Ayase, Kanagawa
No train line runs through Ayase. You arrive by bus or car, crossing the gently terraced land that the Sagami River shaped over centuries — a plateau of mild slopes and small watercourses, where the fields have given way to residential streets without entirely losing the feel of the countryside. The Atsugi base occupies a substantial portion of the city, and its presence creates an unusual quality of open space, a certain quietness in the urban fabric that production crews have noticed and used.
At the Kanzaki Site, the ground itself holds a history that predates any of this. A moated settlement from the late Yayoi period, now laid out as a history park, it sits quietly within the city's ordinary rhythms — joggers pass, children visit on school trips, and the ditches that once enclosed a community remain visible in the earth. Nearby, Joryuji and Renkooji carry the accumulated grave markers of local clans, the Tooyama and Oohashi families, in the way that small temples do — without ceremony, as a matter of course.
The Ayase Sasara Odori and the Ayase Dai-Noryosai mark the calendar, and the rock band festival gives the city a different register entirely. On the table, Kozabuta — the pork raised here — connects the place to its agricultural past, when pig farming defined the local economy. That lineage persists in the food even as the landscape around it continues to change.
What converges here
- 神崎遺跡