From the AURA index Hot-spring town

Inawashiro, Fukushima

municipality

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Fukushima / Inawashiro
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A reading of this place

Snow settles deep across the north shore of Lake Inawashiro each winter, and the lake itself sits almost perfectly still beneath Bandai's volcanic silhouette. The mountain is not a backdrop here — it is a presence, an active volcano that erupted in the late nineteenth century and reshaped the land around it. Inawashiro-machi grew up in that shadow, a town where imperial families once kept summer retreats and where the bacteriologist Noguchi Hideyo was born in a farmhouse that still stands.

The 天鏡閣, a Western-style villa completed in the Meiji era for the Arisugawa-no-miya family, and the adjacent 福島県迎賓館, a Japanese-style residence of the Takamatsu-no-miya family, sit near the lakeshore almost without ceremony — you can walk their gardens on an ordinary afternoon. The 野口英世記念館 nearby shows not the myth but the material: the actual birthplace, the preserved tools, the letters. Between these sites runs the quiet architecture of a resort town that never fully shed its working character — buckwheat is grown and milled locally, 磐梯黄金みそ is produced here, and 中ノ沢こけし, the turned wooden dolls from the onsen hamlet of Nakazawa, are still made by hand.

At 中ノ沢温泉, the baths are modest and the clientele largely local — skiers in season, agricultural workers in others. The 磐梯まつり moves through the town each year with the particular seriousness of festivals tied to volcanic memory. The 小平潟天満宮, founded over a millennium ago on the lakeshore, stands amid old cherry trees. None of this announces itself loudly. The town simply holds its layers — geological, historical, agricultural — and lets them coexist.

Stay in Inawashiro, Fukushima

ONSEN Onsen in this area
Inside this place

What converges here

Cultural Properties 11
  • Aizu Domain Lord Matsudaira Family Mausoleum Historic Site
  • Swans and Their Habitat at Lake Inawashiro Natural Monument
  • Inawashiro-ko Mizusugigoke Colony Natural Monument
  • Mima no Oishi Natural Monument
  • Former Baba Family Residence (formerly located in Ina Village, Minami-Aizu District, Fukushima Prefecture) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Tenkyo-kaku Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Tenkyo-kaku Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Tenkyo-kaku Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Former Takamatsu-no-miya Okishima Villa (Fukushima Prefecture Guest House) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Former Takamatsu-no-miya Okishima Villa (Fukushima Prefecture Guest House) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Former Takamatsu-no-miya Okishima Villa (Fukushima Prefectural Guest House) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
Natural Parks 1
  • Bandai-Asahi National Park
Onsen 2
  • Urabandai Kawakami Onsen MAJOR
  • Nakanosawa Onsen TIER2
Mountains 3
  • Mount Higashiazuma
  • Mount Bandai
  • Mount Minowa
Stations 6
  • Inawashiro 磐越西線
  • Kamido 磐越西線
  • Kawageta 磐越西線
  • Inawashiro-Kohan 磐越西線
  • Okina-shima 磐越西線
  • Sekito 磐越西線
Museums Cultural Properties Natural Parks Onsen Mountains Stations