Kawagoe Kurazukuri Street — Little Edo Merchant District
Kawagoe's Kurazukuri Street (蔵造りの町並み) preserves one of Japan's most complete Edo-period merchant districts — over 30 clay-walled warehouses (kura) built in the 17th–19th centuries, their thick black walls and tiled roofs surviving the Great Kanto Earthquake and multiple fires that destroyed neighboring Tokyo. Walking this 400-meter corridor feels like stepping into a woodblock print — traditional sweet shops, craft stores, and cafes now occupy buildings that once stored rice, silk, and sake.
The term 'Little Edo' reflects Kawagoe's historical role as Tokyo's (then Edo's) supply depot and cultural satellite. The wealthy merchants who built these fireproof warehouses competed to display their prosperity through architectural details: carved roof tiles, elaborate gates, and family crests. The street's preservation was accidental — Kawagoe's economic decline in the Meiji period meant the buildings were never modernized, leaving them frozen in time.
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