Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum
The Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum (江戸東京たてもの園, Edo Tōkyō Tatemono En, lit. "Edo Tokyo Buildings Garden") in Koganei Park, Tokyo, Japan, is a museum of historic Japanese buildings.
江戸東京たてもの園 | |
Main entrance to the Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum | |
Established | 28 March 1993 |
---|---|
Location | Koganei, Tokyo, Japan |
Type | Architecture museum |
Visitors | 237,901 (FY2016)[1] |
Director | Terunobu Fujimori |
Owner | Tokyo Metropolitan Government |
Website | www |
The park includes many buildings from the ordinary middle class Japanese experience to the homes of wealthy and powerful individuals such as former Prime Minister Takahashi Korekiyo, out in the open in a park.
The museum enables visitors to enter and explore a wide variety of buildings of different styles, periods, and purposes, from upper-class homes to pre-war shops, public baths (sentō), and Western-style buildings of the Meiji period, which would normally be inaccessible to tourists or other casual visitors, or which cannot be found in Tokyo.
Acclaimed animator Hayao Miyazaki often visited here during the creation of his film, Spirited Away, for inspiration.[2]
- Relocated buildings in the East Zone of the museum. In the middle is Kodakarayu, a bath house.
- Residence of Hachiroemon Mitsui
- House of Kunio Maekawa
- Farmhouse of Yoshino Family
See also
- Meiji Mura, an open-air architectural museum/theme park in Inuyama, near Nagoya in Aichi prefecture
References
- 平成28年度事業実績(公益目的事業) (PDF) (in Japanese). Tokyo Metropolitan Edo-Tokyo Museum. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
- "Miyazaki on Spirited Away // Interviews // Nausicaa.net". www.nausicaa.net. Retrieved 2020-04-05.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum. |
- Official website
- Japan guide information
- unofficial video of the park — and accessible gateway to J google.