Tsukuba, Ibaraki
The Tsukuba Express pulls in from Akihabara in under an hour, and the shift is immediate — wide roads, low-slung research institutes, a flatness that stretches south across the Kanto plain. Tsukuba was planned, and it shows: the grid is deliberate, the campuses are spacious, the whole city carries the posture of a place built from scratch in the 1960s with a purpose in mind.
Yet the older geography doesn't disappear. To the north, Tsukuba-san rises from the plain, a double-peaked mountain with a long history of pilgrimage. The Tsukuba-san Jinja sits at its base and up its slopes, its inner shrines occupying both summits. The Gama Matsuri, the Ume Matsuri, the Momiji Matsuri — the mountain runs its own calendar, separate from the research-city rhythm below. The Daigo-dō, a pilgrimage hall on the mid-slope, marks the mountain as part of the Bandō Kannon circuit, drawing a quieter, more deliberate kind of visitor.
Back on the plain, the Tsukuba Expo Center keeps an H-II rocket standing outdoors, full-scale, as if it simply needed somewhere to rest. The Chizu to Sokuryo no Kagakukan — the museum of surveying and cartography — occupies its own building nearby, a reminder that the city's scientific institutions run into some genuinely specific territory. At the market stalls and roadside stands, ashitaba and pakuchi appear alongside the more expected produce, small signs of the agricultural flatlands that still exist just beyond the institute fences.
What converges here
- 小田城跡
- 平沢官衙遺跡
- 大塚家住宅(茨城県新治郡桜村)
- 旧矢中家住宅
- 旧矢中家住宅
- 水郷筑波
- Mount Tsukuba