The long, overstuffed pillow is called a Bolster. It is used to Prop or "Bolster" your back when sitting up in bed, or anywhere you need more support. There are reasons for most "throw pillows". They make uncomfortable pieces of furniture, comfortable.
@@LakesideGazer Yeah, they tend to be more decoration at that point than anything. And a lot of the time in the US, they're NOT washed as far as I've been able to tell. So my family takes them off of the bed immediately and propping them somewhere else in the room.
I haven't had any fun lately, You bring me joy!I love the kind and generous heartwarming atmosphere that you create, your kind, easygoing, warm vibe. I like the essence how you live on. I need to be true to myself and find a job I am passionate about. I want to find a way to live as who I really am.
Wish you luck , and take it easy my friend, life is too short let us try and enjoy the minuscule yet wholesome moments , that's the only meaning to life.There is no heading meaning or purpose..Just a celebration of events.
A luxury room with a big mistake-dirty glasses!! But the view was interesting, especially during the day when the gates were closed. The Hotel just says "History" as soon as you enter it. Thaks for the tour.
If you dont have the money to stay at the Station Hotel, you can always get a station ticket for 150 Yen. This allows you to enter the train station and get onto the plattform of the Shinkansen. As most of them start or finish here, you will have plenty of time to take pictures of them, see how effecient the trains are cleaned, what happens between journeys etc. I love it (and yes, I love trains), and its a cheap pleasure. Also, in Tokyo station, there is a lot of history, as the Shinkansen was "born" here, and two prime ministers of Japan were murdered here.
Even though you don't speak, somehow your excitement is clearly translated through the video 😊 Im glad you ticked off a bucket list item 🎉 Arigatou gozaimasu 🤘
The “bath mat” is placed on the floor for 2-reasons: first is because the tile flooring is “cold;” and second, the management doesn’t want the guests “to slip and fall” with their wet feet, after taking a bath or shower
This was a great stay. Definitely something to experience at least once. Loved seeing the difference of having people in the station and then everything being quite with no one around only to have life start over the next morning.
I never even knew that there is a hotel in that big busy train station. The original architects and builders did a superb job. I can't believe you are on the 3rd floor and it is so quiet. And it is so beautiful, thank you for sharing.
Beautiful my friend my word I would have a fit traveling with you go to so many beautiful places I don't know why you like traveling alone I guess for peace but I would have fun traveling with you much love be safe have fun for me 😊
I’ve stayed there many times (in almost every room type) and will be staying there in a couple months. I guess I’m a regular, as they upgraded me to the Maisonette suite once (2 floors). But like your room, it was a long walk from the elevator. Sadly the breakfast buffet has declined greatly since pre-covid, the western selection is almost nonexistent now and portions are tiny. The signature French toast use to be so good, now 😢
2:39 The length of the hotel is one of its few downsides. After a long day and/or after you've been out drinking, making your way back to your room can be a bit of an ordeal lol. The dedicated north entrance that you show is convenient; however it gets locked by 1am. If you're back later than that you have to trudge all the way to the main entrance and then all the way down to your room :/
Gorgeous view! The bed and amenities look lovely (except the dusty glasses…didn’t expect that). I’ve never actually wandered around d Tokyo station, so I’ll have a look at the domes next time.
The dusty glasses were awful, but my eye first caught the upholstered bolsters and small throw pillow placed directly on the sheets -- those can't be cleaned very often. That annoys me at any hotel. Charging for the few bottles of drinks on top of the extremely steep room charge is also pretty tacky. It was great to see it through your eyes, though. The station itself is such a lovely building.
Certainly more impressive than the Hotel Granvia in Kyoto station, which I recently stayed in! (However, the Granvia was a lot cheaper and a bit bigger).
And here I am in England thinking my hotel room is good if it includes more than two UHT milk in the tea caddy, the remote control works and there's an ironing board included in the room rather than having to ring reception and ask for one.
The long pillow is a Bolster, You can put it down the middle of the bed if you are sharing with someone who is just a friend or relative not a lover, so you can each have your own space without embarrassment
Dang, I was there in April last year and didn't know there was a hotel there or even look up in the dome. I guess I was too busy finding the station stamp before heading up to Hirosaki for their cherry blossom festival.
