Kasugai, Aichi
Cactus greenhouses line the edges of residential streets in a way that makes you look twice — the silhouettes are unmistakable, and the scale is quietly industrial. Kasugai has been growing grafted cacti for domestic distribution since long before the high-rise apartments of Kōzōji New Town appeared on the eastern ridge, and the two realities sit side by side without apology. The city runs east to west along the Chūō Line, shifting from the flat Nōbi Plain into the folded hills of the Owari uplands, and the change in texture is gradual enough that you feel it in the legs before you register it in the eye.
The Aigi Tunnel Group — brick-lined railway tunnels from the Meiji era, now a preserved industrial heritage site — opens to the public in spring and autumn, and walking their dark interiors makes the history of the line feel physical rather than archival. Closer to the center, the Dōfū Memorial Museum holds the legacy of the calligrapher Ono no Tōfū, a native of this area, whose name surfaces on local signage with the quiet pride of a place that claims one figure and holds to it. At Mitsuzōin, a designated Important Cultural Property pagoda stands in the kind of compound that receives weekday visitors without fanfare.
The Kasugai Matsuri and the Haniwa Festival mark the civic calendar with the ordinary rhythm of a working city, not a tourist town. Peaches and grapes come from the hillside orchards, and the Sabotenfeア draws attention to the cacti that have, in their peculiar way, become the city's most recognizable export. Uchitsu Onsen sits at the edge of things, low-key and local, the kind of bath that appears on no major list.