Book And Bed Tokyo Ikebukuro embraces the unconventional by turning a bookstore into a place you can actually sleep. With over 1,700 books lining towering pine shelves, this "accommodation bookstore" features cozy bunk pods seamlessly integrated into the bookshelves (some even tucked behind secret shelves) so you fall asleep surrounded by stories. Reading lights, power outlets, and private curtains make each nook feel like a bibliophile’s hideaway, while the communal lounge invites lingering with a book or chatting with fellow readers. It’s a hybrid of library, hostel, and literary retreat, perfect for travelers who dream of drifting off in pages rather than pillows.
This luxury hotel in bustling Shinjuku features a Godzilla themed room, as well as a Godzilla view room from which guests can see a full scale art work of Godzilla's head which adorns the terrace of the 8th floor.
Meguro Emperor is a love hotel for adults only, which is set right in front of the banks of Meguro River in Tokyo. The hotel boasts a unique exterior, since it is designed like a fairy tale castle, with its turrets visible from afar.
As a capsule hotel, First Cabin Shinbashi Atagoyama offers accommodation in cabins which include a bed, a small table and a TV. Each cabin is able to accommodate only one guest, while there are separate floors for male and female guests.
Henn na Hotel in the Akasaka area of Tokyo has human-like robots at the reception and smaller robots in other area of the hotel, offering a unique experience to guests.
Book And Bed Tokyo Shinjuku provides accommodation inside a bookshop, allowing guests to choose from the wide selection of books and read at their leisure while also enjoying a beverage of their choice. Apart from private rooms, there are also dorm-type rooms available, for those book lovers who wish to meet up with others during their stay.
PETALS TOKYO isn’t a typical building. It comprises four colorful, stationary houseboats moored on the Tennozu Canal, each a private, artful suite with its own design concept and waterfront views. Inspired by lotus petals drifting on water, the mini–boutique hotel hosts only a handful of guests at a time, right in Tokyo’s Warehouse TERRADA art district beside the floating venue T-LOTUS M (supervised by architect Kengo Kuma). The result feels more like staying in a floating art installation than a conventional hotel.
This unique concept hostel uses parts from the famous Hokutosei sleeper train, which stopped operating in 2015, in order to recreate an environment that feels like guests are truly sleeping inside this now legendary train.