Sendai, Miyagi
1 upcoming event
Sendai Tanabata Festival
On the morning of August 6, the arcades of central Sendai are transformed overnight. Enor…
On the morning of August 6, the arcades of central Sendai are transformed overnight.
Enormous streamers of washi paper and bamboo — each taking months and hundreds of thousands of yen to make — fill the covered shopping streets from end to end.
The tradition reaches back to the time of Date Masamune, and resumed in the ruins of the city the year after the war ended.
More than two million visitors each year. The largest Tanabata festival in Japan.
On the western edge of the city, Ōsaki Hachimangū stands in deep lacquer and gold — its main hall a national treasure built under Date Masamune's orders in the early seventeenth century. The shrine anchors a city that still moves between its castle-town inheritance and something more restless: the Jozenji Street Jazz Festival filling a zelkova-lined boulevard in autumn, the Tanabata streamers hanging dense as rain from every arcade beam in August. Sendai carries its history without treating it as décor.
The food here is specific and argued over. Gyūtan — grilled beef tongue — arrives at the table with barley rice and oxtail soup, a combination that became a postwar local institution. Zunda mochi, edamame paste pressed over rice cakes, appears in convenience stores and specialist shops alike, its pale green color familiar to anyone who grew up in this part of Tōhoku. Sendai miso, darker and richer than most, goes into soups that smell of the morning. Crafts occupy a quieter register: Sendai tansu, the lacquered chests with iron fittings, and Tsutsumi ningyō clay figures, both rooted in the artisan economy that the Date domain once sustained.
West of the city, Akiu Onsen sits along the Natori River, a hot-spring district with a long history that functions less as a resort and more as a place where city residents go to decompress on weekends. The mountains behind — Taihaku, Izumigadake — are close enough that the city's edge feels genuinely open. Hiroseगawa runs through the center of Sendai itself, and the tree cover along its banks gives the city its old nickname, Mori no Miyako: the city of trees.
What converges here
- Miyagi Museum of Art
- Tohoku Fukushi University Serizawa Keisuke Museum of Art and Crafts
- Sendai City Museum
- Tohoku Gakuin University Museum
- History Museum Aoba Castle Exhibition Hall
- Kamei Museum of Art
- HOKUSHU Sendai City Science Museum
- Sendai City Astronomical Observatory
- Sendai City Yagiyama Zoological Park
- Sendai Umino-Mori Aquarium
- Osaki Hachimangu Shrine
- Sendai Castle Ruins
- Sendai Koriyama Government Office Site Group (Koriyama Government Office Site / Koriyama Temple Ruins)
- Iwakiri Castle Ruins
- Hayashi Shihei's Grave
- Tomizuka Tumulus
- Mutsu Kokubunji Temple Ruins
- Mutsu Kokubun Niji Temple Ruins
- Scenic Places along Oku no Hosomichi
- Bandoji
- Akiu Otaki
- Ane-taki (Ane Falls)
- Korean Plum Tree
- Tocho-ji Marumigaya
- Nigatake Ginkgo Tree
- Aobayama
- Mutsu Kokubunji Yakushido
- Tosho-gu Shrine
- Toshogu Shrine (Sendai)
- Tosho-gu Shrine
- Tosho-gu Shrine
- Toshogu Shrine
- Osaki Hachimangu Nagadoko
- Tohoku Gakuin Former Missionary Hall
- Zao
- Sakunami Onsen
- Daigamori Onsen
- Akiu Onsen
- Mount Daito
- Mount Izumigatake
- Mount Taihaku
- Sendai
- Sendai
- Nagamachi
- Nagamachi
- Kita-Sendai
- Kita-Sendai
- Sendai
- Sendai
- Sendai
- Sendai
- Izumi-Chuo
- Aobadori
- Kotodai-Koen
- Nagamachi-Minami
- Hirosedori
- Minami-Sendai
- Kita-Yobanchō
- Tomizawa
- Aobadori-Ichibancho
- Yaotome
- Gobashi
- Asahigaoka
- Kotsuru-Shinden
- Daihara
- Yakushido
- Miyaginohara
- Oroshimachi
- Yagiyama-Dobutsukoen
- Nakanosakae
- Kawaramachi
- Rikuzen-Takasago
- Aobayama
- Iwakiri
- Kuromatsu
- Aiko
- Renbo
- Rokuchonome
- Taishido
- Nagamachi-Ichome
- Rikuzen-Haranomachi
- Toshogu
- Fukutamachi
- Miyaginono-dori
- Kokusai-Center
- Arai
- Kawachi
- Higashi-Sendai
- Rikuzen-Ochiai
- Tsutsujigaoka
- Tohoku-Fukushi-Daimae
- Nigatake
- Omachi-Nishikoen
- Kunimi
- Atagobashi
- Kitayama
- Sakunami
- Oku-Shinkawa
- Kumagane
- Kuzuoka
- Rikuzen-Shirasawa
- Fukanuma Fishing Port