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Asakura Akizukijo Castle Town Walk

Published: Jun 1, 2026
Updated: Jun 1, 2026
castle towncherry blossomsautumn leaveshistoricAsakura
Asakura Akizukijo Castle Town Walk

Akizuki, a small post town in the mountains of Asakura City, contains one of Fukuoka's most complete and least-photographed examples of Edo-period townscape. The castle β€” built in 1203 and destroyed in the Meiji land reforms β€” survives only as a stone gate (nagayamon) at the end of a long stone-paved approach. That approach, lined with cedar-bark walls and old merchant houses, is the destination.

The town is at its most famous in spring, when the cedar-lined approach (called Sugi no Baba) is covered in fallen cherry blossoms β€” a photographic effect so perfect that it looks artificial. In autumn, the maple-lined approach to the Akizuki Shrine produces a tunnel of orange and red that is one of Kyushu's finest foliage walks. The population is 500 people; annual visitors number in the hundreds of thousands in peak season.

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Getting There

Access Information

Akizuki is in Asakura City, 50 minutes from Hakata Station by train (JR Chikuhi Line to Asakura-Kushifuru) + 20-min bus. Or 1 hour by car from Fukuoka City. Best access by rental car. Entry to grounds free; some facilities Β₯300.

Insider Guide

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**Cherry blossom timing:** The famous Sugi no Baba fallen-petal look occurs when 70% of the cherries have bloomed β€” usually April 1–10. Local cherry blossom forecast boards post updates. Aim for a wee

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