Sento in Chuo-ku (1) 1 Minato Yu
I went to Minato-yu in Hatchobori. It was a long line before 3 o'clock on Sunday. The sauna is popular. Two bathrooms are replaced every week. You can enjoy a variety of baths such as silk baths, electric baths, and jet baths.
A public bath in Chuo-ku on the 2nd day
Hinodeyu is a 4-minute walk from Tsukishima Station. It is a building public bath near "Tsukuda Kobashi" with a red balustrade, and it is easy to understand because the chimney also has a large public bath name. It's an entrance for men and women. The customers are mostly local elderly people. Some people have been waiting for 10 minutes before the store opens. It seems that there are many uses of "sento runners" who leave their luggage and run along the Sumida River.
Sento in Chuo-ku, 3 Kinharuyu
Kinharuyu is a long-established public bath in Tokyo located in Ginza during the Edo period. Soak in the bathtub decorated with Kutani porcelain tiles depicting colored carp and spring and autumn birds, and look up at Mount Fuji. The jet bus feels good. If there is a board with the word "wa" at the entrance, put it in. When you can't enter, it says "Nu". It means "boiled" and "drained" water.
A public bath in Chuo-ku, April Shima Onsen
It is a public bath located in the middle of Monja Street in Tsukishima. The local elderly are full of karan.
I found the letters of Tsukishima Onsen written at the entrance on the first floor and the altar and offertory box in the back. Take an EV or stairs to the second floor of the building.
The temperature and the electric bath are soft. There is also a jet bath and a sauna.