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HOTEL K VILLAGE

★★Tokorozawa
7.8/ 10Good

Based on public data

Review

This hotel has little guest-verified firsthand data yet. 0 reports; thin data, conclusions stay cautious. High-value questions (upgrades, lounge, breakfast) stay marked insufficient — we label thin data, we never fabricate.

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06External scores · reference only, not verified
7.79/10FlyerKey composite

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Rooms & Views

King Room
1x Queen 30 Up to 2

The spacious double room offers air conditioning, a tea and coffee maker, as well as a private bathroom boasting a bath…

Standard Double Room
1x Queen 28 Up to 2

The spacious double room offers air conditioning, a tea and coffee maker, as well as a private bathroom boasting a bath…

Standard Queen Room
1x Queen 28 Up to 2

The spacious double room offers air conditioning, a tea and coffee maker, as well as a private bathroom boasting a bath…

Economy Double Room
1x Queen 25 Up to 2

The double room includes a private bathroom, well-fitted with a bath, a shower, a bidet, a hairdryer and slippers. This…

Small Double Room
1x Queen 22 Up to 2

The double room includes a private bathroom, well-fitted with a bath, a shower, a bidet, a hairdryer and slippers. This…

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • Sobakiri SuzukiBib Tucked away in a quiet residential neighbourhood, this soba shop welcomes guests only at lunchtime. The interior is done entirely in natural materials such as wood and stone, lending a homespun feel. Service is friendly and welcoming, placing the heart at ease. The menu consists solely of sobazen a set meal including fine soba noodles, appetisers, and soba-gaki. For those who prefer something sweet, the soba-gaki can be substituted with soba zenzai, a red bean soup made with the same buckwheat dough in dessert form. Quantities are limited so reservations are a must and can be made by phone fro7.2km
  • Sasaki SeimenjoBib The chef ’s aim is to create a ramen shop beloved by locals. He sources ingredients from greengrocers and butchers in Nishiogi, treasuring his interactions with local people. The distance from the train station is also a blessing, as neighbourhood schoolchildren and their families can be seen sitting shoulder-to-shoulder, happily slurping noodles. As befits the ‘Seimenjo’, or ‘noodle-maker’, in the name, his use of Japanese wheat is a selling point. In addition to standard thin noodles, he also offers flat noodles. The miso flavour is a much-anticipated treat in autumn and winter.11.9km
  • SennomagoBib The chef devotes himself to good health through a balanced diet, using Chinese medicines as seasoning to serve food that is salutary for both mind and body. Vegetables from his native Oita are grown by natural methods, making them gentle to the constitution. At dinner, there is a wide range of à la carte dishes, leaning toward Sichuan and Shanghai influences. The chef allows himself an individual take with the mapo tofu: drawing on a wealth of experience, he offers a choice of Sichuan, aged doubanjiang (Chinese broad bean chili paste) and salt. Lunchtime set menus are also popular.12.2km
  • there is ramenBib The soup accentuates the umami of the meats with the flavour of dried sardines; if you’re looking for soup with a unique and beguiling taste, you’ve found it here. Chashumen, ramen topped with roasted pork, is so covered in pork slices that they hide the noodles. Rice is available as an extra with the ramen, so try placing some of the roasted pork on top of it to make chashudon, roast-pork rice. Impressive and satisfying indeed, as if to say there is ramen here.13.2km
  • Shiosoba JikuBib The chef heard the call to the culinary life one day while riding his father’s motorcycle on a long tour around the Seto Inland Sea. When he happened upon a ramen shop along the way, the taste of the salty soba touched his soul. He combines a clear seafood broth with homemade noodles crafted with aroma in mind. The ceiling decoration recalls the roof of an old-time food stall, honouring how ramen culture spread in his native Hiroshima Prefecture.14.8km
  • Sushidokoro Kiraku★ Michelin Reading the signs of the times, the third owner transformed this sushi restaurant, once known for its catering, into an omakase spot serving appetizers and nigiri. Despite the modern shift, traditional Edomae techniques like ageing, marinating, and curing the fish remain unchanged. The friendly chef creates a welcoming atmosphere, while his wife skilfully handles the grilled dishes. With meticulous craftsmanship and reasonable prices, it’s easy to see why this place is a local favourite.19.5km
  • Shigeyuki★ Michelin ‘The look surprises, the taste reassures.’ The chef’s passion for creativity makes his culinary spirit unique. Decoratively arranged sashimi are briefly heated to draw out moisture. The chef doesn’t serve soup dishes, as much of his cooking tailors the dashi stock to each dish. His freewheeling personality makes the evening fun, while the folk-art vibe of the interior, including a chest of drawers inherited from the chef’s grandparents, fills the air with memories and the warmth of family.19.5km
  • TensukeBib The lines that form outside Tensuke at lunchtime are a part of the Koenji landscape. Inside, one voice after another calls for the ‘Egg Lunch’. Accompanying the speciality of deep-fried egg on rice, tempura items are fried in a set order. Another speciality is the performance of the chef, who tosses the eggshells in the air in poses worthy of a kabuki actor. The idea is to make the waiting time fun, too. Deep-fried eggs fill mouths with yolk and smiles.15.0km
  • Teuchisoba JiyusanBib ‘Jiyusan’ is a shop on Mejiro Street. The name is a play on the street’s old name, ‘Jusanken-dori’. Delicately thin seiro soba, made purely from buckwheat served on a wicker tray, offers a pleasing finish. Inaka soba is stone-ground by hand, one grain at a time using a pestle and mortar, and delivers a rich, deep flavour. Appetisers, patiently prepared using techniques the chef learned during his apprenticeship, set the tone—such as shrimp prepared in miso and grilled, or herring fillet simmered slowly over several days.15.3km
  • MatsunozushiBib Sushi items lined up inside a glass display case ooze Showa-era ambience. A sushi shop of the old school, and that’s how the chef likes it. Cutting and serving the sushi himself, the chef offers everything from omakase set menus to à la carte. Tuna is marinated in soy sauce; conger eel is coated in a thick, sweet eel sauce; and egg is served ‘kurakake’ or ‘saddle-style’: layered into a cake and split over a bite-sized mound of vinegared rice. The character for ‘sushi’ combines the characters for ‘fish’ and ‘delicious’. The pursuit of essential Edo style expresses the chef’s pride in his craft 16.5km

Includes Michelin / Black Pearl / guide picks (reference quality, no prices); data from Overture, Michelin Guide and others.

Attractions nearby

  • Ghibli Museum art museum in Mitaka, Tokyo, Japan12.5km
  • Mode Gakuen Cocoon Tower building in Tokyo, Japan19.3km
  • Inokashira Park park in Musashino and Mitaka, Tokyo12.3km
  • Ajinomoto Stadium multi-purpose stadium in Chofu, Tokyo, Japan15.6km
  • Taki-no Castle building in Tokorozawa, Saitama Prefecture, Japan516m
  • Heirin-ji Temple Buddhist temple in Niiza, Saitama prefecture, Japan2.8km
  • Saitama Stadium 2002 football stadium19.8km
  • Hikawa Shrine Shinto shrine in Saitama, Japan15.1km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

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