Travel Photo Monday

 

 

Visiting a Gassho-Zukuri, Travel Photo Mondays

It’s Monday morning, time to enjoy some gorgeous travel photography and inspiration from around the world. Let’s banish those Monday blues by sharing gorgeous imagery and story telling.

 

View from upstairs bedrooms

 

Visiting a Gassho-Zukuri

I’m going to take you back to Shirikawago in the Japanese Alps to go inside on of the famous Gassho-Zukuri homes that have made this village a Unesco World Heritage site and it’s a beautiful home to tour. The village is remarkably well maintained and intact because many of the homes have been converted into small inns, museums, shops and restaurants. One of the largest ones available to tour is the Wada home, a large three-story home belonging originally to the Wada family and a museum even though it is still being used privately as a home. Due to its unique large size and structure, the home which is over 300 years old, is now a national treasure and is open for everyone to visit and tour the entire structure.

 

Gassho Zukuri homes in Shirikawago

 

 

Typical of the homes in the village,  there are many small streams that fill up the rice beds around the village and connect back to the Shokawa river which the main river running through the valley floor and adjoining the village. The dried up rice stalks make up the eves of each home in the village, and is a tradition of building organically from the foundation that has been passed down through the generations and even built with community effort because the thatch has to be maintained and eventually replaced.  Unlike most Japanese homes that have low ceilings to conserve heat, this home is a wide and open floor plan with relatively high walls and large beams.

 

 

View of some village homes

View of some village homes

 

 

During the Edo period, the home was used as the mayor’s home, it was a silk production facility and was also a commerce facility. Building the foundation alone took over four years to prepare with organic materials including dirt, silk worm feces, human urine and grass mixed together to form the base.  Upon entering, there is a large wooden main room with large display cases holding the family lacquer and personal treasures. The two rooms adjoining the main room below, represent the lounge to take tea and enjoy views of the back garden, the other to hold the family batsudan or family shrine.

 

Interior den or lounge area

Interior den or lounge area

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interior wall paneled dining room

Interior wall paneled dining room

 

Upstairs on the second floor is a whole operation set up for silk worm production. Tools and other working equipment is housed in this level with signage to explain some of the key aspects of silk production in these facilities. From the photo below, you can see huge timbers used and  the elaborate rope and twining details.

 

View from upstairs bedrooms
Attic and silk making area

Attic and silk making area

 

 

 

 

 

Views of the village

Views of the village

 

 

Extensive rice beds are laid out throughout the village and feed by a variety of streams. The rice stalks are cut after the rice is collected and use for creating the thick stalks of thatch roofing material that is necessary to insulate and protect from the large amounts of snow that fall in the area from December to March timeframes. The homes are also aligned with the river facing north to south to maximize the sunshine and protect from the severe winds and snowfall during the winter time.

 

 

Visiting a Gassho Zukuri home

Above, large picture windows placed on every level show magnificent views of the village, landscape, surrounding mountains and scenic countryside. The homes are wonderfully located to capture gorgeous views and at the same time laid out to maximize light conditions and strengthen the structures.  There are a few more wonderful homes that have also been converted to museums and shops and are open for the public for viewing.

It was a fun visit to Shirikawago in Japan, I hope you enjoyed the tour for Travel Photo Mondays. Please come and visit the blogs below for more interesting places to visit around the world today.

 

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