Kanazawa, Ishikawa
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Omicho Market
Locals call it Omicho. The market opened in 1721, during the era of the Kaga domain, when…
Locals call it Omicho.
The market opened in 1721, during the era of the Kaga domain, when a fire destroyed several market districts in the city and what remained was consolidated here. For over 300 years, it has been where Kanazawa shops for food.
About 170 stalls line a network of narrow lanes. Fresh fish from the Sea of Japan — nodoguro (blackthroat seaperch), snow crab, sweet shrimp. Vegetables, pickles, dried seafood, tofu. The selection changes with the season; in winter, the fish counters shift entirely.
More than ten fishmongers operate side by side. That means you can compare prices and freshness before you buy — which is the point of a market.
There are restaurants here too, and some have long queues. But the market's real function is older than tourism: it is where Kanazawa families come to buy the fish for a celebration dinner, or the vegetables for an ordinary Tuesday.
Omicho is not a destination. It is a habit. And the habit is 300 years old.
At the near end of Kanazawa Station, where the Tsuzumimon gate frames the exit like a stage set, the city announces itself through architecture before a single street has been walked. The grid beyond it carries the weight of an Edo-period castle town that escaped wartime bombing — not as a museum piece, but as a layered, living fabric. ひがし茶屋街still holds its narrow ochre frontages; the 長町武家屋敷跡 stretches in earth-toned walls that run uninterrupted along shallow drainage channels.
The food culture here is particular and specific. Near江町市場, stalls move加賀野菜and seafood through the morning hours with the efficiency of a place that feeds itself first and performs for visitors second. じぶ煮 — a simmered dish of duck and wheat-flour-coated ingredients — appears on lunch menus without ceremony. At 森八, the confection called 長生殿 sits in lacquered boxes, a pressed sugar cake whose recipe has not needed revision. 不室屋 keeps its麸craft in production, a ingredient that surfaces quietly in broths and kaiseki courses across the city.
Yu涌温泉lies at the city's edge, a small hot-spring district that functions more as a neighborhood retreat than a resort. The 金沢21世紀美術館 sits in the city center with no fence around it — its circular form open to pedestrian shortcut and school groups alike, which perhaps says more about Kanazawa's civic character than any formal description could. The 百万石まつり each year traces the procession of 前田利家's entry into the city, not as historical re-enactment for cameras, but as a rhythm the city still keeps.
What converges here
- Seison-kaku
- Ishikawa Prefectural Museum of Art
- Taniguchi Yoshiro and Yoshio Memorial Kanazawa Architecture Museum
- Kanazawa 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art
- Kanazawa City Nakamura Memorial Museum of Art
- Kanazawa City Yasue Gold Leaf Craft Museum
- Kanazawa Yuwaku Yumeji Museum
- Maeda Tosa-no-kami Family Museum
- Izumi Kyoka Memorial Museum
- Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum
- Kanazawa City Life Museum
- Kanazawa University Museum
- Kenroku-en Garden
- Kanazawa Kazuemachi Preservation District of Historic Buildings
- Kanazawa Utatsuyama Foothills
- Kanazawa Teramachidai Preservation District
- Kanazawa Higashi-Chaya Higashi Preservation District
- Cultural Landscape of Kanazawa: Tradition and Culture of a Castle Town
- Chikamori Site
- Kaga-Etchu Border Castle Ruins and Road: Kiriyama Castle Ruins, Matsune Castle Ruins, Obarakoshi
- Tatsumi Waterway and Attached Toshimizu Enshosagura Ruins
- Kanazawa Castle Ruins
- Seison-kaku Garden
- Nishi-shi Garden
- Dogata no Shiinoki
- Yamashina Okuwaso Fossil Locality and Potholes
- Shogetsу-ji Cherry Tree
- Ozaki Shrine
- Ozaki Shrine
- Ozaki Shrine
- Ozaki Shrine
- Daijo-ji Temple Butsuden
- Shima
- Former Sabonami Honjin Ishikura Residence
- Former Sabanami Honjin Ishikura Family Residence (formerly in Nanjo-cho, Nanjo-gun, Fukui)
- Former Sabanami Honjin Ishikura Family Residence (Originally from Nanjo-cho, Nanjo-gun, Fukui Prefecture)
- Former Sabonami Honjin Ishikura Family Residence (formerly in Nanjo-cho, Nanjo-gun, Fukui)
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa-mon Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa-mon Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa-mon Gate
- Kanazawa Castle Ishikawa Gate
- Kita Family Residence (Nomachi, Nonoichi, Ishikawa)
- Seison-kaku
- Former Matsushita Residence
- Kanazawa Castle Sanjukken Nagaya
- Kanazawa Castle Earthen Storehouse (Tsurumaru Warehouse)
- Kita Residence (Honmachi, Nonoichi, Ishikawa)
- Kita Residence (Honmachi, Nonoichi, Ishikawa)
- Kita Residence (Honmachi, Nonoichi, Ishikawa)
- Oyama Shrine Shinmon Gate
- Former Ishikawa Prefectural Second Middle School Main Building
- Former Fourth Higher Middle School Main Building
- Former Kanazawa Army Arsenal (Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum)
- Former Kanazawa Army Arsenal (Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum)
- Former Kanazawa Army Arsenal (Ishikawa Prefectural History Museum)
- Yamada Family Garden
- Hiraki Family Garden
- Hakusan
- Kanazawa Onsen
- Fukaya Onsen
- Yugawa Onsen
- Yuwaku Onsen
- Mount Daimon
- Mount Takasaburo
- Mount Kuchisanbo
- Mount Iozen
- Kanazawa
- Kanazawa
- Nishi-Kanazawa
- Higashi-Kanazawa
- Hokuriku-Kanazawa
- Morimoto
- Nomachi
- Shin-Nishi-Kanazawa
- Waridashi
- Mitsuya
- Kamimoroe
- Otomaru
- Nishiizumi
- Kagatsume
- Gaku-Jutaku-Mae
- Shijima
- Magari
- Mikuchi
- Isobe
- Okawabata
- Kitama
- Nanatsuya