From the AURA index Hot-spring town

Takehara, Hiroshima

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Hiroshima / Takehara
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A reading of this place

Salt made this town. Walk the preserved streets of Takehara and the evidence is still legible in the merchant houses — their thick plaster walls, the careful proportions of the facades, the sense that wealth once moved slowly and deliberately through here. The Seto Inland Sea trade brought Kitamaebune vessels into port, and the salt revenues funded sake breweries whose names — Taketsuru, Fujii Shuzo, Nakao Jozo — still appear on bottles today.

The grid of the old quarter sits close to the water, the land fanning out from the harbor toward a hillside where bamboo groves begin almost immediately. That bamboo is not decorative: the surrounding slopes have long supplied shoots to markets, and the material itself threads through the town's identity in ways both practical and ceremonial. In October or November, during Dokeino Michi, lanterns are lit along the historic streets — a quiet, unhurried event that belongs entirely to the town rather than to tourism. The Bamboo Festival in May runs on a similar register.

Offshore, Okunoshima carries a different kind of history: the island once housed a poison gas factory, and the Okunoshima Poison Gas Museum holds that record without softening it. The lighthouse at the island's edge, first lit in the late nineteenth century, marks the Mihara Seto shipping lane that still carries freight through these waters. Back on the mainland, the Takehara City Historical Folk Museum — itself a Western-style building from the early twentieth century — displays the salt-field era in photographs and tools. Yusakaonsen sits quietly in the hills, barely announced.

Stay in Takehara, Hiroshima

ONSEN Onsen in this area
Inside this place

What converges here

Cultural Properties 11
  • Takehara District, Takehara City Preservation District for Groups of Traditional Buildings
  • Tadanoumi Hachimangu Shrine Sacred Grove Natural Monument
  • Fukkakukan Rai Family Residence (Takehara-cho, Takehara, Hiroshima) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Shunpukan Yori Family Residence (Hiroshima Prefecture, Takehara) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Shunpukan Yori Family Residence (Takehara, Hiroshima) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Fukkakukan Rai Family Residence (Takehara-cho, Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Fukkokukan Rai Family Residence (Takehara-cho, Takehara City, Hiroshima) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Fukkakukan Rai Family Residence (Takeharacho, Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Shunpukan Rai Family Residence (Takeharacho, Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Shunpukan Rai Family Residence (Takeharacho, Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Shunpukan Rai Family Residence (Takehara, Hiroshima) Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
Natural Parks 1
  • Setonaikai National Park
Onsen 1
  • Yusaka Onsen MAJOR
Stations 5
  • Takehara 呉線
  • Tadanoumi 呉線
  • Daijo 呉線
  • Yoshina 呉線
  • Aki-Nagahama 呉線
Cultural Properties Natural Parks Onsen Stations