Take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but puddles of sweat – urbex in July and August comes with its own set of challenges in Japan…
I think I’ve mentioned before that I usually take a break from exploring in Japan during the summer months, especially in July in August. In June the humidity in Kansai and the surrounding areas skyrockets due to the rainy season, in July the heat kicks in, and in August temperatures tend to be between 34°C (day time) and 30°C (at night) in the Kobe-Osaka-Kyoto megalopolis. You probably don’t mind if you are used to that kind of weather, but I’m from west-central Germany, where temperatures are 5°C lower in average – and humid days are rather rare… and never for up to four months in a row. In addition to that bugs are much smaller and other animals are less poisonous than in Central Japan, because… well, you know… nature likes Central Europe. But exploring is like celebrating – you have to when you have the opportunity… even if the circumstances are borderline crazy!
2017, late July, Friday evening – after a long week of work two friends of mine picked me up at home at half past 10. The goal? A 24/7 super sento (large public bath with places to sleep – on the floor in special rooms, on benches, or special chairs, …) in a suburb or Hiroshima, a “nice and easy” 4+ hour drive away from Osaka. We arrived at around 2 a.m., took a bath, and crashed on some benches at around 3 a.m. for two and a half cool hours of sleep. The sun rises early in Japan in July, we had places to go to, and time was of the essence! After a kombini breakfast, the *Horseshoe Hospital*, and a quick snack for lunch in the car we arrived at the Hiroshima Countryside Clinic pretty much exactly at high noon – and walking the 100 meters from a nearby parking lot to the hospital mansion felt like being an ant under a magnifying glass. While the partly overgrown (and partly collapsed!) mansion, roped-off by city officials to prohibit people from entering, offered protection from the sun, it did little to nothing regarding heat, humidity and gnats.
While it is hard to say how much of the damage to the Hiroshima Countryside Clinic was natural decay and how much was vandalism (some rooms were nearly untouched, others looked like some people vented their frustrations), it’s easy to say that this was a fascinating exploration. I just love those old countryside clinics, mansions with doctors’ offices. There was so much to see, so many unusual items to take pictures of – like the creepy dolls in the living room, the German medical books, or the labels for medicine bottles.
When we left after just 1.5 hours it was a bittersweet departure. On the one hand I would have loved to stay at least another 1.5 hours to finish taking pictures, on the other hand I was happy to get back to an air-conditioned area. At that point I was literally dripping of sweat, my T-shirt wasn’t able to hold an additional drop. To accelerate the drying process in the car I actually took it off and wrung it out – much to the entertainment of my fellow explorers. Apparently one of my many useless ‘skills’ in life is ‘sweating’… Sadly I’ll never get a chance to return to the Hiroshima Countryside Clinic, one of the little known abandoned hospitals in Japan – last week I found out that it has been demolished shortly after my visit; again bittersweet… On the one hand I would have loved to have another look, on the other hand I am forever grateful to my friends who took me there… and for my decision to join them, because when you have the opportunity to explore, you better take it – there might not be a next time!
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Oh, wow – just in the nick of time, eh? Nice find…
Yeah, a really close call… Too bad it’s gone, I would have loved to go back there.
😟
Faszinierender Ort, schade, dass das abgerissen wurde, anstatt das unter Denkmalschutz zu stellen und ein Museum draus zu machen. Das war ja wohl schon etwas älter. Der “Möller und Müller” findet sich auf ZVAB in Ausgaben zwischen 1924 und 1933. Vermutlich hat also mindestens einer der Ärzte da vor dem Krieg in Deutschland studiert.
Teile des Hauses waren leider schon eingestürzt, der Tatamiboden des Wohnzimmers war in sehr schlechtem Zustand und der Holzboden der Klinikräume haben sich auch gewölbt. Ich finde solche 100 Jahre alten Villen total faszinierend, allerdings wäre eine Renovierung und Umbau zum Museum vermutlich ziemlich kostspielig geworden, mit an Sicherheit grenzender Wahrscheinlichkeit im sechsstelligen Bereich – für ein einzelnes Haus irgendwo im Nirgendwo leider zu viel; zumal es in Japan Dutzende solcher Kleinstadtpraxen gibt, vielleicht sogar Hunderte. (Bis in die 60er Jahre haben übrigens die meisten Ärzte in Japan Deutsch gesprochen, da zur Modernisierung des Gesundheitswesens im 19. Jahrhundert Experten aus Preußen angeheuert wurden. Inzwischen sprechen die meisten japanischen Ärzte leider nicht einmal Englisch…)
very nice…atleast you were able to get there once 🙂
Thanks, yeah, I am very grateful that I had the opportunity to explore that mansion. Looks like the dozers are in full action these days – I just found out that the *Shidaka Utopia* has been demolished, too.