14

Nov

Drainspotting Revisited

Topic: Family and Friends, Japan 2007
Tags: , ,

I finally fixed the pictures in my Drainspotting in Japan post from last year (the plugin I used before Shashin for managing my pictures doesn’t work with recent versions of WordPress, so I’ve been slowly working through my older posts to fix the pictures). Pink Tentacle has a photo collection of some of the more dazzling Japanese manhole covers, as well as pictures of what may be the most manhole infested street in the world - a quiet street in Tokyo’s Setagaya ward, with 85 manholes over a 200 meter stretch of pavement.

It looks like Prague is also a good city for drainspotting. I mention this because we’re planning a trip to Prague next summer. Maria is going to be in charge of a group of Villanova students who will be there to study for a summer semester. Maria will be there for two months with the boys, and I’ll join them for the last few weeks (so I need to save up all my vacation time between now and then).

Don’t worry though, I’ll look up from the ground every now and then to see what else the city has to offer ;-)

4

Feb

Ikea in Funabashi

Topic: Japan 2007
Tags:

This is the first of several occasional posts I plan to write about my time in Japan last year. Although I blogged a lot about my time in Japan as it was happening, I didn’t have time to blog about everything.

Ikea in Funabashi, JapanIkea in Funabashi, Japan
Ikea in Funabashi, Japan

About a week after we arrived in Japan last New Years Eve, I was finding it impossible to work comfortably on our rickety dining room table. We were going to be in Japan for only 6 months, so a cheap desk was in order. Where to go for one? I first tried some sayonara sales (expats headed home and selling their stuff) and some used furniture stores (called “recycle shops” in Japan), but didn’t have any luck. The next option is the same one you might think of in the US - Ikea. There are two Ikeas near Tokyo (both built within the last few years), one in Funabashi and one in Kohoku. We decided to head to the one in Funabashi since it’s very close to Tokyo Disneyland. We figured we might catch a glimpse of it as we went by on the 30 minute ride on the Keiyo Line. Eidan munched on Pocky the whole way and got chocolate all over his face, which got a pair of high school girls smiling and giggling at him for quite a while.

Ikea Funabashi is located on the grounds where the LaLaport Skidome (SSAWS) once stood (the massive indoor Skidome represented one of the last gasps of the 1980s Japanese real estate boom, and the dome proved to be financially unsustainable). All I know about Funabashi is what I could see from the train, but it struck me as quite different from other Japanese cities I’ve seen, in that it sprawled - lots of relatively low rise construction spread over a large area. Next to the Ikea is the grim Wakamatsu residential complex, which I believe is public housing. When I say grim, I mean by Japanese standards - the buildings are old and unattractive, but everything is tidy and clean. Across from the Ikea is the massive LaLaport 3 mall, which we didn’t visit, but it’s probably similar to LaLaport 2 in Toyosu (the only mall I’ve ever been to that I actually enjoyed).

What made visiting this Ikea very strange was that it was absolutely identical to the Ikeas I’ve visited in the US. It felt comforting and unnerving at the same time - comforting to be in a familiar environment, but unnerving because it felt really out of place. Visiting a Starbuck’s or a McDonald’s in Japan is just different enough that you don’t get a sensation of deja vu, but not so at this Ikea - it was exactly the same down to the tiniest details, other than the signs being in Katakana.

After an unnervingly, comfortingly familiar meal of Swedish meatballs at the Ikea cafeteria, we quickly found their cheapest desk and desk chair, but since we were so far out from Tokyo the delivery was way too expensive (more than the price of what we were buying). So we put Kai in charge of Eidan’s stroller, Maria handled the chair, and I lugged the desk all the way back on the train. The hardest part was switching lines at Tokyo station, as it’s quite a long walk through the station to the Yamanote Line. It was quite a workout, but that desk and chair served me well for the rest of our time in Tokyo.

16

Dec

Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden

Topic: Japan 2007
Tags: ,

Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007

I noticed that it’s been so long since I wrote about Japan that I no longer have any Japan posts on my front page, and we can’t have that (I’m not counting the Japaridelphia post). With temperatures well below freezing tonight in Philadelphia, a look back at some nice spring weather in Tokyo is in order. Undoubtedly one of the most beautiful spots in Tokyo, Shinjuku Gyoen is one of just a few places I took the time to visit more than once during our 5 month stay.

