Last additions - Other Komae Sights |
Komae's manhole design depicts a gingko tree, the city's official tree.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Riverside Mall shopping street in IzumiDec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae City Hall 狛江市役所Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Riverside Mall shopping street in IzumiDec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station shopping mall includes a bookshop and Cafe DuMonde from New Orleans.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station, south side.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station, south exit. The north and south exits look almost exactly the same, which is unusual for a train station.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station, south exit.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Small shopping mall at Komae Station under the tracks.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station (North exit) on the Odakyu Line. When the Odakyu Line was first built here, Komae Station was not part of the railway plan. Local residents wanting a train station gathered donations and used the money to buy land donated to Odakyu.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station north exit and bus stop. To vitalize the train station area, Odakyu started to develop the adjacent area by building a few homes and shops in front of the station. After World War II, development progressed to form a shopping arcade.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae Station opened in May 1927, two months after the railway started running. The first Komae Station was very simple, with a simple platform and a small waiting room on it. Single-car trains would come every 10 min. There were few passengers.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Open 9:30 am-4:30 pm (till 6 pm in July-Aug.). Closed Wed. and Thu. Address: Moto-Izumi 2-15-5 狛江市元和泉2-15-5, Phone: 03-3489-8981Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Living room with 10 tatami mats. 座敷Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Veranda. The home used to be owned by the Arai family.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Household Shinto altarDec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Room with a irori hearth 茶の間Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Finally in 2002, the house was moved to and restored at this location. Dirt-floored kitchen with fire stoves. 土間Dec 17, 2007
|
|
StovesDec 17, 2007
|
|
The house was originally located near Senryuji temple's front gate. But it got in the way of the Odakyu Line so it was moved in 1927. Then when the station was expanded in 1992, the house was dismantled and put in storage.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Muikara Minka むいから民家園, former farm house with a thatched-roof house originally built in the late 18th century. Free admission.It got in the way of the Odakyu train line (twice) near Komae Station so it was finally moved here in 2002. Open 9:30 am-4:30 pm (till 6 pm in July-Aug.). Closed Wed. and Thu. Address: Moto-Izumi 2-15-5 狛江市元和泉2-15-5, Phone: 03-3489-8981Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
It's just a small hill 6 meters high, 38 meters diameter.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Komae used to have about a hundred tumuli, but most have been destroyed. Only 13 are left. Only two are open to the public, while the others are on private property.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Stone marker for the Kabuto-zuka Tumulus 兜塚古墳. Tokyo Prefectural Historic Place. About a 10-min. walk from Komae Station (Odakyu Line). 兜塚古墳Komae has numerous ancient tumuli, some say up to 100. However, most have been dismantled and only 13 are left. Kabuto-zuka is the city's largest tumulus, in the middle of a residential neighborhood. It is round, with a diameter of 38 meters, and height 6 meters. It is a Tokyo Prefectural Historic Place. Most other tumuli are on private property and permission is required to enter them.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dec 17, 2007
|
|
The shrine was first built in 889 near Tama River. After a river flood washed away the shrine, it was moved to its present location in 1552.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
The shrine is northwest of Komae Station, in Naka-Izumi 3-21-8. About a 12-min. walk from Komae Station. 狛江市中和泉3-21-8Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Dedicated to the god of happiness.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Standing 2.65 meters high, this stone torii was built in 1651, making it Komae's oldest stone torii. One of the city's Important Cultural Properties.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Walk further to the shrine's main hall.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
Izumi Shrine is the Komae's most popular shrine for New Year's prayers.Dec 17, 2007
|
|
The first torii of Izumi Jinja Shrine 伊豆美神社, Komae's most popular shrine dedicated to the god of happiness.People hoping for a good marriage partner also pray here. The shrine was first built in 889 near Tama River. After a river flood washed away the shrine, it was moved to its present location in 1552. Located in Naka-Izumi 3-21-8. About a 12-min. walk from Komae Station. 狛江市中和泉3-21-8Dec 17, 2007
|
|
|
|