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Atami Sea Fireworks Festival
The fireworks thunder at the bottom of a bowl. Atami is a hot-spring town wedged between m…
The fireworks thunder at the bottom of a bowl. Atami is a hot-spring town wedged between mountains and sea, and its bay forms a natural amphitheater—a mortar-shaped hollow where the sound of each shell bounces off the surrounding hills and comes back amplified, again and again, until the whole town seems to shake.
Unlike the great once-a-year festivals, Atami fires its display more than a dozen times across the seasons—spring, summer, autumn, winter—so that a visitor who came simply to soak in the hot springs may find, on an ordinary evening, that the sky has filled with fire. There is something generous about this rhythm, fireworks woven into the ongoing life of a resort town rather than saved for a single sacred night.
The finale is the great aerial Niagara, light spilling across the entire width of the bay while the mountains throw the sound back over the water. And the signature pleasure of Atami is to watch it from the hot springs themselves—to sit in steaming water, the cold sea air on your face, and look up as the bowl of the bay fills with brightness and the hills around you roar.
The hillside drops sharply toward the water, and the streets of Atami follow no sensible grid — they curl, switchback, and dead-end at walls of cut stone. At the base of it all, steam still rises from the ground in places, the city built around its own heat rather than despite it. Atami Onsen has fed this town for centuries, and the weight of that fact is visible in the layered architecture: old ryokan facades pressed between modern hotel towers, a shared bathhouse near the station still used by locals on weekday evenings.
Up the slope toward Izusan, the atmosphere changes. The Izusan Jinja sits near the source of Hashiriyu, where water emerges horizontally from a coastal cave — a rare geological phenomenon that drew pilgrims long before the resort hotels arrived. Kinokuniya Shrine is another register entirely: the camphor tree at Kinomiya Jinja, its trunk so wide it takes many arms to encircle, has been growing here since before the town had a name. The MOA Museum of Art, positioned high above the bay, holds a different kind of accumulation — centuries of lacquerwork and ceramics housed where the view itself is part of the experience.
Down at the fishing harbors of Ajiro and Usami, the catch still comes in. Dried fish — himono — hangs in shop doorways along the approach to the station, salt and sea air mixing with the sulfur that never quite leaves Atami's streets. The Atami Kaijo Hanabi Taikai sends fireworks over the bay in a natural amphitheater of surrounding hills, the sound bouncing back off the slopes. Atami is a place that has always been used: for rest, for ritual, for the particular pleasure of eating well near the water.
Stay in Atami, Shizuoka
What converges here
- Great Camphor Tree of Azusawake Shrine
- Former Hyuga Family Atami Villa Underground Room
- Fuji-Hakone-Izu
- Atami Onsen
- Izusan Onsen
- Izu Yugawara Onsen
- Mount Kurodake
- Atami
- Atami
- Atami
- Atami
- Izu-Taga
- Kinomiya
- Ajiro
- Ajiro Fishing Port
- Usami Fishing Port