Great hotel review. Congrats on checking off a hotel on your bucket list. You should list your recommendations on Plannin. I couldn't find your email. Thank you
what is the machine in the hallway at 2:24? I have no idea what that is, we don't have those where I live. If I had to guess I'd say one of those pants-presses Japanese hotels seem to like, but it appears to be turned on in the video, so it's probably something different?
There are certainly some magnificent Victorian era Railway hotels around. The Midland Hotel in Manchester and its twin on London at what was the other end of the line at the time, are great examples. We had a couple of nights at the Midland Hotel last year. However we found that retrofitting modern plumbing into Victorian hotels has its disadvantages, with the waste pipes from upstairs running in the wall at the back of the bed. Niagara Falls every time someone upstairs showered or flushed. Also, some drunken idiot at a function downstairs set off the fire alarm at 2am. Twice.
13:06 the ‘dust’ is what happens to glasses in dish washers, our everyday glasses go in the dishwasher, but our best ones for special occasions are still shiny because they get washed by hand. In the bathroom it’s a bath man, to soak up any water from your feet and keeps your feet off the cold tiles
Staying at that room warrant some motion just to get to the room itself :3 Wonder if you could do a similar video in future, but with a hotel that have more of the 'traditional Japanese feeling'? Many of us foreigners would be very happy ^_^
Go down to the basement level a little ways from the train station entrance out your window and look for "Ramen Street" it's a little "alley" with like 10 or so little ramen drops. Metcha Oishi!
At that price they leave dusty glasses😮 The pillow shaped like a sausage is old name " bolster pillow", or new name " lumbar pillow". Used to prop up in bed to sitting or behind low back in an unsupportive chair or couch. Dome people put them under knees when lying on their back but that is bad for circulation.
"Many people thought it's just a Station" I know the station is a city inside a city and there's also underground, shopping, bento shops, restaurants, convenience stores, etc. Everything is in one place but i never discover Tokyo Station Hotel.
Some fancy hotels have their own brand of toileteries. It's possible the branding only exists in the Hotel and it's just some other brand they buy. Also, first time I've seen a Japanese hotel with a mini bar.
It did look like the room had nice amenities, but the TV sitting on the desk? Needed to be wall mounted at least 9 inches from top of desk. Center of TV should be a few inches above eye level when sitting at the end of at the headboard of bed. The way it sits now, your feet will be blocking the lower half of TV. Paying $517 for the room means you are patfor service as well. I would have tested the service and had them bring in fresh clean glassware and clean up the drawers. That may on the bathroom floor is meant for comfort and safety. Keeps your wet feet from slipping on the floor after you exit shower.
I just recently learned that there is a hotel at Tokyo Station, in the old and beautiful red brick building. I think that it might be a great place to stay for a night for train geeks, but I feel that the price is way too high. The room is big, especially for Tokyo standards, but the decoration of the room is for me like in my grandmas place somewhere in Europe (which isnt meant as a compliment). Also, the whole hotel seems to be very formal and "stuffy", and thats something that I dont enjoy at all. The worst thing for me however, is that for this price, you dont have even some drinks from the fridge included, and that the windows to the dome are not perfectly clean. But well, that is just me, and you seem to be very happy with it, so I am also happy for you. Luckily, not everybody likes the same things.
Concerning the mat in the bathroom: you should always be without shoes in the bathroom (like you take of your shoes, before entering a room with tatami mats). And the mat is, when you step out of the shower, and your feet are wet, that you can step onto a clean and dry mat.
It looks beautiful except they need to dust and clean the drinking glasses. That dust was there for a while lol apparently the housekeepers don’t open that drawer much
5:49 Looks like the price is for the space. Most Japanese hotel room are pretty cramped. At least the room is VERY QUITE. 7:57 Weird. I'm sure Japanese have bath mats 10:22 Why is there a phone next to the toilet????f
The long, overstuffed pillow is called a Bolster. It is used to Prop or "Bolster" your back when sitting up in bed, or anywhere you need more support. There are reasons for most "throw pillows". They make uncomfortable pieces of furniture, comfortable.
In SE Asia, bolsters are common in any bed. We cuddle it when we sleep. They’re soft and fluffy, not hard like wood.
@@yunorinipariman4808 In the US, those are called body pillows, and aren't really well suited for sitting up against because they're so soft.
Only the usa! Many strange things there
@@sjefhendrickx2257 These were used in European luxury homes since God was a pup..
