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Last call for Kabukicho red-light district

23 Comments
By Brett Bull

The framed certificate in Yoshihisa Shimoda’s office acknowledges his successful completion of a training program on thwarting the activities of boryokudan, or criminal organizations. Such an accreditation from the Tokyo public safety commissioner should be extremely practical given his task at hand.

Shimoda is the office manager of Kabukicho Renaissance, an organization whose goals are to rehabilitate the image of Japan’s largest red-light district, located just northeast of Shinjuku station. “At the end of the day, we want Kabukicho to be clean,” says Shimoda, who along with two other staff members began operations in April. “We want security, safety and a pleasant environment.”

For years, it was well-known that the bread and butter of a typical yakuza gangster working the darkened streets of Kabukicho has been the sale of ordinary items like hand towels and ice cubes at heavily marked-up prices to the area’s seedy bars and "kyabakura" (cabaret clubs) in exchange for “protections.” The establishment of Kabukicho Renaissance coincides with a police crackdown on sleaze that has shut a large swath of "fuzoku" (sex-related) businesses. In place of debauchery, Shimoda’s organization is promoting festivals, concerts, nighttime illuminations and patrols that perform building inspections to counter gang activities.

Perhaps assisting his cause will be this month’s closing of the Shinjuku Koma Theater, Kabukicho’s symbolic center. Should a sparkling office tower rise in its place, as many believe, the cleanup of the area could accelerate, sending many of the neighborhood’s regulars scurrying for new turf.

The 2,000-seat Koma, which opened in 1956 as a venue for kabuki and enka shows, welcomed 1 million visitors annually during its heyday. Its demise comes after film giant Toho made the company that owns the theater, Koma Stadium, a wholly owned subsidiary. In the basement of the Koma building is a Toho film theater that will also close in the coming weeks.

Toho intends to redevelop the site together with the rundown building it owns next door. A company spokesman would not comment on its plans for the property, only saying that Toho was still in the process of dealing with lease contracts for the various other tenants.

However, in a column that appeared in the Aug 27 issue of Newsweek Japan, restaurateur, author and Kabukicho guide Xiaomu Lee proposed that a “Kabukicho Hills” complex be built. But unlike the Mori Building towers that have cropped up in ritzy areas of Tokyo, Lee suggests the Kabukicho version stay close to the area’s roots and include hostess bars and sex clubs.

Such a development would clash with the recent introduction of conventional businesses and facilities that have begun to galvanize Kabukicho, which was named after a kabuki theater in the late ’40s that was planned but never built.

Conventional businesss moving in

Earlier this year, American hotel company Best Western established a franchise near the Shinjuku Ward office, and Japanese chain Hotel Villa Fontaine opened an inn near Shokuan Dori. Also this year, Osaka-based talent agency Yoshimoto Kogyo moved its Tokyo branch to a former school building, one room of which houses the Kabukicho Renaissance office.

Brochures from Kabukicho Renaissance promote the newly brick-lined sidewalks and sparkling parking barricades on Hanamichi Dori, which splits Kabukicho in half and fronts one side of a neighborhood cornerstone, the Furin Kaikan. That building’s Parisienne coffee shop, a well-known gangster meeting place, converted half of its floor space into a pharmacy following a bloody shootout that led to one death and three arrests in 2002.

Other moves included the razing of an entire block of shops peddling adult DVDs earlier this year; the site is now a parking lot. Raids on similar establishments last month netted 17 arrests for the sale of films that were not properly censored.

The host club industry has been a continual target of regulation due to aggressive street-soliciting and cases of girls being gouged for bills that ran to hundreds of thousands of yen. To show that they operate within the bounds of the law and are not at the mercy of the mob, numerous clubs banded together in 2006 to found the Shinjuku Kabukicho Host Club Anti-Organized Crime Association.

Observers have noted that the shift began with the installation of video cameras soon after a fire tore through a neighborhood mahjong parlor in 2001, killing 44 people. Yet the harshest blow has certainly been stricter enforcement of the Law Regulating Adult Entertainment Businesses, which was enacted in 1948 and requires all venues providing entertainment — of any kind — to begin removing customers at midnight and shut down at 1am. Dance halls, hostess bars and sex clubs throughout Tokyo have come under increased pressure.

Complicating matters was a 2006 amendment to the law that requires fuller disclosure on lease and registration documents for shops applying to offer “sexual services.” And more than one piece of legislation introduced over the last two years has restricted hosts from “catching” potential female clients in the street.

