Wall Street in Kabuto-cho and Kayabacho is not just the stock.
The neighborhoods of Kabuto-cho and Kayabacho, where securities companies gather mainly on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, are called Wall Street in Japan. There was "Wall Street" along the Kamejima River.
"Wall Street" in an old concrete building was an organic handmade Italian restaurant with plenty of drinks.
The entrance is reminiscent of Wall Street, which is booming in a boom. This building, Daini Inoue Building, was built in 1927, two years before the Great Depression.
What came to mind from the store's facade was "Great Gatsby". The stage is Fitzgerald's novel in New York in 1922, where a young man who came to work for a securities company talks about a party held every night in the mysterious wealthy mansion.
Inside the store with the scent of the early Taisho Showa era
The fragrance of the early Taisho Showa era drifts from the high ceiling in the store, the calm interior made of beams and trees as it was at that time. Shortly after the establishment of the Second Inoue Building, the Showa Depression and the World Depression occurred, and Japan pushed forward to the Sino-Japanese War and the Pacific War. And the Great Tokyo Air Raid. It's a building that has survived a difficult time.
This view is unique to a shop along the river. Retro lighting reflected on the glass. I feel Gatsby.
2-17-13 Nihonbashi Kayabacho 03-5695-1599 Exit 3, Tokyo Metro Kayabacho Exit 1 minute