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Climbing Japan
Urban Base Camp Shinbashi indoor bouldering and climbing gym in Minato, Japan - modern climbing walls, training facilities, and climbing community

Urban Base Camp Shinbashi

Bouldering Gym in Minato, Tokyo

🧗 Bouldering
💰 ¥2,200 day pass

About Urban Base Camp Shinbashi

Urban Base Camp Shinbashi offers focused bouldering just 1 minute from Uchisaiwaicho Station. About 100 problems across slab, vertical, and overhang walls with dedicated training space.

Hours & Pricing

⏰ Operating Hours
Monday10:00 - 23:00
Tuesday10:00 - 23:00
Wednesday10:00 - 23:00
Thursday10:00 - 23:00
Friday10:00 - 23:00
Saturday10:00 - 21:00
Sunday10:00 - 21:00
💳 Pricing
Day Pass¥2,200
Registration Fee (first-time)¥1,500

Climbing Facilities & Amenities

Lockers
Changing Room
Gear Shop
Foot Wash

Bouldering Wall

The main climbing area features approximately 100 problems set across varied wall angles including slab, vertical, and overhanging terrain. The range caters to beginners through advanced climbers, with enough variety to keep your sessions interesting. The compact layout keeps the energy focused without feeling cramped.

Training Area

A dedicated training space lets you work on conditioning and specific movements beyond just climbing problems. This area is ideal for warming up, working weaknesses, or getting in supplementary strength work between boulder attempts. It's a solid addition for climbers who take their training seriously.

How & When To Visit

📍 Directions

Nearest Station

Uchisaiwaicho Station

Walking time: 1 minutes

Address

Japan, 〒105-0003 Tokyo, Minato City, Nishishinbashi, 2 Chome−39−3 SVAX西新橋ビルディング地下1階

📍 Google Maps
📅 Best Times to Visit

🟢 Quiet Times

Weekday mornings/afternoons

🔵 Social Times

Evenings & weekends

Frequently Asked Questions

Day passes run ¥2,200, plus a one-time registration fee of ¥1,500 for first-timers. That's pretty reasonable for central Tokyo bouldering, especially considering the location right next to Uchisaiwaicho Station.
You've got slab, vertical, and overhang sections to work with. It's not a massive gym, but 100 problems provides decent variety for regular sessions. The layout makes efficient use of the space, so you won't feel like you're climbing the same angle all day.
English support is listed as limited, so expect basic communication. Most bouldering gyms in Tokyo use fairly standard systems for checking in and rental gear, so you can usually get by with gestures and simple phrases if needed.
They've got lockers and changing rooms, which is essential for after-work sessions. There's also a gear shop on-site and a foot wash area, so you can clean up before heading out. The dedicated training area gives you space to work on specific weaknesses beyond just climbing problems.
The nearest station is actually Uchisaiwaicho at just 1 minute walk, which is super convenient. Shinbashi is also nearby if you're coming from that direction—it's in the same general area, making it accessible from multiple transit lines.
With the gym being in the Shinbashi business district, weekday evenings probably get busy with the after-work crowd. Try weekday afternoons or weekend mornings if you want more wall space to yourself for focused training.
There's a gear shop on-site, which typically means rental gear is available. You'll want to confirm shoe rental availability when you arrive, but most Tokyo bouldering gyms stock rentals for first-timers or visitors without their own gear.
With 100 problems spanning different angles and a training area, there's enough to keep intermediate climbers engaged. The variety of wall angles—slab through overhang—means you can work on different movement styles, which is key for progressing past the beginner plateau.

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