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Mojiko Retro District — Meiji-Era Port Town

Published: Jun 1, 2026
Updated: Jun 1, 2026
Meiji eraretroport townarchitectureKitakyushu
Mojiko Retro District — Meiji-Era Port Town

Moji was one of Meiji-era Japan's most important international trading ports — the first point of entry for goods moving from continental Asia into Japan. The prosperity of 1889–1920 left a dense cluster of Western-influenced commercial buildings: red-brick customs houses, Renaissance Revival banks, a rococo-style former maritime office. When the port lost its primacy to Kitakyushu's more modern facilities, Moji froze in time.

Today the district (officially Mojiko Retro) preserves 17 registered Western-style buildings within a 500-meter radius, making it one of the most concentrated examples of Meiji commercial architecture in Japan. The evening waterfront, with buildings illuminated against the Kanmon Strait and the lights of Shimonoseki visible on the opposite shore, is unexpectedly romantic.

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Getting There

Access Information

Mojiko Station (JR Kagoshima Honsen Line, 1 hr from Hakata Station). 5-minute walk to waterfront district. Free to walk. Individual buildings: ¥150–400. Illumination: daily dusk–23:00.

Insider Guide

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**The underground tunnel option:** Kanmon Pedestrian Tunnel runs under the Kanmon Strait from Mojiko to Shimonoseki — 780m, 15-minute walk, ¥20 toll. Cross to Honshu, eat Shimonoseki fugu (puffer fish

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