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  2. I spent $50 to sleep in a capsule pod at a Tokyo airport. It ...

    www.aol.com/spent-50-sleep-capsule-pod-161528367...

    I ended a trip to Tokyo with an experience on my Japan bucket list — a night in a capsule hotel. For $50, I slept at the Nine Hours Narita Airport, a pod hotel inside the airport.

  3. Nakagin Capsule Tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakagin_Capsule_Tower

    The Nakagin Capsule Tower Building Preservation and Regeneration Project preserved 23 capsules [3] including A1302, which was saved by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. [ 24 ] [ 25 ] Sixteen of the 23 preserved capsules have new destinations: Shochiku has since put two capsules on permanent display and as of 2024, five capsules will be ...

  4. Capsule hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capsule_hotel

    Capsules in Tokyo Capsule hotel in Warsaw, Poland.The lockers are on the left of the image, while the sleeping capsules are on the right. A capsule hotel (Japanese: カプセルホテル, romanized: kapuseru hoteru), also known in the Western world as a pod hotel, [1] is a type of hotel developed in Japan that features many small, bed-sized rooms known as capsules.

  5. Finnila's Finnish Baths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnila's_Finnish_Baths

    The couple married and settled to live in the San Francisco's heavily Finnish-populated Castro District. Matti Finnila became a "brick building contractor" in 1910 (1910–1933) and in 1913 he opened a Finnish-style sauna club, Finnila's Finnish Baths, for the general public. It was the "first Finnish steam bath" business in the San Francisco ...

  6. List of time capsules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_time_capsules

    San Francisco International Airport: San Francisco: California: A time capsule was buried in the 1950s at the San Francisco International Airport. It was lost, and then discovered during construction in the 1970s. It was lost again, and then discovered again in the 1990s, close to the original reopening year of 2000. [2] 1954 2013; 12 years ago ()

  7. Japantown, San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japantown,_San_Francisco

    Prior to the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, San Francisco had two Japantowns, one on the outskirts of Chinatown, the other in the South of Market area. After 1906, Japanese immigrants began moving to San Francisco's Western Addition, which then became San Francisco's main Japantown, with a smaller one in the South Park area. [7]

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