@@LakesideGazer Yeah, they tend to be more decoration at that point than anything. And a lot of the time in the US, they're NOT washed as far as I've been able to tell. So my family takes them off of the bed immediately and propping them somewhere else in the room.
Looks pretty swanky. Thanks for taking us along!
I haven't had any fun lately, You bring me joy!I love the kind and generous heartwarming atmosphere that you create, your kind, easygoing, warm vibe. I like the essence how you live on. I need to be true to myself and find a job I am passionate about. I want to find a way to live as who I really am.
Wish you luck , and take it easy my friend, life is too short let us try and enjoy the minuscule yet wholesome moments , that's the only meaning to life.There is no heading meaning or purpose..Just a celebration of events.
The room and corridors remind me of the Chateau Frontenac in Quebec City, another station hotel built about 20 years before the Tokyo Station Hotel
Right after I saw what you paid I thought, "There better be some awesome curry for dinner!"
A luxury room with a big mistake-dirty glasses!! But the view was interesting, especially during the day when the gates were closed. The Hotel just says "History" as soon as you enter it. Thaks for the tour.
Inexcusable. That much money and glasses are a basic.
@@ElisaMoore-r8l true! If it was me, I'd be on the phone about it!
2:32
"The Shining" vibes 😬
I was expecting to see the twins around the corner.
And Jack Nicholson chasing you with a axe in his hand 🤣
If you dont have the money to stay at the Station Hotel, you can always get a station ticket for 150 Yen. This allows you to enter the train station and get onto the plattform of the Shinkansen. As most of them start or finish here, you will have plenty of time to take pictures of them, see how effecient the trains are cleaned, what happens between journeys etc. I love it (and yes, I love trains), and its a cheap pleasure. Also, in Tokyo station, there is a lot of history, as the Shinkansen was "born" here, and two prime ministers of Japan were murdered here.
Beautiful! This place looks so comfortable! Thank you for sharing!
That is a very nice room. 8:21 I really like that countertop.
My Tokyo Station Food Quest: Discovering Unexpected Delights from my 2nd channel
ruclips.net/video/iZxUVIuiHTY/видео.html
Tokyo Station has survived many things! It is a treasure of the Japanese people! GREAT video, STJ! 👍👏❤😍🥰✨
So glad to see you today! Thanks for the post.
What a gorgeous room! Interesting that it's in the train station and has windows looking into the station. I can't get over how QUIET it is in there!
Even though you don't speak, somehow your excitement is clearly translated through the video 😊
Im glad you ticked off a bucket list item 🎉
Arigatou gozaimasu 🤘
The “bath mat” is placed on the floor for 2-reasons: first is because the tile flooring is “cold;” and second, the management doesn’t want the guests “to slip and fall” with their wet feet, after taking a bath or shower
Great video! Thanks for sharing!
very fancy and comfortable looking
Thank you for sharing your videos with us all please continue 😊
This was a great stay. Definitely something to experience at least once. Loved seeing the difference of having people in the station and then everything being quite with no one around only to have life start over the next morning.
Gorgeous hotel. Thank you for showing us!
The dark face towels are for ladies removing makeup, instead of stains on a white face cloth
Wow really classy hotel by to the train station. Love the traditional architectural design. I’d love to stay there.
I never even knew that there is a hotel in that big busy train station. The original architects and builders did a superb job. I can't believe you are on the 3rd floor and it is so quiet. And it is so beautiful, thank you for sharing.
Nice! Thanks for sharing!
Amazing room and it even came with luxury dust!
Very convenient. Good walking shoes helps a lot
Been to the Tokyo Station several times and never realized the hotel was in the actual station building. What a beautiful hotel too. Next trip maybe.
Beautiful my friend my word I would have a fit traveling with you go to so many beautiful places I don't know why you like traveling alone I guess for peace but I would have fun traveling with you much love be safe have fun for me 😊
Nice long walk to the room 😊!
Beautiful hotel. I wouldn't know what to do first in a luxury stay of that level. Tokyo takes on a very calming atmosphere in the rain. ❤❤❤
Amazing hotel
I’ve stayed there many times (in almost every room type) and will be staying there in a couple months. I guess I’m a regular, as they upgraded me to the Maisonette suite once (2 floors). But like your room, it was a long walk from the elevator. Sadly the breakfast buffet has declined greatly since pre-covid, the western selection is almost nonexistent now and portions are tiny. The signature French toast use to be so good, now 😢
Love you videos i watch on my personal youtube channel but i finally got the courage and decided to make my own travel channel
Everything was soo beautiful and I love the room too.
