Venue & Hospitality
Welcome to the Official Attendee Housing Site for the 16th World Medical Nanotechnology Congress scheduled at September 03-04, 2018 Tokyo, Japan
Accommodations will be provided at Conference Venue:
Radisson Hotel Narita
650-35 Nanae Tomisato-Shi,
Narita 286-0221 Tokyo,
Japan
Conference Dates: September 3-4, 2018
Hotel Services & Amenities
- Audio/Visual Equipment Rental.
- Business Center.
- Business Phone Service.
- Complimentary Printing Service.
- Express Mail.
- Fax.
- Meeting Rooms.
- Office Rental.
- Photo Copying Service.
- Secretarial Service.
- Telex.
- Typewriter.
- Video Conference.
- Video Messaging.
- Video Phone.
- ATM.
- Baggage Storage.
Transportation
Driving Directions to
Narita International Airport Furugome, Narita, Chiba Prefecture 282-0004, Japan 1. Drive from National Route 295 line to take incense • Head south-east • Turn right at Airport East Road 4 (Intersection) • Turn left towards National Highway 295 • Turn right towards National Highway 295 • Continue onto National Highway 295 2. Continue to Komagawa • Turn left at Gakka Bridge (intersection) • Turn right towards City Road Line 44 • Turn left onto City Road Line 44 3. Continue to Fuli City • Turn left • Turn left • Turn right • Turn left • Continue straight • Turn left towards Prefectural Line 106 4. Turn right onto Prefectural Line 106 Destination will be on the left Radisson Hotel Narita 650-35 Nanae, Tomisato, Chiba Prefecture 286-0221, Japan
Route Map
About City
Tokyo is Japan's capital and the world's most populous metropolis. It is also one of Japan's 47 prefectures, consisting of 23 central city wards and multiple cities, towns and villages west of the city center. The Izu and Ogasawara Islands are also part of Tokyo. Prior to 1868, Tokyo was known as Edo. A small castle town in the 16th century, Edo became Japan's political center in 1603 when Tokugawa Ieyasu established his feudal government there. A few decades later, Edo had grown into one of the world's most populous cities. With the Meiji Restoration of 1868, the emperor and capital moved from Kyoto to Edo, which was renamed Tokyo ("Eastern Capital"). Large parts of Tokyo were destroyed in the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 and in the air raids of 1945.
Greater Tokyo is the world's most populous metropolitan area and is the center of Japanese culture, finance, and government. A bustling cosmopolitan city, Tokyo is also a major transportation hub and a world economic and industrial center. The city boasts a large number of world-class institutions of higher education, the highest concentration of universities in Japan. Tokyo was known as Edo until 1868, when the Japanese imperial family was moved there from Kyoto. Metropolitan Tokyo is generally defined as the four prefectures of Tokyo, Saitaima, Kanagawa, and Chiba, while the city of Tokyo proper usually refers to the 23 wards in Tokyo prefecture itself. The metropolitan area includes the major cities of Yokohama (the second largest city in Japan), Kawasaki, and Chiba, as well as rural mountain regions west of the city, the Izu Islands outside Tokyo Bay, and the Bonin Islands to the southeast in the Pacific Ocean.
Today, Tokyo offers a seemingly unlimited choice of shopping, entertainment, culture and dining to its visitors. The city's history can be appreciated in districts such as Asakusa, and in many excellent museums, historic temples and gardens. Contrary to common perception, Tokyo also offers a number of attractive green spaces in the city center and within relatively short train rides at its outskirts.
Tokyo is indeed one of the most fascinating cities and it's incomparable to any other place in the world. Besides all those amazing and bizarre things, the city throws out unexpected glimpses of its cultural core.
Places to Visit:
Imperial palace tokyo.
Asakusa and the SensÅ-ji Temple.
National Museum of Nature and Science.
The Tokyo Skytree.
The Meiji Shrine.
The Kabuki-za Theatre.