Ginowan, Okinawa
Fences run along the perimeter of Futenma Air Station, and the streets simply continue on the other side — convenience stores, apartment blocks, a school gate, a car repair shop. This is Ginowan, where a significant portion of the city's land is occupied by U.S. military installations, and where ordinary Okinawan life unfolds in the remaining space with a kind of practiced matter-of-factness. The tension is not theatrical; it is structural, written into the map.
Yet older layers persist. Futenma-gu, one of the eight shrines of the Ryukyu kingdom, sits above a limestone cave stretching deep into the earth, where Kumano faith and Ryukyuan indigenous belief have been held together since the shrine's founding. Nearby, the Ōyama kaizuka — a shell midden — marks human habitation on this coast long before the present political geography arrived. The Ginowan City Museum holds the threads of this longer story, including a facial reconstruction of the Azama proto-human remains, placing the contemporary city within a deep archaeological continuum.
At the Sakima Art Museum, a permanent collection of war paintings confronts the violence of the Battle of Okinawa, and from the rooftop the airfield is visible — the exhibit and the view forming a single argument. Down at Ginowan Seaside Park, the East China Sea opens out past the marina, and during the Ryukyu Kaiensai festival, fireworks are launched over that water. Kuruma-ebi are farmed in local waters; Ōyama taro grows in the agricultural pockets that survive between the base perimeters and the housing districts. The city does not resolve its contradictions — it carries them, visibly.