Categories
Funny

Japanese Sleeping – 5

People in Japan love to sleep on the street, on the train or wherever they can. Here is a new set of my fascinating Japanese Sleeping series.

If you missed the first 4 here they are:

Japanese sleeping

Japanese sleeping

Japanese

Japanese sleeping

Japanese sleeping

Japanese sleeping

Japanese sleeping

Japan sleep

Japan sleep

Japan sleep

Japan sleep

Japan sleep
Their mouth expression is similar, isn’t it?

Japan sleep

Japan sleep

Japan sleep

Japan sleep

Japan sleep
This is picture is not mine, it is from somewhere in China. I put it here because people keep sending it to me for some reason 🙂

Japanese sleeping on the streets

Japanese sleeping on the streets

Japanese sleeping on the streets

Japanese sleeping on the streets

Japanese sleeping on the streets

Categories
JapanGuide

Okayama, Koraku-en

After many years in Japan I finally had the chance to visit Koraku-en in Okayama, which is considered one of the most beautiful gardens in the country. Stopping by is a good idea to spend a couple of hours if you pass by Okayama with the bullet train while going to Hiroshima or coming back to Osaka, Kobe or Kyoto.

Japanese style gardens are designed trying to emulate real landscapes, they are like “scale models” of big landscapes. For example, there are usually mounds between five and the meters high that represent mountains. Rivers are designed using little water streams, and pounds are used to form lakes and seas.

I love to stroll around Japanese gardens. While walking through winding paths in between water streams surrounded by the greenest grass you could ever imagine I feel like if I had been transported to another dimension.

Koraku-en Okayama

Koraku-en Okayama

Koraku-en Okayama

Koraku-en Okayama

Koraku-en Okayama

Koraku-en Okayama

Koraku-en Okayama

How to get there: walking east 20 minutes from Okayama bullet train station. You also can get there taking the bus that goes from Okayama station to Korakuen-mae.

Recommended visit time: two hours.

Categories
Architecture

Nakagin Capsule Tower

After the Second World War 98% of buildings and houses in Tokyo had been destroyed. During the reconstruction of the country some Japanese architects thought that the future of architecture should be the most “modular” possible; they were part of the metabolic movement. These architects, worried about the future of our society, thought that living standards would be better if architecture structures were flexible and extensible, they would be better if they grew as if they were a living organism composed by modules. One of the most important metabolist architects of the post-war era was Kisho Kurokawa. He designed the first modular building: the Nakagin Capsule Tower in Shinbashi, Tokyo.

Nakagin Capsule Tower

The building consists of two big columns that form the core. 140 prefabricated capsules were added to this core, each of them attached to one of the two columns with four big screws. Capsules can be replaced by new ones as time passes by and they are built in a factory. The current capsules have a television, a bathroom, a mini-kitchen, a bed, two built-in closets and even a calculator.

Nakagin Capsule Tower
One of the first designs of the currently installed capsules.

Nakagin Capsule Tower

Nakagin Capsule Tower

After almost 40 years the Nakagin Capsule Tower is still in place but the capsule replacement system is not as simple as it was thought at the beginning and the building is getting old. The inhabitants of the tower have decided to demolish it to build a traditional office tower, something the international community of architects opposes. Many of them consider it an exponent of high historical value of how our cities could be nowadays but never happened. It is a reminder of the paths that were not taken, that there was a possibility of other worlds in where we could live in.

Nakagin Capsule Tower
Photo by Tomio Ohashi.

Nakagin Capsule Tower
Photo by Tomio Ohashi.

Nakagin Capsule Tower
Photo by Tomio Ohashi.

Nakagin Capsule Tower
Photo by Tomio Ohashi.


Video that shows capsules interior with explanations by architect Kisho Kurokawa.