It offered the perfect fuel for a packed day ahead.


Immersive Art at TeamLab Borderless

Our first stop was the world-renowned TeamLab Borderless in Minato Toranomon. This museum isn’t filled with traditional paintings or sculptures—it’s an evolving collection of interactive digital installations where art literally moves around you. Rooms shift with light and sound, walls come alive, and the boundaries between you and the artwork dissolve.

  • Location: Mori Building Digital Art Museum: TeamLab Borderless, Toranomon-Azabudai Project, Minato City
  • Admission: ¥3,200 ($22 USD) for adults; ¥1,000 ($7 USD) for children
  • Tip: Tickets often sell out in advance—booking online is recommended.

While exploring, we tried a tea and dessert experience that was just as artistic as the exhibits themselves. A bowl of mochi tea bloomed with digital flowers when placed on the table, paired with a side of creamy matcha ice cream. In Japan, these small desserts and snacks are as much about presentation as flavor—and here, art and food blended seamlessly.


Lunch in Ginza – Heijoen

From Minato, we headed into Ginza for lunch at Heijoen Ginza Gochoume, a stylish yakiniku (Japanese BBQ) restaurant.

  • Address: BINO GINZA 3F, 5-8-9 Ginza, Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0061
  • Access: 2-minute walk from Ginza Station (Tokyo Metro Ginza Line), 3-minute walk from Ginza Station (Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line)
  • Price Range: ¥2,000–3,000 ($14–$21 USD) per person for lunch sets

The restaurant specializes in high-quality grilled meats served with rice, soup, and sides—an indulgent but well-balanced meal.


Strolling Through Ginza

After lunch, we took a walk around Chuo-Ginza, Tokyo’s luxury shopping district. Sleek storefronts, flagship fashion houses, and modern architecture lined the streets. A highlight was the Nissan Crossing showroom, where futuristic concept cars and race vehicles were on display (see photo attached).


Cat Café MoCHA Lounge – Shinjuku

Later in the afternoon, we made our way to Cat Café MoCHA Lounge in Shinjuku. With floor-to-ceiling windows, cozy seating, and plenty of feline friends roaming freely, it offered a relaxing escape from the bustle of the city.

  • Admission: ¥200 ($1.50 USD) per 10 minutes, with a one-drink order required (around ¥350–600 / $3–$4 USD).
  • Fun Fact: The café also has daily “treat times” when staff feed the cats all at once—a must-see moment if you’re there.

Dinner – Sushi in Shinjuku

We closed the evening with sushi in Shinjuku, a fitting finale to a day of contrasts—digital art, luxury shopping, cats, and a traditional Japanese meal. Fresh, simple, and perfectly prepared, it reminded us why Tokyo is one of the world’s great food capitals.


Day 3 Travel Guide

  • 🏨 Hotel: Cerulean Tower Tokyu Hotel — ¥30,000–60,000 per night ($200–$400 USD)
  • 🎨 TeamLab Borderless: ¥3,200 ($22 USD) adults; ¥1,000 ($7 USD) children
  • 🍵 Mochi tea & matcha ice cream (inside TeamLab): ~¥1,200–1,500 ($8–$10 USD)
  • 🍖 Lunch at Heijoen Ginza Gochoume: ¥2,000–3,000 ($14–$21 USD) per person
  • 🚗 Nissan Crossing showroom in Ginza: Free entry
  • 🐈 Cat Café MoCHA Lounge Shinjuku: ¥200 ($1.50 USD) per 10 min + drink ¥350–600 ($3–$4 USD)
  • 🍣 Dinner (sushi in Shinjuku): ~¥3,000–5,000 ($21–$35 USD) per person

💰 Estimated daily spend (excluding hotel): ¥9,000–12,000 per person ($65–$85 USD)

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