Takayama Festival Floats — Masterworks of Lacquer & Karakuri
Takayama Matsuri (spring April 14–15, autumn October 9–10) is ranked among Japan's three most beautiful festivals for its parade of 11–12 yatai (屋台) — ornate festival floats decorated with gold leaf, intricate carvings, lacquerwork, and mechanical karakuri puppets that perform on top of the floats. The craftsmanship rivals temple architecture: each float costs ¥200–500 million and takes 20+ artisans years to build. Three floats feature karakuri puppet shows where marionettes perform tea service, acrobatics, or lion dances controlled by hidden strings and cams.
Outside festival dates, four of the floats are displayed year-round at the Takayama Festival Floats Exhibition Hall (Yatai Kaikan), where visitors can see the gold-leafed carvings, view karakuri mechanisms close-up, and watch explanatory videos. The hall rotates which floats are displayed (each remains three months), so repeat visitors see different yatai. The adjacent Sakurayama Hachimangu Shrine houses the autumn festival floats in permanent storage buildings (viewable through windows).
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