Namakokabe Avenue Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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MarianJ007
Stapor wall
Original Text
I wandered around Matsuzaki Town in Shizuoka Prefecture. Namakokabe-dori is a street that represents the atmosphere of Matsuzaki, and I often ride on pamphlets. The Namako wall is a technique that stretches square flat tiles on the wall surface and raises the seams into a kamaboko shape with plaster. It is said that it spread in the Edo period for fire and windproof purposes. You can also see the Namako Wall in Shimoda City, Matsuzaki Town.
He was the birthplace of heizaburo Kondo, a chemist of alkaloid studies.
Original Text
Works of cherry blossom masters such as Chohachi Irie remain here and there in the town. Chino City, Nagano Prefecture is also famous for cherry blossom master's works, but Matsuzaki has mostly old private houses, warehouses, and walls.
It was Matsuzaki for the first time in several years. I parked my car in the parking lot in front of the Chohachi Museum of Art and walked through the town of Namako Wall. You can see Namako Walls in other towns, but is this the only place you can see many houses with Namako Walls? The prosperity of that time still remains. There was a footbath and there was no one, so I took a footbath for about 10 and enjoyed the atmosphere of the trip.
Walk along "Namako Wall Street". It's really a quiet town in the countryside. This house is the birthplace of Heizaburo Kondo. He seems to have left footprints in the study of alkaloids at the University of Tokyo Medical School. It doesn't look like a house in the Meiji era. , In addition, it is a building of the "Matsuzaki Town Tourism Association", but you use an old house. A river runs through the center of the town. It is called "Nakagawa". The bridge over there is "Tokiwa Ohashi". Like your house, a railing is made of "plaster" ...
the wall of pride that i want you to leave forever.
Original Text
It is natural to break old things and rebuild new things, and leaving them like this will create rare value in itself. Next to the building of the Tourism Association, I would like you to walk while collecting information.
Stapor wall
I wandered around Matsuzaki Town in Shizuoka Prefecture. Namakokabe-dori is a street that represents the atmosphere of Matsuzaki, and I often ride on pamphlets. The Namako wall is a technique that stretches square flat tiles on the wall surface and raises the seams into a kamaboko shape with plaster. It is said that it spread in the Edo period for fire and windproof purposes. You can also see the Namako Wall in Shimoda City, Matsuzaki Town.
He was the birthplace of heizaburo Kondo, a chemist of alkaloid studies.
Works of cherry blossom masters such as Chohachi Irie remain here and there in the town. Chino City, Nagano Prefecture is also famous for cherry blossom master's works, but Matsuzaki has mostly old private houses, warehouses, and walls.
there are many namako walls left.
It was Matsuzaki for the first time in several years. I parked my car in the parking lot in front of the Chohachi Museum of Art and walked through the town of Namako Wall. You can see Namako Walls in other towns, but is this the only place you can see many houses with Namako Walls? The prosperity of that time still remains. There was a footbath and there was no one, so I took a footbath for about 10 and enjoyed the atmosphere of the trip.
It doesn't look like a house in the Meiji era.
Walk along "Namako Wall Street". It's really a quiet town in the countryside. This house is the birthplace of Heizaburo Kondo. He seems to have left footprints in the study of alkaloids at the University of Tokyo Medical School. It doesn't look like a house in the Meiji era. , In addition, it is a building of the "Matsuzaki Town Tourism Association", but you use an old house. A river runs through the center of the town. It is called "Nakagawa". The bridge over there is "Tokiwa Ohashi". Like your house, a railing is made of "plaster" ...
the wall of pride that i want you to leave forever.
It is natural to break old things and rebuild new things, and leaving them like this will create rare value in itself. Next to the building of the Tourism Association, I would like you to walk while collecting information.