Japan Center
1750 Geary Blvd.
(415) 922-6000
www.kabukisprings.com
The serene and elegant
Kabuki Springs and Spa (formerly Kabuki Hot Springs) are an
oasis for soul and body. Whether it's a hot communal bath with
all the accoutrements (sea salts, chilled cucumber face cloths),
a facial, or a seaweed wrap, it's the perfect place to unwind
after a long day of work or sightseeing.
In August of 1999, the
Kabuki launched "Co-ed Tuesdays," when men and women
can enjoy the salt scrubs, saunas and hot baths together. The
rest of the week, men and women come on separate days (see
schedule below).
The largest Japanese
communal bath in the United States, the Kabuki offers a wealth
of spa features in addition to the traditional Japanese Shiatsu
massage and communal baths (the baths are co-ed on Tuesdays).
Massage services now include Esalen/Swedish, Cranial-sacral,
Lymphatic, Reiki Energy Work and therapeutic deep body work.
Other treatments include
Ayurvedic rebalancing — after a warm botanical body mask to
exfoliate the skin, followed by oil and a hot towel wrap, warm
herbal oil is gently dripped onto the forehead to encourage deep
relaxation — or the Kabuki's famous Javanese Lulur body
treatment, which features a turmeric and jasmine skin scrub
followed by what they intriguingly term a "traditional
yogurt application and an exotic flower bath."
The 50-minute seaweed wrap
begins with a brush scrub to exfoliate the skin, followed by
brisk massage with essential oils and a total body wrap with
seaweed to revitalize a sluggish system.
Facilities include a hot
pool, cold plunge, sauna, steam room, individual bathing areas
and showers. Complimentary herbal teas and waters, bath products
and body polishing sea salts are always at hand.
Previously, the Kabuki was
a traditional, if shopworn, Japanese bath and massage house. It
was bought by Joie de Vivre, a San Francisco hospitality company
noted for its one-of-a-kind boutique hotels, and redesigned to
appeal to the city's frazzled city dwellers seeking a few
moments of Zen. The focus is on wellness-oriented treatments and
alternative healing, rather than beauty treatments.
The refurbished Kabuki is
decorated with a Pan Asian look by way of California. Elements
such as the seagrass matting and wood deck on the floors,
Javanese silk curtains and temple roof tiles from Japan combine
with a Californian color scheme of soft golds, greens and subtle
marine blues to evoke health and harmony. Each week, the Kabuki
introduces a new color to its bathing environment, beginning
with adobe colors of the earth and continuing through the jewel
tones of the mid chakras, ending on the seventh week with white,
the color of purity.
There are 18 different spa
treatment rooms, making the facility the largest spa operation
outside a resort in all of Northern California. Visiting
practitioners of acupuncture, herbal medicine or Shiatsu are
often available for consultations through the spa's Masters
Program. Massage services are affordable, with rates starting at
$45 for a half-hour massage and communal bath.
Hours:
Daily 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Baths:
Women only: Sundays,
Wednesdays and Fridays
Men only: Mondays,
Thursdays and Saturdays
Coed: Tuesdays
Admission/fees:
Traditional communal
bathing, sauna, steam room, hot pool and cold plunge: $10 before
5 p.m., Mon.-Fri.; $15 after 5 p.m. and weekends
Massage:
ranges from $45 for a 25-min. session with access to bathing
facility ($40 without) to $110 for the deluxe 80-min. session
with access to bathing facility.
Facial: 50 min. $65
Body polish: 25 min. $45
Seaweed wrap: 50 min. $65
Avurvedic rebalancing: 80
min. $110; or 110 min. with warm herbal oil drip $130
Javanese Lulur body
treatment: 80 min. $110
Validated parking:
available from the Japan Center (with massage)