Closing its cabin a few months ago was "kyabakura" Sky Heart, in which ladies outfitted in stewardess uniforms were open for molestation by customers. A “new half” cabaret, in which the staff are women who were once men, has received numerous visits from law enforcement. A mama-san going by the name Akita says that the club’s floor shows, which are fully nude and showcase mind-bogglingly amazing surgery, have been reduced from roughly four to two per evening due to the crackdown. “Once they catch you going past 1 a.m., they come back again,” she says of the police presence. “It’s like baseball. One, two, three strikes and you are out.”

Crackdown linked to Tokyo's Olympic bid

Insiders interviewed for this article almost unanimously believe that the motive behind a wholesome Kabukicho is the doing of Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara, who is making a push for the metropolis to host the 2016 Olympics.

Location, too, is a key. With the newly opened Fukutoshin line rolling past to the east and the Yamanote line bordering on the west, Kabukicho is well situated for an influx of legitimate businesses. “Right now, Osaki and Odaiba have many office buildings,” says Masaru Jo, director of the Kabukicho Shopping Center Promotion Association, whose fifth-floor office is around the corner from the Koma complex. “But they are not convenient. There is a high demand for the Koma space as an office.” Jo predicts that, given current building laws, a structure between nine and 15 floors could rise on the site.

A report compiled by Jo’s association indicates that, each day, 250,000 people shuttle past Kabukicho’s approximately 3,500 pleasure shops, many of which are not prepared to let the demise of the Koma be the domino that quickens the cleanup movement.

Since bars and restaurants that exist exclusively for drinking and eating are exempt from the 1am law, dozens of “girl’s bars” have appeared. These are basically rearranged hostess clubs in which fashionably dressed ladies tend bar opposite the seated customer, with the crucial difference being that the pair are not elbow-to-elbow — as would be seen as “entertainment,” at least in the minds of the police.

The National Police Agency, however, understands the true nature of the bars. “We consider them to be of the same category,” said an NPA official in an interview in October. “We are not distinguishing them from other adult businesses.” To show that the authorities are indeed monitoring the situation, a 24-year-old female employee at girl’s bar Double was arrested for sitting next a male patron on a sofa just before 2am on a Saturday morning in October.

Host club magnate Takeshi Aida, who founded his first venue in Kabukicho in 1972, last year established his second onabe bar, where the staff are dressed as men. Attired in sharp white shirts and dark vests, the girls at Marilyn 2 serve drinks into the wee hours of the morning from behind a curving counter bathed in blue LEDs.

Hiroharu Kimura, chairman of sex-trade publishers Creators Company Connection, believes that Kabukicho in its old form is dead. “Right now, I think it is a great time for everyone to reflect on how we view the issue,” he explains in his office just north of Kabukicho. “The law has been in place for such a long time but enforcement has become lax. It’s like traffic laws — if the maximum speed is 40kph, people will drive 50 kph.”

Free entertainment guide Poke Para (“Pocket Paradise”) is one of Creators’ numerous titles catering to sexual services industries. Yet it is Deri Heru Manzoku, which offers ads for girls who can be ordered by phone or internet to meet at a designated location, that Kimura believes represents the future. “The shift will be to the internet,” Kimura says, adding that brick and mortar shops are not practical in the current enforcement climate. “The guide is portable and the information is accessible by a mobile phone.”

And what if fuzoku operations are shuttered entirely? “They will scatter all around the city,” he says. “I find it troubling that the general public will stumble across these places.” Kimura cites the Taito-ku neighborhood of Yoshiwara as an example of a red light district that’s easily controlled because it’s confined to a limited area.

Meanwhile, Kabukicho maintains its familiar pulse. Hosts sporting their trademark frilly hairdos and toting copies of Poke Para, open to the page where their club’s ad is located, still patrol the streets around Hanamichi Dori. Even on a typical weekday at 10am, a line snakes down the stairs leading to strip club T.S. Music, which all day features shows of ladies disrobing from schoolgirl and nurse uniforms for 5,000 yen.

Nor have the gangs left the area entirely. Renaissance’s Shimoda guarantees that gangster offices are still scattered around Kabukicho, and at any of the festivals at nearby Hanazono Shrine, where many people come to pray for prosperous business ventures, visitors with pinkies trimmed at the first joint are not an unusual a sight.

Retail association director Jo believes that regardless of what the future holds — glistening office tower or otherwise — Tokyo’s legendary red light district will retain some of its character; after all, that is why people come. “The attraction remains the same,” he says. “People come to Kabukicho because it is Kabukicho.”

This story originally appeared in Metropolis magazine (www.metropolis.co.jp).