The gardens which are 58.3 hectares in size, and with a circumference of 3.5 km, blend three distinct styles: French Formal, English Landscape and Japanese traditional. The gardens have more than 20,000 trees, including approximately 1,500 cherry trees which bloom from late March (Shidare or Weeping Cherry), to early April (Somei or Tokyo Cherry), and on to late April (Kanzan Cherry). Other trees found here include the majestic Himalayan cedars, which soar above the rest of the trees in the park, tulip trees, cypresses, and plane trees, which were first planted in Japan in the Imperial Gardens… The gardens are a favourite hanami (cherry-blossom viewing) spot, and large crowds can be found in the park during cherry blossom season… The greenhouse… has a stock of over 1,700 tropical and subtropical plant species on permanent display.

Unfortunately I went too early in the season to see the French and English gardens in their glory, but the rest of the park is spectacular in the early spring. It’s acre upon acre of well manicured, immaculate, perfectionist-fetish Japanese landscaping at its finest. Each time I went I had just a couple of hours for my visit, but the park is huge and you could easily spend a very pleasant, relaxing day exploring it.

It’s one of the few public parks in Tokyo that charges an admission fee (200 yen - about $2). They don’t allow people to use frisbees, balls, etc. and no pets are allowed (most parks are referring to as koen, but this one is a gyoen - an Imperial garden). But you can bring a picnic, there’s a restaurant, two tea houses, and at least one snack bar.

If you’d like to visit, check out the Shinjuku Gyoen official web site (English version). For some reason the site doesn’t come up when you do a Google search, which is unfortunate, because it has by far the best map and access guide. To get there, the easiest route for most tourists will be to take the Yamanote line to Shinjuku station and go out the South exit. This is the world’s busiest train station and the the world’s second largest, but don’t be intimidated - just follow the prominent English signs. Turn downhill when you come out of the station. You won’t see the Gyoen entrance at first, but just a minute after you cross the intersection with Meiji-Dori Ave, you’ll see the Shinjuku Gate entrance ahead of you.

Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007
Shinjuku Gyoen National Park in April 2007

22

Sep

Japanese Youth Hostels, Ryokans, Minshukus, and Capsule Hotels

Topic: Japan 2007
Tags:

Our room in the Yakushima Youth HostelOur room in the Yakushima Youth Hostel
Our room in the Yakushima Youth Hostel
The communal room in the Yakushima Youth HostelThe communal room in the Yakushima Youth Hostel
The communal room in the Yakushima Youth Hostel

A traditional Japanese dinner, served in our room at the Nakamuraya Ryokan - http://www.japaneseguesthouses.com/db/sapporo/nakamuraya.htm
A traditional Japanese dinner, served in our room at the Nakamuraya Ryokan - http://www.japaneseguesthouses.com/db/sapporo/nakamuraya.htm

If you travel in Japan, there are a number of different types of places you can stay. In our travels around Japan so far, we’ve tried most of them:

  • Ryokan: a traditional Japanese inn - Wikipedia has a good page on ryokans. You’ll sleep on futons on a tatami mat floor, and have a traditional Japanese dinner served in your room. They tend to be pricey but you can sometimes find affordable ones. When we visited Sapporo we stayed at the reasonably priced and very pleasant Nakamuraya Ryokan (pictured on the right). In Kagoshima City we stayed at the Nakazono Ryokan, which was a nice place to stay, but was actually much more like a minshuku…
  • Minshuku: in my experience these are similar to youth hostels in the US. Bathroom and shower facilities are usually shared. Meals are not served in your room. What you’ll get for food may vary: some may offer breakfast in a communal room, others may simply offer a communal kitchen where you bring your own food, and some may not have a kitchen at all. During our 2004 trip we stayed at the Kimi Ryokan, but it really should have called itself a minshuku: all the facilities were communal, no meals were provided, and the guests were primarily noisy foreigners. In Tanegashima we stayed at the Tanegashima Miharusou, which was a relatively quiet, slightly rundown, but well run minshuku that catered to the many surfers that visit Tanegashima.
  • The Oirase Keiryu Grand Hotel. This is where the conference took place, and it's where we stayed. The grounds of the hotel, and it's hot spring baths, were great
    The Oirase Keiryu Grand Hotel. This is where the conference took place, and it’s where we stayed. The grounds of the hotel, and it’s hot spring baths, were great