Beautiful place wish I was there 😍 love from the us
nice. one day I would like to stay there aswell. ❤
2:39 The length of the hotel is one of its few downsides. After a long day and/or after you've been out drinking, making your way back to your room can be a bit of an ordeal lol. The dedicated north entrance that you show is convenient; however it gets locked by 1am. If you're back later than that you have to trudge all the way to the main entrance and then all the way down to your room :/
Omg I didn’t know someone could be looking down in the station ! Amazing 😅
Hah, I've walked through there many times and never realized that some of the windows were hotel rooms. Neat.
The hotel is absolutely beautiful. It reminds me of what the apartments at Kensington Palace would look like.
Beautiful
窓からの東京駅ドームの眺めは見ていて飽きないでしょうね。
お茶やお食事のシーンも出て来ないかな?と見ていました。
Gorgeous view! The bed and amenities look lovely (except the dusty glasses…didn’t expect that). I’ve never actually wandered around d Tokyo station, so I’ll have a look at the domes next time.
I was curious about this hotel 🏨 Thanks for the info 😊
The dusty glasses were awful, but my eye first caught the upholstered bolsters and small throw pillow placed directly on the sheets -- those can't be cleaned very often. That annoys me at any hotel. Charging for the few bottles of drinks on top of the extremely steep room charge is also pretty tacky. It was great to see it through your eyes, though. The station itself is such a lovely building.
I was thinking that too. Let the cheaper drinks be free at least
If you have money to pay for a 5 star hotel you have money to pay for the drinks too. If you don't go to a f motel
Hope you slept well. The hotel looks nice
That is a beautiful room!
That Maker's Mark is so tasty.
Certainly more impressive than the Hotel Granvia in Kyoto station, which I recently stayed in! (However, the Granvia was a lot cheaper and a bit bigger).
Women's bath is on the other side
Beautiful place.
Beautiful room, but is it legal to have an STJ video with no food?
😂
No Food!!! Aww, that's what I come here for.
Great video. This hotel is suitable for businessman or for luxurious traveler. For someone who have limited budget, Internet Cafe still a great idea.
*This is a wall" made me chuckle. 😂
Fancy! 😊☺️
"This is a wall" never lose your sense of humor!
Wow. ❤
Hi great video thanks. What is the name of your other RUclips channel?
And here I am in England thinking my hotel room is good if it includes more than two UHT milk in the tea caddy, the remote control works and there's an ironing board included in the room rather than having to ring reception and ask for one.
I took a photo of that beautiful dome when i was there at the station but never thought there's a hotel up there😅
Lovely hotel😊
The long pillow is a Bolster, You can put it down the middle of the bed if you are sharing with someone who is just a friend or relative not a lover, so you can each have your own space without embarrassment
Dang, I was there in April last year and didn't know there was a hotel there or even look up in the dome. I guess I was too busy finding the station stamp before heading up to Hirosaki for their cherry blossom festival.
Great hotel review. Congrats on checking off a hotel on your bucket list. You should list your recommendations on Plannin. I couldn't find your email. Thank you
what is the machine in the hallway at 2:24? I have no idea what that is, we don't have those where I live. If I had to guess I'd say one of those pants-presses Japanese hotels seem to like, but it appears to be turned on in the video, so it's probably something different?
There are certainly some magnificent Victorian era Railway hotels around. The Midland Hotel in Manchester and its twin on London at what was the other end of the line at the time, are great examples. We had a couple of nights at the Midland Hotel last year. However we found that retrofitting modern plumbing into Victorian hotels has its disadvantages, with the waste pipes from upstairs running in the wall at the back of the bed. Niagara Falls every time someone upstairs showered or flushed. Also, some drunken idiot at a function downstairs set off the fire alarm at 2am. Twice.
13:06 the ‘dust’ is what happens to glasses in dish washers, our everyday glasses go in the dishwasher, but our best ones for special occasions are still shiny because they get washed by hand.
In the bathroom it’s a bath man, to soak up any water from your feet and keeps your feet off the cold tiles
The room is lovely and well worth it for a treat to yourself
You needed it in preparation for those two pretty sad ferries. I do appreciate your sacrifice going on them
What was the thing in the drawer beside the pajamas?
