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Communication and relationship-building with local residents

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The renovation of the house was done and it’s time to think about concrete plans on how to use them. I live and work in Tokyo and the houses are located in a less-populated village (10 hours and 300USD for a return trip from Tokyo), I have to find new users outside from the village. Then things are coming up: how to get along with the local community. I can invite someone, but nobody will visit the houses on a regular basis, if the ambience around isn’t good. In the first place, I myself am an outsider, though my mum grew up in the village. At the offset, I organized: 1) a small event for introducing the tea house last September; and 2) a workshop to collect the memory of the village last December. More precisely, I proposed but practically Mr. Matsuda, an expert of the local authority organized them. Such ambiguity in the organization is a result of the fact that, even though local authorities value the spontaneous actions by private figures, most residents put their trust in the pu...

Photo Diary: The Main House Renovation

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The renovation of the tea house and the main house was launched at the beginning of June and finished on August 21. The construction company called Rinwa Kensetsu gave me some batches of pictures as progress reports. I posted them on tea house , now here are the pictures on the main house. For the cost estimates, please see the previous post . Unlike the tea house, the renovation of the main house was very simple: mainly to renew the floors. Wooden floorboards rapidly deteriorate in the warm and humid climate, particularly when the house is vacant and the air inside is stagnant. First, let me explain the structure of Japanese traditional houses. Under floor boards, the foundation of buildings usually consists as shown in the picture below. They are basically wooden materials except stone bases. For reference, here are the pictures before the renovation. Before renovation REMOVING THE FLOORBOARDS The company tore off the floorboards, sleepers and floor joists, if they are rotten. Such...

Photo Diary: Tea House Renovation

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The renovation of the tea house and the main house was launched at the beginning of June and finished on August 21. The construction company called Rinwa Kensetsu gave me some batches of pictures as progress reports. I’m going to post them of how the tea house was restored. For the cost estimates, please see the previous post . SCAFFOLDINGS AND SUBSTRUCTION REINFORCEMENT The scaffoldings were run up at the end of June. As the tea house stands on the slope of a mountain, scaffolds are necessary for the repair of the roof and the foundation of the house. The wooden foundation had been half-rotten, and so inclined that we weren’t able to open doors smoothly (Doors can open smoothly only when the sash bars keep quadrangle). The company staff fixed the problem. EXTERNAL WALLS The residence zone consisting of two rooms, kitchen, toilet was added about 70 years ago, and my mom lived there about 50 years ago. However, it wasn’t quality work and warped/inclined much faster than the 120-year-o...

A visualized story on the arrival of Buddhism in Japan

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Buddhism is one of the two major religions in Japan, though most Japanese are flexible/tolerant about religions and have practiced elements of both of Buddhism and Shinto (Japan's indigenous religion).   A temple called Seson-ji , stands in Oyodo Town, Yoshino, Nara Prefecture on the site of another temple called Hiso-tera . A set of documentary records materials surviving in the temple illustrates how Buddhism arrived and was accepted in Japan in the sixth century. The materials were digitized with high imaging quality and made accessible to the public. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Buddhism arrived in Japan through China and Korea. Before the "official" introduction of Buddhism in the first half of the sixth century, Buddhists including immigrants from China and Korea would have already been practicing in Japan. The "official" introduction of Buddhism to Japan is dated to 552 according to the Chronicles of Japan when King Seong of Baekje (now western Korea) sent a ...