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Travel snapshots from Toonsarah

Street of traditional Japanese houses
Gallery: the merchant houses of Takayama

Gallery: the merchant houses of Takayama

September 23, 2020

The completion of the house was only the beginning of its beautiful history. The activity inside the house brought it to life and added to the finishing touches. I think that this kind of beauty could only be created and ensue because of the loving hearts that supported it and lived in it.

Teiji Ito (architectural historian) – sign outside Yoshijima-ke

There was something special about Takayama. I could feel it in the air as soon as I stepped off the train – crisp, fresh mountain air, so refreshing after the heat of Kyoto. This mountain town captivated me with its lively morning market, friendly locals, and beautifully preserved old houses.

During the Edo period this was largely a merchant, rather than a samurai, town, and its architecture reflects that fact. The streets of the old town are lined with houses of a style that accommodated both family and business life, and on Ninomachi in the northern part of the town are two of the finest examples, side by side.

Yoshijima-ke

Yoshijima-ke was built in 1907 to be both home and factory for the Yoshijima family, well-to-do brewers of sake. It is considered one of finest examples of rural Japanese buildings. The light inside is beautiful; and the combination of the heavy dark beams, the paler lacquered wood used for door and window frames, and the translucent paper screens is captivating. There is minimal decoration, apart from some beautiful screens, carved wood panels and a few paintings by Japanese artist Shinoda Toko. The beauty is all in the arrangement of the spaces and the contrast of light and dark.

  • Japanese rooms with fireplaces
    Inside Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Japanese room with fireplace in the centre
    Fireplace in Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Japanese interior
    Inside Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Simple Japanese interior
    Inside Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Japanese room with screens
    Room in Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Japanese screen and garden
    Inner garden, Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Japanese window and screen
    A corner of Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Japanese paintings and ornaments
    Corner of a room in Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Alcove with Japanese painting and ornament
    Alcove in Yoshijima-ke, Takayama
  • Stone oven
    Kitchen in Yoshijima-ke, Takayama

Kusakabe mingei-kan

This house belonged to the Kusakabe family, successful Takayama merchants who thrived in the late Edo and early Meiji periods. It was built in 1879 to replace an earlier home and business lost in a fire. It is has a more solid feeling than the neighbouring Yoshijima house, with darker wood. I have seen it described as the more masculine house and Yoshijima as more feminine, which sort of makes sense when you see them.

Like Yoshijima, this is a two-storey structure. Its foot-square cypress timbers are as perfectly fitted as cabinet work, as might be expected from builders of this Hida region, who are famous throughout the country for their skills in woodwork and carpentry. Its most noticeable feature is the fireplace – a sunken hearth made of iron known as an irori and above it a huge adjustable hook for hanging a pot or kettle, known as a jizai-kagi.

Unlike Yoshijima-ke, the Kusakabe house is furnished with some antiques – dark wood cabinets, low tables, a few ornaments. And in its storerooms are various exhibits of household items that would have been traded by this merchant family.

  • Japanese room with fireplace
    Fireplace in Kusakabe mingei-kan, Takayama
  • Iron pot hanging above a fireplace
    Fireplace in Kusakabe mingei-kan, Takayama
  • Large hook hanging from wooden beams
    Hook for kettle in Kusakabe mingei-kan, Takayama
  • Garden seen through Japanese window
    Inner garden, Kusakabe mingei-kan, Takayama
  • Sleeve of blue kimono, embroidered in gold
    Detail of kimono displayed in Kusakabe mingei-kan, Takayama
  • Two hair ornaments
    Hair ornaments, Kusakabe mingei-kan, Takayama

There are plans, descriptions and more images of both houses on the Oriental Architecture website: Yoshijima-ke and Kusakabe

I visited Takayama in 2013

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8 thoughts on “Gallery: the merchant houses of Takayama”

  1. TheRamblingWombat says:
    September 25, 2020 at 11:06

    A beautiful town – just the right size such that after a couple of days you can feel that you ‘know it’ and indeed feel at home. One of my favourite towns in Japan. You have presented a lovely set of pictures as usual.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      September 25, 2020 at 17:42

      I remember that you loved Takayama too Albert 🙂 And I quite agree about it being just the right size!

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  2. Anna says:
    September 24, 2020 at 11:09

    These traditional Japanese houses are just so unique, there’s nowhere else quite like it!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      September 24, 2020 at 12:23

      I know, I love them! I once saw a property programme on TV (called Grand Designs – I think there’s an Australian version?) where a couple in which the woman was Japanese built a traditional Japanese room on to their house so she had a little bit of ‘home’ – complete with screens, tatami mats etc. Beautiful!

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      1. Anna says:
        September 25, 2020 at 04:54

        I know that episode. I watch both British and Aussie Grand Designs. It was awesome! I also watch Escape to the Country, because I’m secretly a 60 year old woman 😂

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        1. Sarah Wilkie says:
          September 25, 2020 at 17:43

          I’m a not so secretly 60+ year old woman and I watch Escape to the Country too, even though I have no intention of doing that 😆

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          1. Anna says:
            September 25, 2020 at 23:33

            😂😂😂😂

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  3. Nemorino says:
    September 23, 2020 at 19:39

    Beautiful houses.

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