Chiyatan, Okinawa
The western coast of Okinawa's main island carries a particular layering that becomes legible only slowly. Chatan-cho sits on reclaimed land facing the East China Sea, and more than half its surface area belongs to U.S. military facilities — a fact that has shaped not just the town's map but its appetite and its architecture. Steakhouses and pizza counters stand beside soba shops; the signage flips between scripts without apology.
American Village, developed across the late 1990s and into the early 2000s on land that was once Hanby Airfield, makes no attempt to disguise its origins. The complex absorbs American military culture openly — not as nostalgia, but as the actual substrate of daily commerce here. Nearby, the Hamagawa fishing port and the older hamlet of Shimosedo, where pre-war shrines and the ritual gathering place called Ashibinaa still stand, remind you that this land held a different shape before 1945. The Ireibarā archaeological site and Chatan Castle ruins suggest a longer continuity beneath the concrete.
On weekday afternoons, the Chatan Sports Park fills with ordinary town life — a baseball stadium where the Chunichi Dragons hold spring camp, a beach at Sunset Beach where the light does what the name promises, and the Chatannirai Center with its community FM station murmuring across the district. Chatan Megumi Onsen, opened in 2004 beside the sea, offers outdoor baths within earshot of the waves. The town is not performing a version of itself; it simply operates on the terms history handed it.
On this island
- 伊礼原遺跡
- 北谷城跡
- 浜川