Skip to content
Roadside Japan
🎲
Nihon Minka-en Open-Air Folk House Museum
📜 History

Nihon Minka-en Open-Air Folk House Museum

📍 Kanagawa, Kawasaki

A wooded hillside in Kawasaki where two dozen real thatched-roof farmhouses, a kabuki stage, and a watermill — rescued from across Japan and rebuilt board by board — form a village out of time.

Tucked into a wooded park in Kawasaki, the Nihon Minka-en is a village that never actually existed — and yet every piece of it is real. Some two dozen traditional folk houses were dismantled at their original sites across Japan, moved here, and painstakingly rebuilt to save them from disappearing.

Why It’s Interesting

Walking the forested paths, you pass steep gasshō-zukuri farmhouses from the snow country, a merchant’s house, a kabuki stage, and a working watermill — a cross-section of vanished rural Japan, all in one hillside. Inside many of them, a hearth fire smokes gently, blackening the beams just as it would have centuries ago. It’s quiet, atmospheric, and a little haunting.

Best Time to Visit

Year-round, but the wooded grounds are at their best in autumn, when the colour frames the thatched roofs.

Getting There

A pleasant walk from Mukogaoka-yuen Station through Ikuta Ryokuchi park — an easy and very different stop near the start of a drive north.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

Old thatched-roof farmhouses on a green wooded hillside, an open-air folk museum
Real old farmhouses, moved here board by board. Wonderfully cozy.
Mon-chan and Cinnamon the squirrel on the porch of a thatched farmhouse
Cinnamon found acorns under the old eaves. A good and ancient porch. chk-chk!

Where it is

You might also like

Nearby discoveries

Comments

  • No comments yet — be the first to share a tip.

Leave a comment

Share a tip, a correction, or what you saw. Comments are reviewed before they appear — no account needed.