    Hotels: western style hotels are common everywhere in Japan nowadays, except in the most rural areas. The only major differences from western hotels are that the rooms are typically smaller, and pricing is usually per person, not per room. They’re especially popular with business travelers who want a western style bed, and may not have the time for, or interest in, the amenities of a ryokan. When we visited Aomori in 2004, we stayed at the fabulous Oirase Keiryu Grand Hotel. Normally it’s not the kind of place that would be an option for us financially, but we were fortunate to have the room paid for by the folks sponsoring Maria’s conference.

  • Capsule Hotels: these are unique to Japan - it’s kind of like sleeping in a cadaver drawer at a morgue, except there’s a small TV in your capsule instead of a freezer. It’s not the kind of accommodation one is likely to seek when on vacation (unless you missed the last train on a night of drunken revelry, and you don’t have enough yen to take a taxi or stay anywhere else). I’ve never had the experience of staying in one, but Wikipedia has an excellent page, with pictures.
  • A room in the Miyanoura Portside Youth Hostel in Kagoshima, Japan
    A room in the Miyanoura Portside Youth Hostel in Kagoshima, Japan

    Youth Hostels: I’ve saved these for last, because they’re the best. The Japan Guide site says Japanese youth hostels “…do not differ much from European or American youth hostels.” This could not be further from the truth. American youth hostels are more akin to Japanese minshukus: not always clean and not always quiet. We’ve stayed in 3 youth hostels in Japan ([text="goodbye-aomori-hello-nikko-goodbye-nikko-hello-ikebukuro" text="when we visited Nikko in 2004"], and two in Yakushima this spring), and they were all immaculate and quiet, with attentive staff. All have at least a communal fridge and microwave, and some provide a communal dinner. They have communal bathrooms and showers, but in my experience they were always very clean. All have doors locked and lights out policies, usually around 10pm, so they’re not good options for nightcrawlers (but traveling with children, we thought it was great). They also offer common areas for the guests, so they’re great places to meet other travelers. In Yakushima, I enjoyed a long conversation (after the family was in bed) with a man from Yokohama who was planning to hike clear across the island. He gave me some good hiking tips and we shared opinions on various Miyazaki films. The youth hostels on Yakushima island are especially worthy of praise. The southern one is very nicely designed (pictured at the top of this post), has nightly communal dinners, the staff organize and lead hiking trips for their guests, and they offer car rentals on the premises. The northern one is more utilitarian (pictured on the right), but is very well run, and offers western style beds.

1

Sep

Kagoshima City

Topic: Japan 2007, Kai and Eidan
Tags: , ,

This is my fourth (and long overdue) post profiling the places we visited during Golden Week. The first was Yakushima, the second was Tanegashima, and the third was the Fukiage Beach Sand Festival. We also had a couple of misadventures on the trip which I wrote about here and here.

The plaque for this statue reads, in part: “Satsuma, now Kagoshima, produced brilliant, far-sighted men during the Meiji Restoration (1868). In 1865, defying the Tokugawa Isolation Law, 17 courageous young students from Satsuma were smuggled to Europe and America to learn advanced Western technology. Overcoming great difficulties, they returned to become the driving force in the modernization of the feudalistic society.”
The plaque for this statue reads, in part: “Satsuma, now Kagoshima, produced brilliant, far-sighted men during the Meiji Restoration (1868). In 1865, defying the Tokugawa Isolation Law, 17 courageous young students from Satsuma were smuggled to Europe and America to learn advanced Western technology. Overcoming great difficulties, they returned to become the driving force in the modernization of the feudalistic society.”

Kagoshima City, with a population of approximately 600,000, is the fourth largest city in Kyushu, the largest southern island of Japan. “It has been nicknamed the ‘Naples of the Eastern world’, for its bay location (Aira Caldera), hot climate and impressive stratovolcano, Sakurajima.” The city is best known for its history in the period surrounding the start of the Meiji Restoration. In violation of the isolation laws preceding the Restoration, 17 students were secretly sent from Kagoshima (known at the time as Satsuma) to study Western technology in Europe and the US (the students are commemorated in the statue above). As a result, many of Japan’s early industrialization efforts were centered in Satsuma. It is also known as the home of the samurai Saigo Takamori, a legendary figure in Japanese history, who led the Satsuma rebellion against the Meiji government. He’s roughly analogous to General Lee in US history, minus the animus of slavery. His last stand was depicted - with great hyperbole - in the movie The Last Samurai.

