From the AURA index Region

Fussa, Tokyo

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Tokyo / Fussa
A reading of this place

Along the Ōme Line west of the city sprawl, the landscape shifts — terraced river bluffs, a canal corridor of old zelkova, and then, cutting across the grid, the perimeter fence of Yokota Air Base. Fussa grew up alongside that boundary, and the coexistence has shaped everything from its street-level signage to its food culture.

Stone storehouses mark the compounds of Ishikawa Shuzo and Tamura Shuzo-jo, both rooted in the Tama River basin and still pressing sake under labels like Kasen and Tama no Megumi. The same grain-and-water logic that fed the breweries also produced Fussa Ham — cured meat that became its own small tradition in a city where American commissary culture and Japanese craft production ended up on the same block. At the Chicken Shack, a live-music room that opened in 1974 and still runs Thursday jam sessions, that layering feels almost architectural: old industrial building, amplified sound, regulars who have been coming since before the city had its current shape.

The terraced topography — Tachikawa Terrace stepping down to Haijima Terrace stepping down to the floodplain — gives the city its physical logic, and the Tamagawa Josui canal traces the upper edge of it in a green corridor. Haijima Station, where several rail lines converge, pulls the whole arrangement together, funneling commuters out toward Tokyo and hikers inward toward the mountains. Between those poles, Fussa simply operates: breweries, a ham factory, a live room, a shrine near Kumakawa Station whose origins trace to iron-sand smelting on the riverbed.