Obu, Aichi
At Obu Station, two rail lines diverge — one heading east along the old Tokaido corridor, the other curving south toward the Chita Peninsula. The station has been a junction since the late nineteenth century, and that branching quality seems to have settled into the city itself: industrial and agricultural, ancient and newly built, all occupying the same gently rolling terrain.
The hillsides here were shaped by ceramics long before the auto plants arrived, and the Obu City Historical Folk Museum holds evidence of that earlier industry alongside reconstructed Meiji-era farmhouses. On the same slopes, the Aichi irrigation canal made modern market farming possible, and today JAあぐりタウン げんきの郷 sells what the land still produces — Kinoyama yam, grapes, Shinkō pears, cabbage, sweet corn — stacked in wooden crates with the casual abundance of a place that grows things seriously rather than decoratively.
To the south, the Wellness Valley cluster and the prefectural park of Aichi Kenko no Mori occupy a broad stretch of land devoted to health infrastructure. A medicinal herb garden sits within the park grounds — an odd, quiet corner that reads less as attraction than as working inventory. Entsuji, founded in the Nara period and the final stop on the Chita Kannon pilgrimage circuit, stands somewhere between those two registers: old enough to predate the city's current shape entirely, yet still embedded in the ordinary fabric of the neighborhood around it.