Solo sauna a hot favourite in Tokyo as COVID-19 cases rise

Japanese sauna offering private Finnish-style rooms gains popularity amid COVID
Kotaro Nakahira, a staff member of Solo Sauna Tune, uses its private Finnish-style sauna room during a demonstration in Tokyo, Japan, Dec 10, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon)

TOKYO: The spread of the coronavirus may have slowed economies and closed many businesses worldwide, but it has not been a damper on a newly opened Tokyo sauna that caters to solo customers.

The Finnish-style sauna rooms at Solo Sauna Tune, where customers can relax in solitude and enjoy the heat from water over hot stones, are so popular they are booked up within hours.

Although the idea for the business came before the spread of the coronavirus, the pandemic and the social distancing it brought have been a big boost, said co-founder Daisuke Kawase.

"We feel that there has been a strong demand for solo services like these as a way of preventing the spread of the coronavirus," Kawase said.

Japanese sauna offering private Finnish-style rooms gains popularity amid COVID
Kotaro Nakahira, a staff member of Solo Sauna Tune, sits on a chair to cool down after using its private Finnish-style sauna room during a demonstration in Tokyo, Japan, Dec 10, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon)

READ: Japan to buy 10,500 freezers for COVID-19 vaccines

The sauna, which opened last week, also caters to a growing market of single people in Japan.

According to government statistics made available in 2018, the ratio of single-person households in Japan is estimated to increase to 40 per cent in 2040, from 30 per cent in 2005.

"Businesses aimed at 'solo' people will take root here, even after the end of the coronavirus," Kawase said.

Visitors can book a sauna room to themselves at an hourly rate of ¥3,800 (US$36). Reservations are available two weeks in advance.

Source: Reuters/dv