© Japan Today

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.


23 Comments
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this is the exactly same thing that happened in Times Square in NYC in the 80's. yes, kabukicho needs some renewal, but there's no way all those thousands of "establishments" will move too far. there's just too much money at stake.

Also, efforts to thwart the yakuza are futile. They are still walking the streets, dividing out turf, and getting extortion money.

The fact that police could arrest a girl at a bar just for having a drink with a customer at 2am is hilarious, considering the things that happen in other places.

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Tokyo is becoming very boring...

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Ahh what? Who cares, most foriegners wouldn't be allowed in those places anyway... Bring on the Olympics..

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Thanks to this stupid "Kabukicho Renaissance," my favorite pub is being shut down. Do we really need yet another Roppongi Hills-esque area with more shopping centers, all carrying the same shops, most of which are already on the other side of Shinjuku Station? Rrrrrr.....

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You don't pay the guvnor you get shut down. But it's good to know that the sex clubs will still be there in one form or another. Life would be very boring indeed without them.

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Replacing debauchery with festivals, concerts, nighttime illuminations, huh? So they want Shinjuku to become as boring as Ginza?!

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Yakuza, and please don't flatter them with the misnomer 'yaks', are like flies.. They hang around garbage, feed on garbage and when you shoo them, the fly up and settle back down somewhere near. The great stink of this society and the sooner they're forced under rocks the better... Listening Keystones?

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Sex clubs could just be moved into the kobans. Less distance for the officers to cover when they want a drink or need to fill their quotas for the month.

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I have a great idea: In a time where Japan is in serious need of inspiration and freedom, let's crack down on fun and make it as boring as possible!

Why don't they just legalize prostitution and let people do what they want?

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the police and politicians will never clean up Kabukicho, never. they get too much from it

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Kubukicho is a Japanese only place anyway. Name an area in Tokyo where there aren't sex shops that people will go to even if Kabukicho goes the way of Ginza? Ugusuidani or Okubo for Korean, Dogenzaka for Chinese/Japanese; Roppongi for aged haggard Chinese etc etc.

Such a big city, so many choices if you're into that thing.

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Closing the KOMA is really a slap in the face to ALL fans of ENKA!!! As far as the rest of Kabuki-cho The energy is what attracts tourists in the first place!The Fag polititians killed times sqare,spreasing out the Adult buisnesses to many residetial areas in N.Y.C.and turning 42nd. street into a Pityful "disneyLand"TheSokaya will always make out Just like here in N.Y.

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Well, even if you say ALL fans of Enka, the greater half of them are senior citizens, and when you consider that Jero is the only enka singer to land #4 on the Oricon.....well, Koma didn't have a bright future.

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Ahh, the end of an era, I have so many fond memories of Kabukicho from years past (before I settled down) actually very gaijin friendly once they got to know you and much more laid back and less expensive than areas such as Roppongi. I will miss it, and miss the people there most of whom had very little connection to the yakuza, just paid a small (much smaller than in places like New York) fee each month.

I've known quite a few owners of clubs in the area, and I guess now they will after years of saving up so they could open their own places have no alternative but to try and become OL's and be part of Ishihara's concept of what good women should be.

Yes, the stories I could tell.....

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Maybe the new Kabukicho will be "Ikebukuro"...a lot of kyabakura and fuzoku there too..

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Sendai's Kokubuncho has always been more fun anyway.

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Couldn't care. Never been there, and no intention of going.

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This has a lot to do with the Chinese mafia now being the big fish in Kabukicho. The Yaks have moved out elsewhere and in true Japanese tradition, these new places will be allowed to carry out their business unhindered by the keystones.

I wonder when they're gonna get round to evicting the Yamaguchi gumi from their HQ?

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'Thanks to this stupid "Kabukicho Renaissance," my favorite pub is being shut down'

yeah, one of mine too!! if you're talking about the angel, my friend who works there said they're kind of joining another bar down the road. not sure how that's going to work though.

i think it would be a shame if kabukicho was smartened up - i love the seedy atmosphere and it's a fun place to walk through at any time of night. inamongst the sex clubs there's also a lot of great little rock bars which i imagine would have a hard time if they make it more business orientated. i'm moving to osaka if that happens!

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first, they get rid of beer vending machines in tokyo, now the seedy night life. just another reason why kansai is more fun.

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Hmm. I wonder where the Yoshiwara of Edo is going to slink off to now.

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Why does this remind me of the Disneyfication of Times Square?

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I have been to a couple of strip shows in Kabukicho, will miss the audience participation.

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