
Source: ドラえごん Doraegon (@doraegon3636) - image used with permission
Japanese train station has a “hidden restaurant” many people don’t know about
- Tags:
- Cafeteria / employee cafeteria / Hidden / Nanba Station / Osaka / Restaurant / Train Station
Related Article
-
Ease Your Sugar Craving At Cafes In Kyoto And Osaka Serving Cute Rilakkuma French Toast Plates
-
3D-printed Cyber Wagashi fuses futuristic design and traditional Japanese sweets
-
Cute Plus Size Yukatas from Kimonomachi Available At Hankyu Summer Fes & Online Store
-
Osaka’s Ramen Girls Festival Takes on Macho Noodle Culture
-
Devour Chrysalises And Crocodile Feet At Nagoya’s Prison-Themed Restaurant
-
Sojo in Waseda: Tokyo’s only vegan Esperanto-speaking restaurant
There are numerous restaurants in the world.
Most of them are located in commercial facilities, around train stations, and other places where many people gather.
However, some restaurants are located in places that are generally unknown to the public.
TikTok user Doraegon (doraegon3636) posted a great example on his account. The restaurant is located past the station's ticket gates, through a service corridor and on the other side of what looks like a door for station personnel...
After borrowing a special entrance pass from a station attendant at Namba Station, he went through the ticket gate and went straight to the back of the station, instead of heading for the platform, where he found a sign that read "No Entry Except for Cafeteria Users and Personnel".
What lay beyond the door was the employee cafeteria that Nankai Electric Railway Co. employees use on a daily basis!
Doraegon ate the daily set meal for 470 yen and ramen for 280 yen!
Although the prices differ from those for employees, the set menus for the general public are also available at prices ranging between 400 to 500 yen, which is very wallet-friendly.
According to Doraegon, the entrance pass allows you to use the cafeteria but you're not supposed to board trains with it.
It seems that many people did not know about this employee cafeteria which was also open to the general public.
Some of the comments the video elicited were:
According to the Doraegon, employees are given priority when the cafeteria is crowded, so please keep that in mind.
If you're in the Osaka area and looking for a cheap, tasty meal in an unusual location, why not give it a try?