Kyoto Imperial Palace
Japan's imperial family lived in the Kyoto palace from
1331 until 1868 (when they moved to Tokyo), and today visitors can
view the furnishings and delicate decorations on guided one-hour
tours of the city's Imperial Palace. It is necessary to reserve a
tour in advance by calling at the Imperial Household Agency office
in the Kyoto Imperial Park, which surrounds the palace. To join a
tour you need to produce your passport.
Telephone: (0)75 211 1215
Website:
Transport: Karasuma Subway line from Kyoto Station to Marutamachi
or Imadegawa Station
Opening times: Daily tours at 10am and 2pm, except weekends. Closed
for official functions and from 28 December to 4
January
To-ji
To-ji, with the tallest pagoda in Japan, was the
temple founded in 794 as guardian of the then young capital city's
welfare. Today it stands about 10 minutes walk to the south of
Kyoto Station, drawing curious tourists to admire in particular its
five-storey pagoda, which was rebuilt in the mid-17th century.
During the span of centuries a treasure trove of statuary,
calligraphy and paintings has been collected at the temple, now
housed in the various historic buildings making up the temple
complex. The statues include a six-metre-tall Senju Kannon
(thousand-arm Buddhist Goddess of Mercy) carved in
877.
Telephone: (0)75 671 9612
Website:
Transport:
Opening times: Daily 9am to 4.30pm (20 March to 25 May, and 20
September to 25 November)
Golden Pavilion (Kinkakuji)
One of Kyoto's most popular attractions is to the
north of the city. The Golden Pavilion (Kinkakuji) is a
three-storey pavilion covered in gold leaf, glittering in the
waters of a calm pond. Kinkakuji was built in 1397 as a retirement
home for Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, who lived there in luxury
until he died in 1408, after which the building was converted into
a Zen temple. In 1950 a mad monk burnt the pavilion down, and it
was not rebuilt until 1955. Today it is covered in gold leaf five
times thicker than the original coating, and presents an awesome
sight. A short walk from the pavilion is Ryoanji, Japan's most
famous Zen rock garden, laid out in the 15th century. A veranda
overlooks the garden in which 15 rocks are set among raked white
pebbles.
Telephone:
Website: www.shokoku-ji.or.jp
Transport: Bus 101 or 205 from Kyota Station or subway
Opening times: Daily 9am to 5pm
Sanjusangendo Hall
The temple of Rengeoin in eastern Kyoto is better
known by its popular name of Sanjusangendo Hall, and houses an
amazing sight. Inside the longest wooden building in Japan stand
row upon row of life-sized statues of Kannon, the goddess of mercy,
carved from Japanese cypress in the 12th and 13th centuries. There
are 1,001 statues altogether. The statues surround the large,
central figure of a seated Kannon, carved in 1254 in the Kamakura
Period.
Telephone: (0)75 525 0033
Website:
Transport: Bus 100, 206 or 208 to Hakubutsukan
Sanjusangendo-mae
Opening times: Daily 8am to 5pm (April to mid-November); 9am to 4pm
the rest of the year
Gion
Most visitors to Japan are fascinated with the
traditional Geisha: white-faced kimono-clad women specially trained
to entertain and spoil men in a soothing setting. Kyoto boasts one
of the most famous Geisha districts in the country, a neighbourhood
of plain wooden buildings to the east of the Kamo River known as
Gion. There were once thousands of Geisha and maiko (apprentice
Geisha) performing their genteel tasks in this area. Today the
number has dwindled to a few hundred, but visitors who stroll the
Hanami-koji street at sunset, past teahouses and restaurants, will
probably catch a glimpse of one or two en route to the geisha
houses in their clattering wooden shoes. The geisha houses
themselves are strictly off-limits to anyone not properly
introduced and invited, but from behind the paper screens you will
hear the strains of music and laughter. While geisha-spotting in
the Gion district, take in the Yasaka Shrine with its many paper
lanterns, and the Minamiza Kabuki Theatre.
Telephone:
Website: www.pref.kyoto.jp/visitkyoto/en
Transport: Train to Keihan Shijo station, or bus 100 or 206 from
Kyoto Station
Opening times:
Kiyomizu-dera
The 'Pure water temple', Kiyomizu-dera, is one of
Japan's most celebrated temples, founded in 780 and associated with
Nara Buddhism, the oldest sect in Japan. The temple's main feature
is the lovely view afforded of the wooded hills of eastern Kyoto
from its terrace. Below the terrace is the spring from which the
temple got its name; visitors can sample the water, which is said
to have healing powers. Nearby is an interesting three-storey
pagoda, and the Otawa Falls. The approach to the temple along
Kiyomizu-michi or Gojo-zaka is steep and narrow, the streets lined
with stores specialising in local sweets, pottery and the
inevitable souvenirs. Behind the temple is the Shinto Jishu Shrine,
dedicated to the god of love.
Telephone: (0)75 551 1234
Website:
Transport: 15-minute bus ride (100 or 206) from Kyoto Station to
Kiyomizu-michi or Gojo-zaka stop
Opening times: Daily 6am to 6pm






