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Roadside Japan
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Tateyama Snow Wall (Yuki-no-Otani)
✨ Experience Seasonal

Tateyama Snow Wall (Yuki-no-Otani)

📍 Toyama, Tateyama

Each spring, plows carve the deepest snow on the Tateyama alpine route into a corridor walled by snow up to 20 metres tall — you walk a road with white cliffs towering on both sides.

High on the Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route, at the Murodo plateau, falls some of the heaviest snow on Earth — and every spring, road crews don’t just clear it, they sculpt it. The result is Yuki-no-Otani, the “Great Snow Valley”: a plowed corridor where the road runs between sheer white walls of packed snow that can rise 20 metres overhead.

Why It’s Interesting

It’s a road trip through a canyon made entirely of snow. For a few weeks, a stretch of the route opens to pedestrians, and you can stroll the lane with cliffs of blue-white snow towering on either side while route buses inch past. That it happens in spring — sun blazing, sky deep blue, and yet you’re standing in a glacier-deep trench — is the surreal charm.

Best Time to Visit

The route opens around mid-April and the walls are tallest in April and May, melting steadily into June. Pick a clear day for the blue-sky-against-white-walls contrast.

Getting There

No private cars allowed — you ride the Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route (a relay of cable car, ropeway, and bus) up to Murodo from either the Toyama or Nagano side. The journey itself is half the spectacle.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

A red bus driving through a towering 20-metre snow corridor
Snow walls taller than ten of me, stacked up. In spring!
Mon-chan and Cinnamon the squirrel in tiny scarves in the towering snow corridor
Walls of snow taller than ten of me. Cold as my metal mother. Cinnamon: 'YEAH!' ❄️

Where it is

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