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shirobako shimizu 5 chome crossing

SHIROBAKO

Tokyo

Episode
Ep. -
Time
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shirobako shimizu 5 chome crossing
  • Nearest Station: Higashi-Fushimi Station (Seibu Shinjuku Line)
  • Walk: 20 minutes on foot
  • Best time to visit: Late morning or early afternoon on a clear day for easier street-angle matching
  • Crowd level: Usually quiet
  • Aoi Miyamori stands near a neighborhood intersection in a quiet urban street scene from SHIROBAKO.
  • This moment captures the everyday rhythm that SHIROBAKO portrays so well: a character walking through an ordinary intersection while carrying the pressure of work and the future. Aoi Miyamori appears to be caught between thought and motion, her feelings subdued rather than dramatic, with a quiet mix of fatigue and focus. Scenes like this usually come as she moves around for animation production, constantly pulled between reality and ambition. The surrounding story often connects to her contacting colleagues or industry people and rushing from place to place, reinforcing both the hectic production environment and her strong sense of responsibility. The real-life model is the Shimizu 5-chome Crossing area in Nishitokyo, Tokyo, and the anime recreates the road layout, openness of the intersection, and residential atmosphere with notable accuracy. The utility poles, traffic lights, and corner geometry in real life closely match the lived-in feeling shown in the anime, though the series simplifies shop signs, traffic markings, and building details for a cleaner frame and stronger narrative focus. On site, you will notice more visual clutter, updated street elements, and small renovations, but as an anime pilgrimage spot, the appeal comes less from a single landmark and more from the neighborhood mood and camera angle. Matching the direction of the intersection, roadside trees, and building outlines makes it easier to recreate the scene faithfully.
Is Shimizu 5-chome Crossing easy to photograph for SHIROBAKO scene matching?
Yes, it is a public roadside location and fans generally recreate the shot from the sidewalk. Be careful because it is a working neighborhood intersection with regular vehicle traffic.
Can I use Google Street View to find the exact SHIROBAKO angle before visiting?
Yes, Street View is very useful here because the scene depends more on road geometry and surrounding houses than on one landmark. Checking the crossing shape and utility poles in advance makes matching much easier.
Are there any pilgrimage signs or official SHIROBAKO markers at this crossing?
No dedicated marker is known at the crossing itself, so it feels like a normal residential street rather than a formal tourist spot. Bring a scene reference image and visit quietly out of respect for local residents.

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