The city is now known for its shopping districts, local cuisine, tourist attractions, and, of course, the simmering, occasionally ash spewing volcano that dominates the eastern skyline. The outdoor Tenmonkan shopping district has a series of long, translucent roofs, which are there so shoppers can go about their business without worrying about ash getting in their clothes and hair. For the rest of the city, there are ash collection points every few blocks, where residents and shopowners are expected to deposit the ash they sweep up and bag.

The footbath at Dolphin Port mall. It's a real hot spring with sulpher water that's good for your skin but very stinky
The footbath at Dolphin Port mall. It’s a real hot spring with sulpher water that’s good for your skin but very stinky

The central area of the city is dominated by a modern aquarium, the Tenmonkan, the Dolphin Port outdoor mall, and a number of museums, ancient ruins, temples, and statues celebrating the area’s history. The Dolphin Port mall sports a hot spring-fed footbath, which Kai and Maria thoroughly enjoyed. Unfortunately, you don’t see things like this in the US - only in Japan is there complete, mutual trust that everyone will clean their feet properly before using the footbath.

All the food we ate in Kagoshima City was delicious. I remember the night we had sushi especially well, because it was the freshest sushi I’ve ever eaten, and because just a few hours later, I threw out my back.

For our last night in Kagoshima City, I took Kai to see Spider Man 3 at the enormous, modern Amu Plaza, which is probably the only place within a 100 miles where you can really immerse yourself in Japan’s consumer culture (which, believe it or not, surpasses the US’). We were staying across town from the plaza, so we rode on the trams. They aren’t too hard to figure out once you get to know the main roads, even if you don’t speak Japanese. Fortunately, in Japan they show most American movies in English, with Japanese subtitles. Unfortunately, Kai got scared towards the end of the movie when Venom was on the loose, so we had to leave before the movie was over - I still don’t know how it ends :-( .

The only part of our visit that didn’t work out was our last half day. It was raining so we decided to cancel our plan to take the ferry over to see the historical sites surrounding the volcano. Instead, Maria and I cobbled together the last of our yen coins so I could take the boys into the aquarium while she tried to figure out where to get some more cash. It was a holiday, and the post office ATMs were unexpectedly closed (I wrote about how all that turned out in this post).

I should re-iterate from my previous post that we enjoyed staying at the Nakazono Ryokan. It’s inexpensive, it has a central location (it’s within walking distance of the Yamakataya bus terminal and the main port), and the man who runs it is very attentive. He even helped us buy our ferry tickets and gave us a ride to the port after I hurt my back. And he speaks English :-) .

On the trip home Maria and I had idle conversation about someday retiring somewhere on Kyushu. It’s a place of stunning natural beauty, but with a few cities big enough that you can enjoy what civilization has to offer too.

Bronze statue of Saigo Takamori, who's legend was retold (with several major historical innaccuracies) in the movie The Last Samurai (he was named Katsumoto in the movie)
Bronze statue of Saigo Takamori, who’s legend was retold (with several major historical innaccuracies) in the movie The Last Samurai (he was named Katsumoto in the movie)
Hot dog sushi, at a restaurant in the Dolphin Port mall, Kagoshima City
Hot dog sushi, at a restaurant in the Dolphin Port mall, Kagoshima City
A common sign on the sidewalks of Kagoshima City, instructing residents and shopowners to bag the volcano ash they sweep up, and leave it by the sign for collection
A common sign on the sidewalks of Kagoshima City, instructing residents and shopowners to bag the volcano ash they sweep up, and leave it by the sign for collection
The covered shopping district in Kagoshima City, known as Tenmonkan. The roof is there to protect against ash from the nearby volcano.
The covered shopping district in Kagoshima City, known as Tenmonkan. The roof is there to protect against ash from the nearby volcano.
The road in Tenmonkan has a number of tiles depicting astronomical phenomena. This is a favorite of mine, the Hourglass Nebula
The road in Tenmonkan has a number of tiles depicting astronomical phenomena. This is a favorite of mine, the Hourglass Nebula
A nicely decorated cafe, along the road by Shiroyama Park
A nicely decorated cafe, along the road by Shiroyama Park

