When I did the bulk of my haikyo research in late 2009 I followed all kinds of hints on the internet to find places I could go to. Sometimes I found names, sometimes descriptions. Most of the time pictures, barely ever the whole package. With “Doggy Land” (not the real name) it was even harder. I had barely any information about it, not even what kind of place it was, but thanks to GoogleMaps I had a vague idea of where it was – so I went to the Hyogo countryside to find out. And I guess I was lucky as the place still existed and was nowhere covered with pictures and reports on the internet, neither the English speaking nor the Japanese speaking. Not even from the time when it was still open for business.
When I did the bulk of my haikyo research in late 2009 I followed all kinds of hints on the internet to find places I could go to. Sometimes I found names, sometimes descriptions. Most of the time pictures, barely ever the whole package. With “Doggy Land” (not the real name) it was even harder. I had barely any information about it, not even what kind of place it was, but thanks to GoogleMaps I had a vague idea of where it was – so I went to the Hyogo countryside to find out. And I guess I was lucky as the place still existed and was nowhere covered with pictures and reports on the internet, neither the English speaking nor the Japanese speaking. Not even from the time when it was still open for business.
Posted in Abandoned, Amusement Park, Animals, Asia, Haikyo, Hyogo, Japan, Kansai, Urbex, Visited in 2009 | 4 Comments »
When visiting the Mt. Atago Cable Car you should have a look at the Atago Hotel, too – there’s not much left, but after climbing about 640 meters 20 more won’t kill you.
The Atago Hotel was opened on 1930-07-20, shortly after the cable car, and closed down together with it in 1944. Like the top station of the cable car the Atago Hotel is nothing more but a bunch of walls, just in a slightly better condition – but without floors. It seems like the hotel, located at a slope, was built with the entrance at the ground floor and an “open basement”. The ground level is almost completely gone whereas the walls of the basement are still there, or at least some of them are; including openings for windows and doors. If you get to the hotel from the southern side and on a lower level the remaining walls look very massive, almost like an ancient Japanese castle.
Overall the place is quite unspectacular and only worth going there since the cable car station is so close-by. At one side of the hill is kind of a dump with lots of old cans, cups and plates. I’m not sure if everything there is from the time when the hotel was still open or if later visitors left their garbage there, but it’s nevertheless interesting and offers quite a few items worth taking pictures of – if you are into that kind of stuff.
Posted in Abandoned, Asia, Haikyo, Hiking, Hotel / Ryokan, Japan, Kansai, Kyoto, Urbex, Visited in 2009 | Leave a Comment »
Hello and welcome to Abandoned Kansai!
My name is Florian and I’m a German expatriate living and working in the Osaka area.
This is my first blog and I am not a native English speaker, so please don’t be too harsh with comments – I’m still learning. That also applies for the pictures I’ll put onto this blog: Until October 2009 I only used compact cameras with their standard settings. That’s when I found CJW’s great blog about hiking and climbing in Japan and I decided that I wanted to take better pictures myself. At that time I was hiking in the Kansai area for about a year and the more beautiful places I saw the stronger my urge to take good pictures grew – CJW’s pictures are amazing and I hope one day mine will be nearly as good.
Coincidentally around the same time I was talking to a friend back home about abandoned places. I was always fascinated by them, especially since I attended a seminar at the Zeche Zollverein in Essen, Germany, but I never took any actions exploring them as I was a couch potatoe at that time. Anyways, we talked about the topic and it inspired me to research abandoned places in Japan, although I failed miserably when I first came here three years ago. Since then Michael John Grist started his homepage, which is mainly about the Kanto area and also includes some interesting pictures. I continued my research (dozens of hours so far actually, with an incredible amount of dead ends – urban explorers tend to be quite secretive…), found an abandoned place that combined hiking and *haikyo* (the Japanese term for ruin, used by local urban explorers) and got hooked ever since.
Now that I have about a dozen abandoned places under my belt I decided to start this blog – inspired by the two blogs I’ve mentioned before; and by the fact that there is no (English) blog about urbex in Kansai. I’ll try to present as many abandoned places in Kansai as possible, but sadly the number of locations around here is very limited – so (hopefully…) I will go on short trips to cover other parts of Japan now and then, too.
Long story short: Please enjoy – and come back once in a while…
Posted in Urbex | 9 Comments »


















