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Climbing Japan
Bouldering Gym SORAYON indoor bouldering and climbing gym in Minato, Japan - modern climbing walls, training facilities, and climbing community

Bouldering Gym SORAYON

Bouldering Gym in Minato, Tokyo

🧗 Bouldering
💰 ¥2,200 day pass

About Bouldering Gym SORAYON

Bouldering Gym SORAYON delivers focused bouldering 5 minutes from Shirokanedai Station. 12 walls span 80° to 165° with fast problem rotation and natural stone holds for outdoor training.

Hours & Pricing

⏰ Operating Hours
Monday14:00 - 23:00
Tuesday14:00 - 23:00
Wednesday14:00 - 23:00
Thursday14:00 - 23:00
Friday14:00 - 23:00
Saturday13:00 - 21:00
Sunday13:00 - 21:00
💳 Pricing
Day Pass¥2,200
Registration Fee (first-time)¥1,600

Climbing Facilities & Amenities

Lockers
Changing Room
Foot Wash
Parking
Gear Shop

Bouldering Wall

12 walls reaching 3.8m height offer angles from 80° slabs to 165° steep overhangs, with five vertical 90° walls forming the core. The gym emphasizes beginner to intermediate problems with quick rotation, keeping sessions fresh. Special features include crack problems, layback sections, and natural stone holds that mimic outdoor rock climbing—perfect for preparing for real crags.

Training Area

Dedicated training space allows focused conditioning work between boulder attempts. The gym's variety of angles (including 105°, 110°, and 120° walls) provides natural training progression, while traverse and climb-down problems build endurance and control. Ideal for structured sessions targeting specific weaknesses.

How & When To Visit

📍 Directions

Nearest Station

Shirokanedai Station

Walking time: 5 minutes

Address

Japan, 〒108-0071 Tokyo, Minato City, Shirokanedai, 5 Chome−14−1 白金台 アパートメント B1

📍 Google Maps
📅 Best Times to Visit

🟢 Quiet Times

Weekday mornings/afternoons

🔵 Social Times

Evenings & weekends

Frequently Asked Questions

They've got a solid range: 80° and 85° slabs, five vertical 90° walls, then progressively steeper overhangs at 95°, 105°, 110°, 120°, and a beastly 165° wall. The five vertical walls give you plenty of space for technique work, while the overhang progression is great for building power gradually.
Day pass is ¥2,200, plus a ¥1,600 registration fee on your first visit. Pretty standard pricing for Tokyo-area gyms. Once you're registered, you're good to go for future visits at just the day pass rate.
The gym mentions fast problem update speed, which is great if you climb regularly and want fresh challenges. Most problems skew beginner to intermediate, so if you're in the V2-V5 range, you'll have plenty to work with each visit.
Yes! They specifically use natural stone holds designed to replicate outdoor rock, plus they set crack problems and layback routes. It's a solid choice if you're training for actual crag sessions and want holds that feel closer to real rock than typical gym plastic.
They've got separate changing rooms with key-locked lockers, a dedicated foot and hand wash area for cleaning off chalk, and a gear shop on-site. There's also parking on Platinum Street—it's ticket parking during certain hours but free on Sundays and holidays.
It's listed as limited, so brush up on basic Japanese climbing terms or bring a translation app. Staff will likely help as best they can, but don't expect full English explanations of everything. Pretty typical for Tokyo neighborhood gyms.
Just 5 minutes on foot from Shirokanedai Station. Super convenient if you're coming from central Tokyo—Shirokanedai is on the Namboku and Mita lines, so it's well-connected.
The natural stone holds are a big draw if you're training for outdoor climbing, and the variety of wall angles (12 walls with angles from slabs to 165° overhang) gives you more options than many neighborhood gyms. The focus on special problem types like cracks, laybacks, and traverses also adds technical variety beyond typical gym routes.

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