14

Aug

The Devil’s Curly Hair

Topic: Japan 2007, Kai and Eidan
Tags: ,

Eidan pretending to crash into posts, at the park adjacent to World City Towers in ShinagawaEidan pretending to crash into posts, at the park adjacent to World City Towers in Shinagawa
Eidan pretending to crash into posts, at the park adjacent to World City Towers in Shinagawa

I shot this video of Eidan at the park adjacent to the gargantuan World City Towers residential complex in Shinagawa. From Kai he learned the trick of pretending to bump into a pole and exclaiming “unh!,” as if he’d hurt himself. And here he’s doing it repeatedly. This park was a short walk from our apartment, and during the spring it was a daily destination for Eidan and I in the mornings. We’d play in the park after Maria left for work and Kai left for school, then I’d do our daily shopping at the wonderful Maruetsu grocery store. We’d go home for lunch, Eidan would nap for two hours while I worked, Kai would finish school, the three of us would go somewhere for a few hours, and then be home in time for dinner with Maria.

I enjoy doing write-ups of the parks we visited in Tokyo, but this one isn’t worth much commentary - it’s main attraction was that it was nearby. It’s a new park, and is quite large, but with only a few play structures, and an enormous, smooth gravel area in the middle. Every morning a workman came by to empty the trashcans, and sweep the entire gravel area with nothing more than an old fashioned Japanese broom. The one astonishing thing is that the grassy sections are strewn with rubble. It’s peppered with small pieces of broken concrete and tile, from the recently completed World City Towers. It’s just another idiosyncrasy of the otherwise fastidious Japanese: in so many ways they have the most exacting standards, but when it comes to parks, they’ll just throw grass seed down on top of the rubble and call it a day.

4

Aug

Takanawa Yochien (Kindergarten) Video

Topic: Japan 2007, Kai and Eidan
Tags: ,

I’ve uploaded a minute and a half clip from a show that was on our local cable channel in Tokyo about Kai’s school. Kai makes a brief appearance towards the end of the clip (if the video looks big and blurry when you play it, look for the small arrow in the bottom right corner and adjust the display to “original size”). It’s in Japanese of course, but even if you can’t follow along, you can still get a good sense from the visuals of what the school is like. Sitting next to Kai in the video is his friend Hiroki. Hiroki lived with his parents in Albany, New York for a while, and he went to school there, so his English is quite good. Kai had another friend at the school named Kaito, who also speaks English. Both of them helped Kai out a lot, since he spoke very little Japanese.

In the video, the woman greeting the kids as they arrive is the principal. That wasn’t staged for the video - she’s out there every morning, rain or shine, to hold the gate open and say good morning to everyone as they come in. While the other teachers spoke at least a little English, she didn’t speak any, so my (attempts at) conversations with her were always the most challenging for me.

It was a really great school for Kai, and I’ve written many times before about how much he enjoyed it. The teachers and his classmates were very supportive and understanding, given that he didn’t speak any Japanese at first. But he did learn quickly. One thing that was fun for me was watching him with the kids in the playground after school, and hearing him try to transpose English words into Japanese. There’s actually quite a bit of English that’s been borrowed in Japanese. Once Kai figured out how to transform English words into their “correct” Japanese pronunciation (e.g. “hot dog” becomes “hotto doghu”, apple juice becomes “apploo juicoo”), and once he mastered a few key Japanese phrases, it was amazing how much he could communicate. One of his first Japanese words was “dameh!” which means “stop it!” - a vital playground survival phrase.

The show about the school was on the Minato City channel, as part of a regular series on the local schools. Each year they make their way through all the local kindergartens and elementary schools. It struck me as a really nice way for residents to get a broader sense of their community, and see how their neighborhood school compares to others in the area.

