Shime, Fukuoka
The concrete shaft tower rises above the rooftops of a dense residential grid — incongruous, enormous, quietly unmistakable. That structure, the 志免鉱業所竪坑櫓, is a designated Important Cultural Property and the most visible trace of what Shime once was: a coal town at the heart of the Kasuya coalfield, its seams worked from the Meiji period until closure in 1964. The navy ran these mines for a stretch, and the engineering embedded in that tower reflects construction techniques that were, at the time, at the leading edge of industrial practice.
The 志免産業遺産収蔵庫 holds what the tower cannot — smaller artifacts, documents, and one unexpected object: a fan repurposed from the propeller of a seaplane. It is the kind of detail that stops you, the collision of two industrial worlds in a single object. Nearby, the 志免緑道 follows the old Katsuta Line corridor, now a walking path where the geometry of a former railway still organizes the space underfoot. The 七夕池古墳, a fourth-century burial mound in which kotojigata stone objects were found, sits in the same town, a reminder that the density of human presence here long predates coal.
What presses on you in Shime is the layering — ancient tomb, naval mine shaft, disused railway, and now one of the most densely populated small municipalities in the country. In September, 石投げ相撲marks the calendar with a local ritual that belongs to none of those layers in particular, and perhaps to all of them.
What converges here
- 七夕池古墳
- 旧志免鉱業所竪坑櫓