Dusty glasses is just fiber in the diet. Gives the bubbles in the Perrier something to cling to.😊
Staying at that room warrant some motion just to get to the room itself :3
Wonder if you could do a similar video in future, but with a hotel that have more of the 'traditional Japanese feeling'? Many of us foreigners would be very happy ^_^
Lovely. Did you ask the hotel to clean that drawer? Would have liked to have a tour of the hotel.
Not sure what that type of pillow is actually called, but I've always called it a throw pillow, in that I throw it off the bed the moment I see them.
I think that specific type of throw pillow is called a bolster pillow.
High price, beautiful place
What is that Panasonic thing in the drawer with the pajamas?
Beautiful experience, stunning room. Wonder if the hotel is haunted 👻
As aLWays good video!
Go down to the basement level a little ways from the train station entrance out your window and look for "Ramen Street" it's a little "alley" with like 10 or so little ramen drops. Metcha Oishi!
At that price they leave dusty glasses😮 The pillow shaped like a sausage is old name " bolster pillow", or new name " lumbar pillow". Used to prop up in bed to sitting or behind low back in an unsupportive chair or couch. Dome people put them under knees when lying on their back but that is bad for circulation.
The 5-star dust 😂
"Many people thought it's just a Station"
I know the station is a city inside a city and there's also underground, shopping, bento shops, restaurants, convenience stores, etc. Everything is in one place but i never discover Tokyo Station Hotel.
there is no way 500$ is justified for that room. I could stay 5 nights at every other hotel close to the station and see more of japan
The hotel is beautiful and the view of the dome was nice, but that small room should have been half the price you paid. Glad you enjoyed it though.
You ARE A VIP! To us at least 😁🇬🇧
Some fancy hotels have their own brand of toileteries. It's possible the branding only exists in the Hotel and it's just some other brand they buy. Also, first time I've seen a Japanese hotel with a mini bar.
I never noticed until this video but the planes, trains and ships have a lot of background noise. Todays episode is quiet and calm
I believe the white floor towel is to keep your feet dry as you exit the shower barefooted. Could it be a western thing?
Is this hotel owned by one of the train lines ? They have been divesting some of their real estate but own a lot of property .
It did look like the room had nice amenities, but the TV sitting on the desk? Needed to be wall mounted at least 9 inches from top of desk. Center of TV should be a few inches above eye level when sitting at the end of at the headboard of bed. The way it sits now, your feet will be blocking the lower half of TV. Paying $517 for the room means you are patfor service as well. I would have tested the service and had them bring in fresh clean glassware and clean up the drawers. That may on the bathroom floor is meant for comfort and safety. Keeps your wet feet from slipping on the floor after you exit shower.
But what was the important dinner party for!? What did you wear!? 😅
I just recently learned that there is a hotel at Tokyo Station, in the old and beautiful red brick building. I think that it might be a great place to stay for a night for train geeks, but I feel that the price is way too high. The room is big, especially for Tokyo standards, but the decoration of the room is for me like in my grandmas place somewhere in Europe (which isnt meant as a compliment). Also, the whole hotel seems to be very formal and "stuffy", and thats something that I dont enjoy at all. The worst thing for me however, is that for this price, you dont have even some drinks from the fridge included, and that the windows to the dome are not perfectly clean.
But well, that is just me, and you seem to be very happy with it, so I am also happy for you. Luckily, not everybody likes the same things.
Concerning the mat in the bathroom: you should always be without shoes in the bathroom (like you take of your shoes, before entering a room with tatami mats). And the mat is, when you step out of the shower, and your feet are wet, that you can step onto a clean and dry mat.
Are you sure this is 44m2?
Round tubular cushions are called “bolster cushions”
❤❤
Thanks for always supporting me! I appreciate it.
It looks beautiful except they need to dust and clean the drinking glasses. That dust was there for a while lol apparently the housekeepers don’t open that drawer much
So much walking not enough eating. You’ll fade away!
wow. $500 USD is $1000 AUD ... an expensive night in Australia!
the room windows should be one-way glass that way nobody can look in …
5:49 Looks like the price is for the space. Most Japanese hotel room are pretty cramped. At least the room is VERY QUITE.
7:57 Weird. I'm sure Japanese have bath mats
10:22 Why is there a phone next to the toilet????f
A bath mat for after getting out of the shower so you don’t get the floor wet or slip and fall.