26

Jul

Com Pho (コム フォー), Tokyo: Four Flavors of Blasphemy

Topic: Japan 2007, Phonatic: Pho Reviews
Tags: ,

The Com Pho (コム フォー) restaurant in the  Marunouchi OAZO Shopping Center, near Tokyo station
The Com Pho (コム フォー) restaurant in the Marunouchi OAZO Shopping Center, near Tokyo station
The flavors of pho at Com Pho bear little resemblance to traditional Vietnamese pho
The flavors of pho at Com Pho bear little resemblance to traditional Vietnamese pho

It’s been a long time since I’ve written a pho review. I have a backlog of a few I’ve been meaning to write (two more in Philly and one in San Mateo), and hopefully I’ll get to those soon. But for now I’ll weave my talk of pho with my ongoing talk of Tokyo. Pho is not easy to find in Japan. While the Vietnamese diaspora in Tokyo is big enough to sustain at least a few Vietnamese restaurants, you usually need to go to a specialty shop to get good pho. Thanks to the dazzling pho-king site, I was aware of at least one pho restaurant in Tokyo. Unfortunately, I never made it there - it would have been an excursion to get there from where we lived, and it just never made it to the top of the list. But I did stumble across the Com Pho stand in the basement of the Marunouchi Oazo shopping center, located across the street from Tokyo station. Com Pho is a chain with four locations in Tokyo, but I haven’t been to the others.

I was visiting the shopping center with the family, but couldn’t persuade them to join me for pho. So I sat with them while they ate Chinese food next door, and then I got pho take out afterwards. Like many inexpensive restaurants in Japan, you order at Com Pho by putting your money in a vending machine and pushing the button for the food you want, and then the machine gives you a ticket that you take to the counter. It saves the restaurant staff from spending time behind a cash register. If you want a drink, they have free water, or you can get your own drink from one of the ubiquitous soda machines that are on every block in Tokyo.

When I go to a pho restaurant, I have certain expectations. One of them is that they serve pho. I found myself baffled by the Com Pho menu: it had four choices, and none of them resembled any kind of pho I was familiar with. The staff was not Vietnamese, none of the broths appeared similar to traditional pho broth, and the soups were filled with vegetables like asparagus and broccoli. So, it turned out to be a typical Japanese bastardization of foreign food. Another example is pizza: if you’ve ever had pizza in Japan, you know that they typically put things like mayonnaise, corn, nori (dried seaweed), and Tabasco sauce on it.

I decided to go for the green curry pho. It was actually much more like a Thai soup, with a coconut milk-based broth, ground meat, and lots of basil. For that reason I’m not giving it a rating, since it simply was not pho. But that didn’t stop me from enjoying it. It was quite tasty, and I hadn’t had any Vietnamese or Thai food in the 5 months we had lived in Tokyo, so it was a nice change of pace.

Location: The Marunouchi Oazo shopping center site’s access page has a couple PDFs that show you how to find the shopping center. Com Pho is on the basement floor. The phone number is 03-3216-0564, but be ready to speak Japanese!

21

Jul

Taking the Tokyo Train

Topic: Japan 2007
Tags: ,

My apologies to the late Richard Scarry for stealing this post’s title from one of his stories in the wonderful book Busy, Busy World.

For an authentic 19th century experience in the US, all you have to do is hop on a train or subway anywhere in the Northeast or mid-Atlantic states. Although the train cars and stations have become quite run down since then ;-) . My end of the “El” in Philadelphia is shut down for over a week this month, and for over 2 weeks next month, as part of a renovation project that’s been going for about 10 years, with 2 years to go. The El is the subway I take to work everyday, and it’s the primary public transportation line for moving east-west across Philly, and on into New Jersey. SEPTA has been substituting shuttle buses during the shutdown. They picked the same time to raise fares, to make sure that if the inconvenience of the buses doesn’t drive you away, the higher fares will, thus maximizing the traffic the buses have to slog through. It all adds up to doubling my commute time from 45 minutes to an hour and a half (another reason for my recent dearth of blog posts). It’s only 7 miles from my house to my office, which means if I were in better shape, and it weren’t so blazingly hot, I could jog home in the same amount of time. It boggles my mind how much time - and therefore money - is wasted across the US every day, with people sitting in traffic for hours (not to mention the gas expense and pollution).

