Tokyo hides things well. Duck into the right side street, slip between two concrete walls, and you’ll find one of the most extraordinary automotive workshops on Earth—though you’d never know it by looking. No neon sign. No glass showroom. Just a narrow doorway leading to Naito Engineering Tokyo, a family-run restoration shop so selective it asks curious visitors not to stop by.

Naito isn’t a speed shop. It’s not even a traditional restorer. It’s an enclave where car guys become craftsmen, where five workers—each related by blood—perform some of the most precise, obsessive restoration work anywhere in the world. In an era of digital scanners, robots, and plug-in everything, Naito’s most advanced tools are wrenches, jacks, and the kind of hands that come from decades of doing one thing extremely, stubbornly well.
The Cutting Workshop
The heart of Naito Engineering is what they simply call the “cutting workshop,” a modest room that might as well be a shrine. It’s here that the crew brings back the crème de la crème of automotive exotica—rare European sports cars restored piece by piece, all in-house. Engines, transmissions, chassis, paint, metalwork: nothing leaves the building. Nothing gets outsourced. There’s no stopwatch ticking in the background. The only deadline is perfection.

This philosophy traces back to the company’s founder, Shinichi Naito. Born a natural mechanic, Shinichi learned his trade the hard way: keeping aircraft engines alive during World War II. Precision wasn’t an ideal—it was survival. When he opened his Tokyo garage in 1952, those same principles carried over. Imported European sports cars arrived with demanding standards; Naito matched them with Japanese meticulousness and a stubborn resistance to shortcuts.
Shinichi’s son, Masao, inherited not just the tools but the ethos. Under him, Naito Engineering transformed from a humble garage into a mythical name whispered among collectors. If you wanted the best, you went to Naito. If you wanted the fastest job… you didn’t bother calling.

Now the torch is being passed a third time. Masao’s sons—So and Kei—work beside him, continuing the family craft while navigating what might be the biggest challenge in the shop’s history: living up to the legacy.
A Family on Film
The world’s been trying to peek behind Naito’s curtains for years. Finally, documentary filmmaker Ben Bertucci managed it. His feature film, One of One, took five years to shoot and captures Naito Engineering with the intimacy of a meditation and the tension of a family drama.
At the center is Masao, the aging patriarch whose retirement is approaching like an unwelcome deadline. He knows what this shop means—what his father built, what he’s expanded, and what could be lost if the transition isn’t perfect. The film follows him wrestling with one question: Can he trust his sons to carry the Naito legacy forward?
Not in a business sense. In a soul-of-the-machine sense.
The documentary doesn’t focus on glamorous cars or high-rolling clients. It focuses on the hands that shape them, the patience that restores them, and the fragile, human thread tying three generations together.

The Garage That Doesn’t Want Visitors
Today, Naito Engineering is so sought-after that the family can choose their clients. Random walk-ins aren’t allowed. The workshop’s website even politely warns against unannounced visits. They simply don’t have the time—or the desire—to be distracted from their work.
Because for Naito, this was never about expanding, franchising, or becoming an empire. It was always about doing one thing, the right way, from the first bolt to the final polish.
And in a city of 14 million people and infinite noise, this tiny workshop tucked in a concrete courtyard remains one of the quietest—and greatest—testaments to automotive craftsmanship in the world.
Source: Type 7 via YouTube