A chapter of Japan
Ehime
20 towns and villages, listed not by rank but as they are — places you may not have met yet.
EVENTFestivals & gatherings
ISLANDThe islands
ONSENHot springs
TOWNSAll municipalities
- ainanchou The road into Ainan follows the contours of a coastline that keeps folding back on itself — inlets cutting into hillsides, fishing nets drying on concrete walls, the sea appearing and disappearing as the bus from Uwajima winds south along National Route 56.
- ikatachou Wind turbines stand along the ridge in a long procession, visible from the road before the sea comes into view.
- imabarishi Shipyard cranes mark the skyline before anything else does — great angular silhouettes rising above the Seto Inland Sea coast, where the water between the islands runs busy with vessels.
- iyoshi The smell arrives before the sign does — a warm, smoky drift of shaved bonito that hangs over certain streets in Iyo, where削り節 factories have operated for generations.
- uchikochou White plaster walls run the length of the Yatsukaichiogoku district, their surfaces catching the flat afternoon light with the quiet authority of buildings that have stood since the wax trade made this valley prosperous.
- uwajimashi The rias coastline arrives before the city does — a jagged edge of inlets and fish-farm buoys visible from the train window as the limited express "Uwakai" descends from the mountains toward Uwajima Station.
- oozushi The Hijikawa moves through Ozu in slow bends, and the castle keeps watch from the bluff above — its wooden tower rebuilt in the early years of this century to match the original joinery.
- kamijimachou Ferry schedules govern time here.
- kihokuchou Near the upper reaches of the Shimanto watershed, the Hiromigawa river cuts through a basin where forest covers nearly every slope visible from the road.
- kumakougenchou The air at this altitude carries a sharpness that belongs to the Shikoku highlands, not the coastal lowlands of Ehime.
- saijoushi Groundwater rises through the soil here unbidden — in Saijo, it seeps up through gaps in pavement, pools beside rice paddies, feeds the city from below.
- shikokuchuuoushi Pulp and paper mills line the narrow coastal plain, and on certain mornings the air carries a faint industrial warmth that mingles with sea salt off the Hiuchi Sea.
- seiyoshi Along the old post road through Uwamachi, the wooden shopfronts stand in careful alignment — their plaster walls and latticed windows unchanged in their proportions since the Edo period.
- touonshi Pond water catches the late light across the flat farmland at the foot of the mountains — this is the edge of the Dogo Plain, where Toon City sits inland, far from any coast, shaped by the Shigenobu River and the small alluvial fans it has built over centuries.
- tobechou Kilns and water wheels appear along the road south from Matsuyama, the landscape shifting from flat plain to folded hillside as you enter Tobe-cho.
- niihamashi Copper ore moved through these mountains for nearly three centuries, and the weight of that industry still sits in Niihama's streets.
- masakichou The six stations along the line through Masaki-cho mark a quiet rhythm on Ehime's coastal fringe, each stop a small pause before the sea reappears between buildings.
- matsunochou The train slows at Matsumaru Station and the first thing you notice is the bathhouse — not beside the building but inside it, occupying the second floor of the station itself.
- matsuyamashi Trams still run through Matsuyama on tracks laid into the asphalt, their bells audible from the arcade of Ginten-gai on a weekday afternoon.
- yawatahamashi Ferries still run from the harbor here — to Usuki, to Beppu — and the rhythm of arrivals and departures gives Yawatahama its particular pulse.