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Subculture, second-hand records, and the city's longest-running stand-up bars — a five-minute ride west of Shinjuku, in a different decade.
Photo: Pexels / Arnie Papp
Nakano is what Shinjuku looks like with the volume turned down by half. Five minutes west by Chuo Line, the streets are narrower, the rents are cheaper, and the buildings haven't been replaced in 40 years. The famous Nakano Broadway shopping mall (built 1966) anchors the north side of the station — four floors of vintage manga, anime cells, retro toys, used watches, secondhand kimono. South of the station, Nakano Sun Mall and the alleys behind it are denser per square meter with cheap izakaya and standing bars than almost any neighborhood in central Tokyo. The audience is a mix of subculture obsessives, students from the universities to the west, and old salarymen who've drunk at the same bar since 1985. The food is honest, the prices are reasonable, and the energy is the energy of people who chose this neighborhood over the louder ones.
Nakano was farmland until the 1889 opening of the Chuo Line gave it a station and the displaced merchants of central Tokyo a place to relocate after the 1923 earthquake. By the 1930s it was a working-class commuter neighborhood, and the destruction of 1945 spared a meaningful percentage of its prewar building stock — enough that the postwar rebuild was a patch job rather than a wholesale replacement.
The defining moment was 1966: the opening of Nakano Broadway, a 200-shop indoor shopping mall built atop a Soviet-style luxury apartment block. The mall failed at high-end retail and was rapidly colonized by used-record dealers, manga shops, and anime memorabilia stores. By the 1980s it was the country’s densest concentration of subculture commerce, and by the 1990s it had passed Akihabara as the place to find rare anime cells and vintage manga (Akihabara, then dominated by used electronics, only pivoted to anime in the 2000s).
Today, Broadway is still there, still 80% subculture, still housing 200+ small shops. The streets around it are still cheap. The energy is still working-class, but the working class includes 30-year-old anime obsessives now alongside the salarymen.
Most of Nakano Broadway's shops close at 8pm sharp. If your priority is the manga and anime shops, arrive by 15:00 latest. The mall itself stays open later for the basement restaurants, but the retail floors empty out fast.
Mandarake started in Broadway in 1980 and now occupies dozens of small storefronts across multiple Broadway floors, each specializing in something specific (vintage manga, doujinshi, anime cels, model kits, used kimono, militaria). The pricing is fair by Tokyo standards. Allow at least 90 minutes.
Many Nakano <em>tachinomi</em> (standing bars) open at 15:00 or 16:00, against Shinjuku's 17:00 norm. The early-start crowd is mostly retirees and night-shift workers. By 18:30 the after-work salarymen arrive. The early window is friendlier for first-timers.
Nakano is the first stop on the Chuo Line west of Shinjuku, and the line continues through Koenji, Asagaya, and Ogikubo — each with its own subculture and its own old-school shotengai. A full Chuo Line evening starting at 16:00 in Nakano and ending at 22:00 in Ogikubo is a Tokyo classic.
On the 5th floor of Nakano Broadway is a small bar called Daikichi Sushi, with rooftop access. The view is unspectacular but the prices are 20 years out of date. ¥1,500 for an hour of drinks. Cash only.
Outside the chain conveyor-belt shops, Nakano has several mid-tier sushi counters charging ¥3,000–¥4,500 for an 8-piece nigiri course at lunch. Quality matches Ginza's ¥10,000 lunch course. The reason is rent — Nakano is 1/3 of Ginza's per-square-meter.
Behind Sun Mall there are at least four 50+-year-old kissaten still operating, all with house-blend coffee and original 1970s interiors. None advertise. None are on Tabelog English. Walk slowly and look for the wooden facades.
Get off at JR Nakano Station, north exit. Walk straight up Sun Mall — the covered shopping arcade — and after 250 meters you’ll hit Broadway at the end. Allow 1–2 hours inside Broadway just to see what’s there.
For drinking and dinner: come back out, walk west into the alleys behind Sun Mall. The standing bars (tachinomi) and small izakaya start filling at 17:00 with regulars; visitor-friendly ones display menus with photos.
If you don’t care about subculture, Nakano isn’t for you. If you do, plan a half-day.
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