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Tomioka Silk Mill — UNESCO Industrial Heritage

Published: Jun 3, 2026
Updated: Jun 3, 2026
UNESCOsilk millTomiokaindustrial heritageMeiji era
Tomioka Silk Mill — UNESCO Industrial Heritage

Tomioka Silk Mill (富岡製糸場, Tomioka Seishijo) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Japan's first modern mechanized silk-reeling factory, established in 1872 during the Meiji era's industrialization drive. The mill was built with French technology and Japanese craftsmanship, producing high-quality silk thread that made Japan the world's largest silk exporter by 1900. The mill operated for 115 years (1872-1987), and its brick buildings, wooden-truss architecture, and intact machinery are preserved as a monument to Japan's transformation from feudal society to industrial power.

The site includes the East Cocoon Warehouse (300m long, brick structure housing silkworm cocoons), the Silk-Reeling Plant (original French-built machinery), and worker dormitories. Guided tours (in Japanese, English audio guides available) explain the silk production process — from silkworm cultivation to thread reeling — and the mill's role in women's industrial labor history (female workers lived on-site and learned modern factory skills).

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Getting There

Access Information

Tomioka Silk Mill: 1-1 Tomioka, Tomioka City. 15-min walk from Joshu-Tomioka Station (Joshin Electric Railway, 40 min from Takasaki). Entry: ¥1,000. Hours: 9:00-17:00 (last entry 16:30), closed Wed. English audio guide: ¥200. Visit duration: 90-120 minutes.

Insider Guide

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**Tour highlights:** The guided tour (60 minutes, Japanese language, ¥1,000 entry) explains the silk-reeling process: silkworm cocoons are boiled to soften silk, then mechanically unwound onto spools.

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