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hibiya station
  • Nearest Station: Hibiya Station (Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line, Chiyoda Line, Toei Mita Line) / Yurakucho Station (JR Yamanote Line, Keihin-Tohoku Line)
  • Walk: 0–3 minutes on foot
  • Best time to visit: Late morning or early afternoon on a weekday for clearer photos and easier scene matching
  • Crowd level: Can be crowded
  • Tsunomaki Watame stands near an entrance area of Hibiya Station in a quiet urban moment framed by station signage and city structures.
  • In this moment, Tsunomaki Watame stands alone near a station entrance, and the scene carries a quiet, reflective mood. Rather than pushing dramatic plot action, the music video uses her pause in a corner of the city to express a gentle but slightly lonely feeling. The surrounding sequence likely follows the song’s lyrical rhythm, showing her moving through the city while sorting out her feelings, and this shot works like a brief emotional pause before she starts moving forward again. The real-life location around Hibiya Station is recreated with impressive accuracy, especially the structure above the underground entrance, the surrounding wall layout, and the vertical urban lines that define the area. The anime simplifies some signage and text, but it keeps the station entrance recognizable enough that viewers can still immediately identify it as a major transport hub in central Tokyo. Compared with the real place, the anime uses cleaner and softer colors, reducing the advertisements, pedestrians, and temporary fixtures often seen on site so the focus stays on Watame’s emotions. If you compare it with street photos or Google Street View, the background shapes and spatial relationships are very close, though the real location is usually busier and more affected by pedestrian flow.
Which exit at Hibiya Station is best for matching this Watame scene?
Use the station exits facing the Hibiya crossing and surrounding office blocks, then compare the entrance canopy and wall lines with the frame. Exact matching is easiest after checking current Street View because some surface details change over time.
Can I take photos around Hibiya Station for anime pilgrimage purposes?
Yes, outdoor photography around the station entrances is generally fine as long as you do not block pedestrian flow or station access. Avoid tripods in busy areas and be careful not to photograph commuters too closely.
When is the least crowded time to recreate this scene at Hibiya Station?
Weekday late mornings are usually better than rush hour, when the area fills with commuters and office workers. Nights can also work visually, but matching the brighter anime atmosphere is usually easier in daylight.

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