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Tokyo Flea Market
Old things alone draw this many people. In Chofu, Tokyo, twice a year, in spring and autum…
Old things alone draw this many people. In Chofu, Tokyo, twice a year, in spring and autumn, the Tokyo Flea Market is held. Hundreds of vendors gather from home and abroad with antiques, old books, vintage clothing, Nordic furniture, and antique tableware. Nothing is new; everything has been used and aged, its scratches and tarnish part of its history. Tens of thousands come, some seeking a particular treasure, others wandering with no aim, all of them drawn to old things. Why do people love what is old? Perhaps because time lives within it, the trace of someone's life that a new object can never hold. There are workshops and food stalls as well, more than one can take in a single day. Old things passed to the next person; not discarded, but carried on. One of Tokyo's two great flea markets.
Soba noodles arrive in lacquered trays at the tea houses near 深大寺, the broth carrying a quiet earthiness that suits the temple grounds. The temple itself was founded in the Nara period, and the surrounding lanes still hold that particular stillness — stone lanterns, old cryptomeria, the faint smell of incense drifting past the entrance to 神代植物公園, which occupies what was once the temple's own land. Chofu wears its history without announcing it.
The city has a second, stranger layer: film. 角川大映スタジオ has been producing movies here since the prewar decades, when the area earned the nickname "the Hollywood of the Orient" — a phrase that sounds outsized now, but the studios remain active, and the annual シネマフェスティバル in February keeps that thread alive. Meanwhile, 近藤勇, the Shinsengumi commander, was born here, and the 西光寺temple holds a seated statue in his memory. October brings a local festival in his name. These histories do not overlap neatly; they simply coexist, the way things do in a place that has accumulated rather than curated its past.
What grounds daily life is the geography — the Musashino plateau dropping toward the Tama River, the崖線ridgelines that shape the neighborhood contours. Trains reach Shinjuku in around twenty minutes, yet the residential streets feel unhurried. A glass of 深大寺ビール at a bench near the temple, the sound of pigeons on the roof of a tea house, the mid-afternoon light through the park's canopy — Chofu moves at its own pace, indifferent to the city pressing close on all sides.
Stay in Chofu, Tokyo
What converges here
- Shimofuda Site
- Jindai-ji Castle Ruins
- Chofu
- Sengawa
- Tsutsuji-ga-oka
- Kokuryo
- Tobita-kyū
- Shibasaki
- Nishi-Chofu
- Keiō-Tamagawa
- Fuda
- Chofu
- Chofu Airfield