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Higashikawa: The Town That Grows Furniture and People
Higashikawa Town's population has been growing while most of rural Hokkaido's has been dec…
Higashikawa Town's population has been growing while most of rural Hokkaido's has been declining. The reasons are multiple and interconnected: a Japanese language school that attracts international students; a furniture manufacturing tradition that draws craftspeople and design-oriented businesses; a long-standing designation as a 'photography town' that has created a community of artists and visual practitioners; the proximity of the Daisetsuzan range, which provides exceptional outdoor access.
The town also has no municipal water supply — residents drink groundwater from the mountain, which is delivered to homes and available from public fountains. This is presented, correctly, as an advantage: the water is excellent, and the daily awareness of where it comes from changes your relationship to the resource.
Migration experience programs in Higashikawa offer a few days inside this combination: visiting farms and furniture workshops, meeting people who moved here, understanding what the trade-offs look like from the inside. The town is thirty minutes from Asahikawa and close to some of Hokkaido's best hiking. Whether you are considering moving here or simply curious about why a small Hokkaido town is succeeding where others are not, the experience of spending time in Higashikawa tends to answer the question more clearly than any explanation can.
Snowmelt from Daisetsuzan feeds the taps directly — no municipal waterworks, just groundwater drawn from the mountain's base. That fact alone tells you something about Higashikawa's relationship with its landscape. The town sits at the western foot of Daisetsuzan National Park, forests covering most of its area, with Asahidake ropeway and the hot spring village of Asahidake Onsen at roughly eleven hundred meters marking the upper edge of ordinary life.
The town declared itself "a town of photography" in 1985, and that identity has accumulated weight over the decades. The Higashikawa International Photography Festival runs through summer, drawing submissions and visitors into a conversation about images that feels less like a promotional event and more like a working proposition the town has made to itself. Alongside it, the Shasin Koshien — a national high school photography competition — brings young photographers here each year, giving the streets a particular kind of attentive energy. Mitsuzakura Sake Brewery, relocated from Gifu, uses Daisetsuzan spring water for its brewing; Higashikawa rice, grown in the same watershed, has its own reputation among local producers.
Furniture-making and woodcraft have run through the local economy for generations, connected to the forests that surround the town. The roadside station Michikusa-kan carries the products — rice, sake, local vegetables — in one place, adjacent to the Kyodokan, where a relocated former town hall holds records of the settlement era. Tenjinkyo Onsen sits deeper in the gorge, near Hagoromo no Taki, a waterfall of considerable drop. The texture here is not rustic nostalgia but something more purposeful: a small town that has chosen specific things — water, images, wood, fermentation — and built a coherent, if quiet, argument around them.
Stay in Higashikawa, Hokkaido
What converges here
- Daisetsuzan
- Mount Taisetsu
- Mount Taisetsu