Kuradori Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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"Yutong り/ Temple り" の logo
Original Text
If you go straight from Wakasa Station, there was a sign indicating "Kura-dori / Tera-dori" in the left direction. The temple continued on one side of the street and the warehouse continued on the other side. When I went back and forth by rental cycle, I couldn't find a warehouse that was open inside, but it seemed good for walking around the old townscape.
It's a small alley-like street near Wakasa Station. If you proceed from the station, you will find a temple on the left and a white-walled dozo on the right. You can take a leisurely stroll because cars don't pass.
A street lined with white walls near wakasakura station
Original Text
It is a narrow street near Wakasa Station, lined with white-walled warehouses. It's a narrow road that you can't get a car, but it's lined with old temples, and it seems that it used to be an Omote Kaido. Kurajitai is a Machiya warehouse that is still inhabited, and the interior is not particularly open to the public. If you take a walk on the narrow road lined with warehouses, you can see the ancient history of Wakasakura.
The city of Wakasakura is parallel to the straight main street, and it feels like a back street, and there are this Kura-dori and Tera-dori. A group of warehouses built tightly on a narrow street. It is a small town, but it is well understood that it once prospered.
Immediately from Wakasa Station. White-walled dozo is lined up on a narrow road. The former 々 was a warehouse that puts rice for nengu rice. There was a big fire in the Meiji era, and it was prohibited to build other than the warehouse to protect the temple on the other side of the road. The road was under construction when I visited, but there was an atmosphere that reminded me of the prosperity of the past.
"Yutong り/ Temple り" の logo
If you go straight from Wakasa Station, there was a sign indicating "Kura-dori / Tera-dori" in the left direction. The temple continued on one side of the street and the warehouse continued on the other side. When I went back and forth by rental cycle, I couldn't find a warehouse that was open inside, but it seemed good for walking around the old townscape.
Near wakasakura station
It's a small alley-like street near Wakasa Station. If you proceed from the station, you will find a temple on the left and a white-walled dozo on the right. You can take a leisurely stroll because cars don't pass.
A street lined with white walls near wakasakura station
It is a narrow street near Wakasa Station, lined with white-walled warehouses. It's a narrow road that you can't get a car, but it's lined with old temples, and it seems that it used to be an Omote Kaido. Kurajitai is a Machiya warehouse that is still inhabited, and the interior is not particularly open to the public. If you take a walk on the narrow road lined with warehouses, you can see the ancient history of Wakasakura.
We know that it was once a great success.
The city of Wakasakura is parallel to the straight main street, and it feels like a back street, and there are this Kura-dori and Tera-dori. A group of warehouses built tightly on a narrow street. It is a small town, but it is well understood that it once prospered.
A path lined with white walls of dozo
Immediately from Wakasa Station. White-walled dozo is lined up on a narrow road. The former 々 was a warehouse that puts rice for nengu rice. There was a big fire in the Meiji era, and it was prohibited to build other than the warehouse to protect the temple on the other side of the road. The road was under construction when I visited, but there was an atmosphere that reminded me of the prosperity of the past.