A Shinkansen "bullet" trainA Shinkansen "bullet" train
A Shinkansen "bullet" train

My extended commute gives me plenty of time to sit and pine for the Tokyo trains, revisiting pleasant memories of riding modern, clean, quiet, comfortable trains that go absolutely everywhere, and are almost always exactly on time. The Tokyo rail system is a marvel of urban planning and engineering. No matter where you are in the city, you’re rarely more than a few minutes walk from a bus stop or a 10 minute walk from a train stop. During rush hour, you might have to stand instead of sit on the train, or at worst, wait 2.5 minutes for the next train. The days of train workers having to push people onto the trains because they were so crowded are mostly gone (but it does still happen for brief periods at the busiest stations at peak hours).

If any of the major lines in Tokyo shuts down for more than a few minutes during peak hours, it can quickly cascade into massive delays and confusion, as the vast majority of Tokyo’s population gets around on the trains. But the rail companies are extremely efficient, and such delays are rare. They even perform rapid cleanup after someone kills himself by jumping in front of train - less than 30 minutes to get the trains moving again! Grisly but true. And unlike SEPTA, if a station is being renovated they don’t shut it down - instead they find ways to keep people moving through it, and even add an artistic touch.

The Philadelphia metropolitan area (i.e. Philly plus its closest suburbs) has a population of about 6.2 million. The population of Tokyo is about 12.5 million. The main subway line through Philly is the El and the main line through Tokyo is the Yamanote. The El carries about 132,000 passengers on a typical weekday. The Yamanote carries over 3.5 million. Even if you adjust for population, that’s a staggering difference. Just picking two lines like this is probably not a really fair comparison, but it gives a rough sense of the difference in reliance on mass transit.

A driver on a Yamanote line trainA driver on a Yamanote line train
A driver on a Yamanote line train

Watching the Yamanote drivers at work is amazing. If there’s such a thing as an elite among train drivers, these guys and gals must be it. I think they are monitored by video camera, as they are constantly gesturing with their white gloved hands towards their speedometers, and towards the specially mounted analog pocket watches that are on the dashboard of every train. The pocket watches are a great touch - all the other systems are computerized and digital, but the most important time piece - the driver’s clock - is still old fashioned. A popular video game in Japan is a Yamanote line simulator, where you can experience what it’s like trying to keep on time, and always stopping at the exact right spot so the car doors open precisely on the platform’s marked spots.

Monitors on the Yamanote line, showing constantly updated train information and, of course, adsMonitors on the Yamanote line, showing constantly updated train information and, of course, ads
Monitors on the Yamanote line, showing constantly updated train information and, of course, ads

Your average US train is an antique compared to the Japanese trains. In Tokyo, you can ride the fully automated (i.e. no driver or conductors) Yurikamone line, or ride the Shinkansen at almost 200 mph to other cities in about the same time it would take to fly (depending on how far you’re going). The Yamanote line sports TV screens in every car that constantly update you on your current location, the number of minutes to reach upcoming stations, and news on any delays on other lines (in Japanese and English). And, as I mentioned before, I’m in love with the woman who does the recorded English announcements on the Yamanote line.

Some of the train lines in Tokyo have cars reserved for women only, as a way of combating the problem of women being groped on crowded trainsSome of the train lines in Tokyo have cars reserved for women only, as a way of combating the problem of women being groped on crowded trains
Some of the train lines in Tokyo have cars reserved for women only, as a way of combating the problem of women being groped on crowded trains

Another thing I’ve mentioned before is Japan’s low crime rate, but one crime that the Japanese have had a difficult time stamping out is women being groped on crowded trains. When I first visited Japan in 2000, there was a publicity campaign going on, with posters in the stations showing a high school girl raising her hand in the air and shouting “chikan!” The intent was for her to quickly grab the man’s hand and pull it up in the air to humiliate him, turning the shame aspect of Japanese culture back on the perpetrator instead of the victim. I didn’t see these posters anymore while I was in Japan this time, but I did see new signs indicating certain train cars were reserved for women only during peak travel hours, which is probably the most straightforward solution.

Tokyo has a dense network of subway and train lines, all of which are privately run, although the majority of the system was publicly owned and operated until 1987 (when the Japanese National Railways was privatized into Japan Railway). Something I always appreciated in Tokyo was that different lines that cross or come near each other share stations - even if they’re run by different companies - making it easy to switch between them. In contrast, in San Francisco, if you want to switch from Caltrain to BART, you need to walk about a mile or catch a bus. Here in Philly, the 100 line and the R5 have probably half a dozen stops within a half mile of each other, but somehow they couldn’t get even one shared stop between them.

