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Explore near Site of Kikaiyu Public Bath: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Site of Kikaiyu Public Bath Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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Original Text
An explanation is left in a building full of downtown feeling about a 5-minute walk from Suidobashi Station. It seems that a public bath was made using a boiler of a ship and a paint painting was drawn.
It is the birthplace of paint paintings, just off Kanda Church. A small sign with explanations is hung on the outer wall of the building, and it seems to pass by at first glance. You can feel the history of Mt. Fuji, a public bath that has become commonplace now.
There is a signboard in the building on the road near the Catholic Kanda Church. It seems that there was a public bath (Kikaiyu) that wrote a picture of a public bath for the first time here. Of course it was only a signboard now.
About 5 minutes walk from the east exit of Suidobashi Station to the southeast, there was an information board near the entrance of the building. It's really hard to find. There are no public baths left now, only information boards. It was the first place to draw a picture of Mt. Fuji on the wall of the public bath.
It seems that there used to be Kikaiyu, which was the first time in a public bath to draw a paint painting here. Now there is only an information board near the entrance of the building. It doesn't seem to be enough to go all the way. It's just a stop by when you pass by.
Instructions
An explanation is left in a building full of downtown feeling about a 5-minute walk from Suidobashi Station. It seems that a public bath was made using a boiler of a ship and a paint painting was drawn.
Unexpected な place に
It is the birthplace of paint paintings, just off Kanda Church. A small sign with explanations is hung on the outer wall of the building, and it seems to pass by at first glance. You can feel the history of Mt. Fuji, a public bath that has become commonplace now.
Tang の
There is a signboard in the building on the road near the Catholic Kanda Church. It seems that there was a public bath (Kikaiyu) that wrote a picture of a public bath for the first time here. Of course it was only a signboard now.
it's hard to find.
About 5 minutes walk from the east exit of Suidobashi Station to the southeast, there was an information board near the entrance of the building. It's really hard to find. There are no public baths left now, only information boards. It was the first place to draw a picture of Mt. Fuji on the wall of the public bath.
only the guide board.
It seems that there used to be Kikaiyu, which was the first time in a public bath to draw a paint painting here. Now there is only an information board near the entrance of the building. It doesn't seem to be enough to go all the way. It's just a stop by when you pass by.