1 upcoming event
Saijo Sake Festival
White walls and red chimneys. Saijo's sake quarter runs a few hundred meters, and along i…
White walls and red chimneys.
Saijo's sake quarter runs a few hundred meters, and along it stand seven breweries, their plastered storehouses lined up wall to wall, each chimney stenciled with the brewery's name in white. This is one of Japan's three great brewing towns, named in the same breath as Nada and Fushimi, and the reason is underfoot: soft water from the wells of the Saijo basin, drawn for centuries.
In October the breweries open all at once. The wells used for the mash are uncovered, the inner rooms usually closed to outsiders are thrown open, and more than a thousand sakes from across the country gather in a single town for two days. You can walk from one brewery to the next, cup in hand, until the streets themselves seem to tilt.
The dish to find is bishonabe—a brewery workers' stew, chicken and vegetables simmered not in stock but in sake, salt, and a great deal of pepper. The whole town smells faintly of it, and faintly of fermentation, and by afternoon even those who do not drink find themselves, somehow, a little lifted. An autumn town, gently drunk.
The white-walled kura of Saijo line the street in a particular silence on ordinary weekdays — red-tiled rooflines, *namako*-patterned plaster, the faint residue of fermentation in the air. This is sake country, placed alongside Nada and Fushimi as one of Japan's recognized brewing centers, and the 酒蔵通り carries that weight without announcing it. In October, the Sakematsuri draws crowds through those same lanes; the rest of the year, the breweries simply work.
Higashihiroshima is also Aki-tsu, a coastal district where oysters are farmed and *shirouo* — small translucent fish — come in season. The Aki-tsu Kakimatsuri in January gathers people around that harvest, while the town's red brick, fired locally, marks the older industrial character of the coast. Inland, the 酒類総合研究所 — Japan's sole comprehensive sake research institute, relocated here from Tokyo in 1995 — sits within the Science Park, a quiet signal that this place takes its fermentation seriously enough to study it.
Hiroshima University's consolidation onto a single campus here through the 1970s reshaped the city's identity, layering a student and research population over the older sake-town and market-town fabric. The result is not a tension exactly — more a layering, the Saijo Basin holding both the historic kura district and the campus sprawl without either canceling the other out. Fukuseiji temple, founded in the Nara period, and the ruins of the Aki Kokubunji stand in that same basin, patient and undemonstrative.
Stay in Higashihiroshima, Hiroshima
What converges here
- Mitsushiro Tumulus
- Aki Kokubunji Temple Ruins
- Saijo Sake Brewery District
- Kagamiyama Castle Ruins
- Fukujo-ji Hondo Nai Zushi oyobi Shumidan
- Chikurin-ji Main Hall
- Former Kihara Family Residence (Hiroshima Prefecture, Kamo-gun, Takaya-cho)
- Setonaikai
- Higashi-Hiroshima
- Saijo
- Nishitakaya
- Hachihonmatsu
- Terake
- Shiroichi
- Kawachi
- Akitsu
- Kazahaya
- Irino