Explore near Okabe Memorial Hall Kinreiso: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Okabe Memorial Hall Kinreiso Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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ScenicHiker575
after the dream of a kimono wholesaler in the Meiji period
Original Text
Kinsuzuso is in the back of the Maoka Cotton Hall. The parking lot is free of charge for the municipal parking lot across the road. It is a cotton wholesaler villa with a strolling garden and is open to the public for free. It has a namako wall to the top of the building. Seen from the garden, it is characterized by a glass wall. It is a wooden tile-roofed 2 floor, and it looks good in the garden. You can write your name and visit the building's 1 floor corridor. 2 I couldn't go upstairs. There are calligraphy and painting antiques in the Japanese-style room, near ...
It seems to be a space for hospitality for the Okabe family, who made a fortune in a kimono dealer. It is behind the textile hall. There were various explanations in the room with wide 々. It seems that the understanding will deepen if you can hear the explanation of the volunteers.
It is said that the second generation, Kushiro Okabe, who was a kimono dealer who has been in the Edo period, built a luxurious guesthouse in the mid-Meiji era during the heyday. The main floor is placed in all rooms (up to the second floor). It is a facility with no sense of life, and the building with a glass window at the opening of the pond spring strolling garden is a masterpiece surrounded by locally produced Isoyama stone (now not mined) on the site of about 1,000 tsubo. It is said that the Okabe kimono shop went bankrupt because of the cheap overseas cotton, but the building is a luxury fee called Kim Suzuso ...
15 minutes walk from Mooka Station and 10 minutes walk from Kitamooka Station. Free admission. Volunteers will explain. This building was built as a villa by the second generation of the Okabe Kimono store in the Meiji era. It is said that it is a wealthy merchant, and there are many valuable wood in the room, and the wood is attached to the wood, and the wood is painted on the wood. A long cedar log is used for the beams in the corridor, and the beams and ceiling plates are painted with persimmon astringency, and the redness remains today. The boarded stage is ... on the 2nd floor.
after the dream of a kimono wholesaler in the Meiji period
Kinsuzuso is in the back of the Maoka Cotton Hall. The parking lot is free of charge for the municipal parking lot across the road. It is a cotton wholesaler villa with a strolling garden and is open to the public for free. It has a namako wall to the top of the building. Seen from the garden, it is characterized by a glass wall. It is a wooden tile-roofed 2 floor, and it looks good in the garden. You can write your name and visit the building's 1 floor corridor. 2 I couldn't go upstairs. There are calligraphy and painting antiques in the Japanese-style room, near ...
Tingも Qili
It seems to be a space for hospitality for the Okabe family, who made a fortune in a kimono dealer. It is behind the textile hall. There were various explanations in the room with wide 々. It seems that the understanding will deepen if you can hear the explanation of the volunteers.
Great architecture in the Meiji era
It is said that the second generation, Kushiro Okabe, who was a kimono dealer who has been in the Edo period, built a luxurious guesthouse in the mid-Meiji era during the heyday. The main floor is placed in all rooms (up to the second floor). It is a facility with no sense of life, and the building with a glass window at the opening of the pond spring strolling garden is a masterpiece surrounded by locally produced Isoyama stone (now not mined) on the site of about 1,000 tsubo. It is said that the Okabe kimono shop went bankrupt because of the cheap overseas cotton, but the building is a luxury fee called Kim Suzuso ...
The owner of the service house の Don't worry
15 minutes walk from Mooka Station and 10 minutes walk from Kitamooka Station. Free admission. Volunteers will explain. This building was built as a villa by the second generation of the Okabe Kimono store in the Meiji era. It is said that it is a wealthy merchant, and there are many valuable wood in the room, and the wood is attached to the wood, and the wood is painted on the wood. A long cedar log is used for the beams in the corridor, and the beams and ceiling plates are painted with persimmon astringency, and the redness remains today. The boarded stage is ... on the 2nd floor.