A Look Inside Nintendo’s Old Kyoto Headquarters
A look inside.
If you’re a Nintendo fan, you’ve probably seen countless photos of the exterior of Nintendo’s old Kyoto headquarters. But have you seen inside?
The building has long been a popular pilgrimage site, with Nintendo fans trekking over to stand outside and take selfies. The only person I know who has ever been inside is GovernorWatts, who just…walked in the place in the late 2000s.
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However, Nintendo have now moved out, and starting this April, the building will be a hotel. Guests can also just walk into the place. As Kotaku previously reported, the existing building will undergo improvements, and there are plans to add 20 guest rooms as well as a restaurant, a bar, and a gym. Hotel and restaurant development company Plan See Do is handling the project.
In the past few years, there has been a trend in Japan of turning old buildings, such as castles, into hotels. It’s to cash in on the country’s tourism boom. But with Covid-19 and Japan’s borders shut to foreign tourists, the hospitality industry has been hit hard.
A peek behind the curtain.
Photos of the inside of the building prior to renovation have been released, giving an idea of what it looks like inside—or rather, what it looked like.
I really like it! Fingers crossed the renovations do this building—and Nintendo—justice.
I love that fire place. This will be turned into a guest room.
This isn’t Nintendo’s first headquarters. In 1889, Fusajiro Yamauchi founded Marufuku Nintendo Card Co., producing traditional Japanese playing cards called hanafuda, and eventually Western playing cards as well. That building was demolished in 2004, and is apparently now a parking lot.
I love these lights.
However, this was the oldest Nintendo building in Japan, but now Nintendo no longer owns it. The old headquarters is not in Nintendo’s possession, but rather the Yamauchi family’s.
This is a great-looking building.
Hopefully, the hotel will include some sort of museum with old Nintendo-related family heirlooms, so guests can have an even deeper appreciation during their stay.
The Yamauchi Nintendo sign out front.