Kaminokawa, Tochigi
The flat Kantō plain stretches without interruption here, and the town announces itself not through a train station of its own but through the hum of logistics — trucks on the new Route 4, the wide parking fields of Interpark Utsunomiya Minami visible from the elevated road. Kaminokawa-machi sits in this geometry of movement, a working town shaped by what passes through it and what gets made inside it.
At the center of that making is the Nissan Tochigi Plant, where GT-R and Fairlady Z models come off the line alongside the Ariya. The plant carries its own internal world — a test course, a training school established in 1983 for mechanics — and its workforce gives the town its particular weekday rhythm. Yet step back a few hundred meters and the ground holds older sediment: the earthworks of Kaminokawa Castle still read clearly as a mound in the park named for its ruins, and the moat traces of Takō Castle survive where the Takō clan once held off repeated incursions during the Sengoku period.
Kannpyō — the dried gourd shavings used in sushi and traditional cooking — is a local product, its cultivation tied to the flat, irrigated fields the Tagawa River feeds as it runs north to south through town. The Kaminokawa Sunflower Festival and the Yūgao Summer Festival mark the agricultural calendar against the industrial one. Manganji temple, opened in 767, holds Buddhist sculpture from the Heian period quietly inside its grounds. These layers — Nara-period administrative center, medieval castle town, modern factory floor — do not resolve into a tidy story. They simply coexist, as the land allows.