From the AURA index Region

Nisshin, Aichi

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Aichi / Nisshin
A reading of this place

At Akaike station, the subway line from Nagoya surfaces into a different register — the platform sits outside the city boundary, yet the trains run through without pause. This is the entry point to Nisshin, a municipality that urbanized rapidly once the Tsurumai Line and the Meitetsu Toyota Line met here, pulling residents outward from the metropolis into what had been farmland and low hills.

The eastern ridgeline still holds its older weight. Iwasaki Castle, rebuilt in its current form in the 1980s on a site where fighting broke out during the Komaki-Nagakute campaign, looks out over the Tenpaku River valley below. Near the castle grounds, the former Ichikawa family residence — a mid-Edo-period headman's house, now open to the public — sits quietly among newer streets, its heavy timber framing a different kind of evidence. The shrine Tenchi-sha, founded in the late fifteenth century, holds the oldest structure in the city. These are not monuments arranged for tourism; they sit inside ordinary residential fabric, encountered between a convenience store and a parking lot.

The Aichi Farm keeps dairy cattle and runs butter-making sessions open to visitors without an entrance fee. The Maspro Museum holds a substantial collection of ceramics and ukiyo-e. Nisshin's specialty,磨砂 — polishing sand — is a quieter product, less visible than the festivals: the Iwasaki River cherry blossom event, the Nishsin Yume Matsuri fireworks, the morning market. The city's texture is that of a place still negotiating between its agricultural past and its commuter present, and the negotiation is visible, unresolved, and worth watching.