Liners arrive at all four terminals:
Osanbashi Terminal
located in the city center. A free shuttle service is available to Yokohama station, which offers trains to Tokyo Central Station. The journey takes about 30 minutes.
Trains leave every four minutes. Near the terminal is the Nihon-Odori Station red line.
Address: 1-1-4, Kaigandori, Naka-ku, Yokohama, 231-0002, website
https://osanbashi.jp/english/
Terminal Yamashita
be near the Osanbashi terminal. Cruise liners are the least likely to land here. The entire infrastructure is the same as that of the Osanbashi terminal.
Address: 1-1-4 Kaigandori, Naka-ku, Yokohama, 231-0002
New Daikoku Pier Cruise Terminal
was opened in spring 2019. Its distinctive feature is that the terminal is built on an artificial island, next to the terminal is the Bay Bridge. Most cruise lines organize free transfers. Tsurumiono train station is 5 km from the terminal.
Address: 16 Daikokufuto, Tsurumi Ward, Yokohama, Kanagawa 230-0054.
Hammer head or Shinko Pier terminal,
often referred to as TBC. It was opened in the fall of 2019 and is located in the city center. You can reach the port by train, close to the station of the Minatomirai line (Bashamichi station - 10 minutes walk to the terminal and Minatomirai station - 12 minutes walk to the terminal) and JR line (from Sakuragicho 15 station minutes walk). You can also take the new Peer line bus. The bus runs on the route: Sakuragicho Station - Yokohama hammerhead.
Address: 2-14-1, Shinkou, Naka-ku, Yokohama, website:
https://www.hammerhead.co.jp/
Yokohama does not have its own airport, all flights arrive at Tokyo airports. Tokyo has two airports, one of them Narita, located about 100 km from Yokohama, the city can be reached by Narita Express, the journey will take approximately two hours. Haneda Airport is only 20 km away, but it receives much less international flights.
The Ramen Museum showcases nine ramen houses in a 1950s cityscape. The museum offers an exposition on the culture and history of ramen. You can also buy noodles and goods from all over Japan at the museum shop.
Chinatown in Yokohama is one of the largest in the world. It consists of over 200 shops where you can have lunch and dinner. Many typical Chinese landmarks can also be seen here, including the Pailow Gate, lined with feng shui principles, the Kanteibyo Temple, which houses the god of business, and the Masobyo Temple, which houses the sea goddess.
Yokohama Minatomirai 21. MinatoMirai21 is a shopping and dining district in Yokohama, dotted with major commercial and tourist attractions such as the 296-meter Landmark Tower and the giant CosmoClock21 Ferris wheel. The night view is also impressive.
The Sankeien Garden, designed and landscaped by Sankei Hara, a successful silk merchant and renowned art lover, is a traditional Japanese-style garden covering an immense 180,000 square meters. Ten of its buildings, including the Rinshunkaku in the inner garden and the former three-story Tomyoji Pagoda, are important cultural treasures in Japan. Plums, cherries, azaleas and fall foliage that bloom in the garden attract both Japanese and foreigners.