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Roadside Japan
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🌧️ Rainy Day

12 discoveries

Bunshokan (Former Yamagata Prefectural Office)
📜 History

Bunshokan (Former Yamagata Prefectural Office)

A grand English-Renaissance government hall from 1916 with a landmark clock tower, free to wander — marble stairs, a chandeliered assembly chamber, and balconies that make it Yamagata City's most unexpectedly elegant indoor stop.

📍 Yamagata, Yamagata 🆓 Free ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Cup Noodles Museum, Ikeda
🏛️ Museum

Cup Noodles Museum, Ikeda

A shrine to instant ramen on the spot where it was invented — design your own Cup Noodle, walk a tunnel wall of 800 packages, and salute the shed where Momofuku Ando changed dinner forever.

📍 Osaka, Ikeda 🆓 Free ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Fujiko F. Fujio Museum
🏛️ Museum

Fujiko F. Fujio Museum

A joyful museum in Kawasaki devoted to the creator of Doraemon and friends — original manga art, a rooftop play world, and that famous blue robot cat waiting in the garden.

📍 Kanagawa, Kawasaki 💴 Paid ⏱ Half day
Fujishiro Seiji Museum
🎨 Art

Fujishiro Seiji Museum

A theater-like museum devoted to Seiji Fujishiro's luminous 'kage-e' shadow art — jewel-colored cut-paper fairytale worlds — reached through a garden where a cat sculpture quietly shows you the way.

📍 Tochigi, Nasu 💴 Paid ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Kamo Aquarium (Jellyfish Dream)
🦊 Animals

Kamo Aquarium (Jellyfish Dream)

A white aquarium on the Tsuruoka coast that holds the world's largest jellyfish collection — a Guinness record 50-plus species — climaxing in a five-metre 'Jellyfish Dream' tank where 2,000 moon jellies drift in slow, glowing circles.

📍 Yamagata, Tsuruoka 💴 Paid ⏱ Half day
Nasu Stained Glass Museum
🏛️ Museum

Nasu Stained Glass Museum

A museum built like an English manor house, its little stone chapels glowing with antique stained glass from the 1800s — wander between the windows as live pipe-organ and music-box notes drift through.

📍 Tochigi, Nasu 💴 Paid ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Nasu Teddy Bear Museum
🏛️ Museum

Nasu Teddy Bear Museum

A cozy English-cottage museum in the Nasu highlands stuffed with antique and artist teddy bears from around the world — plus a beloved life-size Totoro-and-Catbus room that delights every visitor.

📍 Tochigi, Nasu 💴 Paid ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Nasu Trick Art Museum
🎨 Art

Nasu Trick Art Museum

A highland gallery of mind-bending optical illusions where the paintings reach out and grab you — pose to be eaten by a shark, hang off a cliff, or shake hands with the Mona Lisa, camera ready.

📍 Tochigi, Nasu 💴 Paid ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
The Railway Museum, Omiya
🏛️ Museum

The Railway Museum, Omiya

A cathedral of trains in Saitama: real locomotives from steam to shinkansen parked in a vast hall, a turntable that spins a steam engine to a whistle, and driving simulators for would-be conductors.

📍 Saitama, Saitama 💴 Paid ⏱ Half day
Shika-no-yu, Nasu's Oldest Hot Spring
✨ Experience

Shika-no-yu, Nasu's Oldest Hot Spring

A 1,300-year-old wooden bathhouse at the top of Nasu Onsen, where you soak in six cypress tubs of milky, sulfurous water at rising temperatures — a hot-spring ritual nearly unchanged for centuries.

📍 Tochigi, Nasu 💴 Paid ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Oya History Museum (Underground Quarry)
🛸 Oddity

Oya History Museum (Underground Quarry)

Descend into a cathedral-sized underground stone quarry — 20,000 square metres of cool, cavernous chambers carved by hand, now hosting concerts, art, and the occasional film shoot beneath the earth.

📍 Tochigi, Utsunomiya 💴 Paid ⏱ ≈ 1 hour
Meguro Parasitological Museum
🏛️ Museum

Meguro Parasitological Museum

A tiny, free, two-floor museum dedicated entirely to parasites — home to a preserved 8.8-metre tapeworm and a gift shop selling parasite keychains. Tokyo's most gleefully strange date spot.

📍 Tokyo, Meguro 🆓 Free ⏱ ≈ 1 hour