The start of Suica and Pasmo in Japan in March was avery big deal - ads were everywhere at the train stationsThe start of Suica and Pasmo in Japan in March was avery big deal - ads were everywhere at the train stations
The start of Suica and Pasmo in Japan in March was avery big deal - ads were everywhere at the train stations

One challenge with switching lines, even with shared stations, is buying additional tickets or dealing with transfers. In March of this year, that all went away in Tokyo, as almost all the trains and buses started honoring Suica and Pasmo cards. With either card, you’re simply charged when you come out of your last station, regardless of how many lines you switched between along the way. The cards have also become general purpose charge cards - you can use them for purchases at many stores. You can set your card to get automatic refills from your bank account if your balance gets low, and you can download it to a FeLiCa-enabled mobile phone if you don’t want to bother carrying the card around.

If you scan the data matrix (the black and white square in the middle of the sign) with your cell phone at this bus stop in Tokyo, you'll get an alert when the bus is on its wayIf you scan the data matrix (the black and white square in the middle of the sign) with your cell phone at this bus stop in Tokyo, you’ll get an alert when the bus is on its way
If you scan the data matrix (the black and white square in the middle of the sign) with your cell phone at this bus stop in Tokyo, you’ll get an alert when the bus is on its way

The buses are equally high tech. Many bus stops in Tokyo have a data matrix, which is essentially a next generation bar code, that you can scan with your cell phone. You can then get an alert on your phone when the bus is nearing your stop (you can specify how many minutes of advance warning you want). Before I knew about this system, I would stand all by myself, waiting in the rain at the bus stop near our apartment, and marvel at how people would just appear from nowhere a minute before the bus arrived, even when it was running late. Also, I’m fairly sure all the newer Toei “non step” buses are hybrids. Their engines turn off whenever they stop, just like our Prius (”non step” means they’re wheelchair and elderly friendly - another interesting Japanese turn of English phrase).

Like I said, I’ve had time to reminisce about all this while sitting endlessly on the SEPTA buses this past week. And with a two week El shutdown scheduled for next month, I’ll have plenty more time to keep thinking about it while enduring more interminable bus rides.

10

Jul

Drainspotting in Japan

Topic: Japan 2007
Tags: , ,

Sorry for the lack of posts recently. I’m back at work full-time, and we’re rearranging rooms in the house right now. Kai is sleeping in the same room with my computer while I get his new room painted, so I haven’t had a time or place for blogging. I’ll probably be posting only about once a week for the next few weeks or so :-( .

KamakuraKamakura
Kamakura
Minato-ku, TokyoMinato-ku, Tokyo
Minato-ku, Tokyo

If you spend a little time in Tokyo, sooner or later you’ll look down at the sidewalk and see one of the fire hydrant manhole covers with anime firemen on them (in Japan the fire hydrants are under manhole covers). Then, if you’re like me, you’ll notice the firefighting scenes on the manhole covers vary in different parts of town. Then you’ll notice that each of the major parks in Tokyo has its own unique, artistic design for the covers of otherwise ordinary manholes. Then you’ll notice almost every Japanese city has unique designs for its manhole covers. And then, before you know it, people are looking quizzically at you, the crazy gaijin with his camera out, stopping in the middle of the street to take pictures of the ground.

KawasakiKawasaki
Kawasaki
Ueno Park, TokyoUeno Park, Tokyo
Ueno Park, Tokyo
KawagoeKawagoe
Kawagoe
KawagoeKawagoe
Kawagoe
Marunouchi Oazo Shopping Center, near Tokyo stationMarunouchi Oazo Shopping Center, near Tokyo station
Marunouchi Oazo Shopping Center, near Tokyo station
ZushiZushi
Zushi
Inokashira Park, KichijojiInokashira Park, Kichijoji
Inokashira Park, Kichijoji
Shin YokohamaShin Yokohama
Shin Yokohama
Minato-ku, TokyoMinato-ku, Tokyo
Minato-ku, Tokyo

I discovered the Japan Visitor blog has several sets of manhole pics that are really great: here, here, and here. It turns out there are drainspotting enthusiasts around the world.

Now that I’m back in the US, I’ve been checking out the manhole covers in Philly. They’re utterly uninteresting. That’s probably why I never paid any attention to them in the first place ;-) .