The photograph that made the Kadokawa Musashino Museum go viral is always the same one. A vast room, floor to ceiling covered in books — not arranged neatly on shelves but angled, layered, overwhelming in every direction, as if the building itself is made of books rather than simply containing them. The bookshelves are eight meters high. The room holds 50,000 volumes. Every twenty minutes, the entire space transforms into something else entirely, as projection mapping lights the books from within and turns the library into a theater.
The photograph does not adequately prepare you for the experience. Almost nothing does.
The Kadokawa Musashino Museum — opened in 2020 in Tokorozawa, Saitama Prefecture, about forty minutes from central Tokyo — is one of Japan's most visually spectacular cultural institutions, and one of its most under-visited by international tourists. That is changing. Social media has been doing its work. The Bookshelf Theater is now a hot topic across TikTok, Instagram, and Pinterest in multiple languages. The visitors are coming. But many international travelers still don't know it exists — which means the experience, for now, remains relatively uncrowded compared to what it deserves.
What Is the Kadokawa Musashino Museum?
The museum is built around the cultural output of KADOKAWA — one of Japan's largest media and publishing conglomerates, responsible for a significant share of the manga, light novels, and anime that have defined Japanese pop culture for decades. But calling it a corporate museum misses the point entirely.
The building was designed by Kengo Kuma — the architect responsible for the Japan National Stadium built for the Tokyo Olympics, and Takanawa Gateway Station, among many other landmark projects. The exterior is faced with approximately 20,000 granite slabs with specially treated rough textures, creating a surface that shifts character depending on the light. It is a building that rewards looking at, from outside, before you even enter.
"A wonderful complex — a rock library museum building that easily provides a full day of discovery. One of the most extraordinary spaces in Japan."
TripAdvisor visitor review, 2026
Inside, the museum spans five floors, each with its own character and purpose. The combination — library, art gallery, manga collection, immersive digital theater, anime museum, and curated curiosities — resists simple categorization. It is not quite a museum in the traditional sense. It is closer to a total environment, designed to produce wonder at every turn.
Floor by Floor: What to Expect
The Bookshelf Theater: Why Everyone Comes
The Bookshelf Theater is the room in the photograph. In person, it is considerably more than the photograph suggests.
The space is a roughly circular room entirely lined with bookshelves reaching eight meters to the ceiling. The 50,000 books are not arranged decoratively — they are real books, actual titles from KADOKAWA's publishing history and personal collections donated by writers, scholars, and cultural figures. You can read the spines. The collection includes the personal libraries of literary critic Kenichi Yamamoto, historian Risaburo Takeuchi, and Okinawan studies scholar Morinobu Hokama, among others.
Every twenty minutes, the projection mapping begins. The books become the surface for a light show built around the concept of "playing with books and interacting with books." Books appear to open. Light cascades across the shelves. The names of writers appear and dissolve. The room that was a library becomes something closer to a dream about libraries — what it might feel like to be inside the mind of someone who has read everything ever written.
Plan to stay for at least two cycles of the projection mapping. The first viewing is overwhelm. The second is understanding.
What's On in 2026
The museum's exhibition program runs continuously, with major exhibitions rotating through the gallery spaces. In 2026, the headline shows include:
Galaxy Express 999: THE GALAXY EXPERIENCE (April 25 – October 26, 2026) — An immersive exhibition based on Leiji Matsumoto's beloved manga and anime series, occupying the Grand Gallery on the first floor. The show combines original artwork, archival materials, and experiential design to bring the iconic space train journey to life.
Aramata Wonder Treasure House: Cyber Treasure Museum (through April 2026) — The ongoing transformation of Hiroshi Aramata's cabinet of curiosities, currently focused on the history of microcomputers and early digital culture.
Genyoshi Kadokawa and His Time (from October 2025) — A retrospective on the founder of KADOKAWA, tracing the publishing empire's origins and the cultural vision that built it.
Practical Information for Your Visit
Fri–Sat: 10:00–21:00 (last entry 20:30)
Why This Is the Most Underrated Museum Near Tokyo
Most international tourists visiting Japan's museums concentrate on Tokyo's central institutions: the Tokyo National Museum in Ueno, teamLab's venues in Odaiba and Toyosu, the Mori Art Museum in Roppongi. These are excellent. They are also crowded, expensive relative to what they offer, and increasingly familiar to international audiences.
The Kadokawa Musashino Museum occupies a different position. It requires a train journey and a ten-minute walk that most tourists don't make. It is rooted in a very specific Japanese cultural tradition — the publishing and manga ecosystem that KADOKAWA built — that international visitors may not know exists. And it offers an experience — particularly the Bookshelf Theater — that has no direct equivalent anywhere else in Japan, or arguably anywhere else in the world.
"One can easily spend a full day here. The Bookshelf Theater alone is worth the journey from Tokyo."
Airial Travel, 2025
The forty minutes on the train from Tokyo is not an obstacle. It is, in context, a reasonable price for what awaits at the other end. A room full of 50,000 books, eight meters high, that lights up every twenty minutes and reminds you what it felt like the first time you understood that books were not just objects — that they were another way of being alive.
Go on a Friday evening. Stay for two showings of the projection mapping. Take the train back to Tokyo after dark, with the image of those glowing bookshelves still in your eyes.

