A chapter of Japan
Niigata
30 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
- aganoshi Swans arrive at Hyoko Lake when the rice fields of the Echigo Plain have gone quiet, and the sight of them settling on the water is part of the rhythm of Agano's year rather than a spectacle arranged for outsiders.
- agamachi The Agano River moves quietly through the gorge, wide enough to carry boats in the Edo period, when this stretch of water connected Aizu to Echigo and small cargo vessels worked the current through Tsugawa.
- awashimauramura The ferry from Iwafune port cuts through the Japan Sea for the better part of an hour before the cliffs of Awashima come into view — coastal terraces rising abruptly from water that has, over centuries, deposited foreign debris along the shoreline.
- izumozakimachi The妻入り gabled facades along the old Hokkoku Kaidō face the street in a narrow, continuous line — rooflines turned sideways to the road, a configuration that marks this as once a prosperous Edo-period tenryō, a shogunate-controlled port where Sado gold passed through and Kitamaebune trading vessels put in.
- itoigawashi Stone turns up on the beach here — green, waxy, cold in the palm.
- uonumashi Snow arrives here not as a novelty but as a structural fact.
- ojiyashi At Ojiya Station on the JR Jōetsu Line, a tiled underground passage connects the platforms, its walls patterned with the flowing shapes of nishiki-goi — the ornamental carp that have been bred in this river-basin town for generations.
- kashiwazakishi The mountains come first — Kuro姫, Yoneyama, and Hasseki ranged behind the Kariwa plain, their ridgelines visible on clear days from the coast road.
- kamoshi Three sake breweries stand within walking distance of each other in Kamo — Kamonishiki, Masukagami, and Yukitsubaki — and the town's relationship with fermentation feels as layered as its relationship with wood.
- kariwamura The Echigo plain stretches quietly here, cut through by the Bessangawa river and framed by low hills where the ruins of Akada Castle sit at the top of a short woodland trail.
- gosenshi Peony seedlings move through Gosen in quiet volume — nursery rows stretching toward the Echigo plain, roots bound for gardens across the country.
- sadoshi The ferry from Niigata takes you across open water before the silhouette of Sado's mountain ridges comes into view — the Osado range to the north, the Kosado range curving south, and between them the flat rice country of Kuni-nakadaira.
- sanjoushi Iron is the first grammar of this city.
- shibatashi The old arcade along Shibata's station-front shopping street still has its single-arm canopy, the kind bolted to one wall rather than spanning the full width — a small structural fact that somehow captures the town's character.
- jouetsushi The gamaguchi-shaped snow corridors of the old arcade streets — the *gangi-dōri* — run through Takada like covered veins, their wooden eaves joining shop to shop against the weight of winter.
- seiroumachi The dunes of Niigata's coast run through Seiro-machi like a quiet spine, separating the flat agricultural interior from the Japan Sea.
- sekikawamura The straw cat baskets called *neko-chigura* take months to weave, and the hands that make them are mostly those of older women in the villages along the Arakawa.
- tainaishi The special express *Inaho* stops at Nakajō Station, and for a moment the platform holds a particular stillness — rice fields pressing in from both sides, the Tainai River somewhere behind the tree line.
- tagamimachi Kiri tansu — the paulownia chest — is the craft that quietly anchors this corner of Niigata.
- tsunanmachi Snow comes to Tsunan in volumes that reshape the landscape entirely — rooflines disappear, the terraced river bluffs along the Shinano grow muffled and still, and the logic of daily life reorganizes itself around depth and weight.
- tsubameshi Metal shavings and rice fields occupy the same plain.
- tookamachishi Snow accumulates here in depths that reshape the entire logic of daily life — rooftops, roads, the angle of a walk to the station.
- nagaokashi Along the Shinano River, the alluvial plain stretches wide and flat, and the city that grew here has rebuilt itself twice over — from the fires of the Boshin War and again from the ashes of the wartime air raids.
- niigatashi The Bandai Bridge crosses the Shinano River at a width that makes the water feel almost oceanic — flat, grey-green, moving steadily toward the port.
- mitsukeshi The Kariyada River splits the town before you can quite orient yourself — one bank, then a bridge, then another cluster of streets.
- minamiuonumashi Snow compresses the basin into itself for months at a stretch — the streets of Minamiuonuma narrow under the weight of it, and rooftops carry loads that would be remarkable elsewhere.
- myoukoushi Snow accumulates here in depths that reshape the landscape entirely — Myoko's winters are not incidental but structural, pressing the town into a particular rhythm of life and labor.
- murakamishi Salmon hang drying in the eaves of old machiya along the town-centre streets — a sight that connects Murakami directly to the Miomote River running behind it.
- yahikomura The JR弥彦線 ends here, at a small terminal station whose architecture echoes the shrine gate a short walk away.
- yuzawamachi Snow accumulates here in depths that reshape the landscape entirely — the mountains ringing Yuzawa belong to the Echigo range, and the town sits at the southern tip of Niigata, pressed against the borders of Gunma and Nagano.