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| Culture Shock Discuss cultural differences between Japan and your country, and interrelations between Japanese and foreigners.
Attention : For practical questions about working, studying, shopping, or things to bring to Japan go to the Japan Practical subforum. |
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#1 |
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Wanderer
![]() Join Date: Aug 25, 2005
Location: Pecrot (Belgium)
Age: 33
Posts: 221
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Would you live in paper-wood rooms in your own country?
I would say yes, only if the front side of the house is in the local architecture. I would like to have a japanese-style rest room for exemple, but at the back of the house, opening on a beautifull green garden
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#2 |
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Decommissioned ex-admin
![]() Join Date: Jul 17, 2002
Location: Austrasia
Posts: 6,647
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If you are talking about Japanese houses with a wooden frame structure and cardboard-like walls, then never ! It is one of the darkest side of Japan. I got frost bites to my feet because of these uninsulated hovels. Even with a bit of concrete around that is still the same. It's actually colder inside than outside in winter and hotter in summer.
If you are talking about having paper doors (fusuma) inside a brick-and-mortar house (or better, one made of big grey-stone), then I wouldn't mind, but it probably wouldn't fit well with the style of the house. What's more, if you have a (reasonably big) dog, it will go through the paper fusuma if it tried to open it by jumping on it.
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Over 100 destinations in the Japan Sightseeing Guide + detailed Tokyo Guide and Kyoto Guide Eupedia : Your Guide to Europe in English Read the "Maciamo FAQ" "What is the use of living, if it be not to strive for noble causes and to make this muddled world a better place for those who will live in it after we are gone?", Winston Churchill. |
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#3 |
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Wanderer
![]() Join Date: Aug 25, 2005
Location: Pecrot (Belgium)
Age: 33
Posts: 221
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.........I was always wondering why they were keeping those poor friends outside their houses! Thanks for the hint
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#4 |
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As the Rush Comes
![]() Join Date: Apr 25, 2003
Location: The EU capital
Age: 25
Posts: 1,288
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I agree with Maciamo, it is already pretty cold here in Belgium and with that kind of structure i would die of hypothermia in my sleep. brrrrrr, winter is even gettin closer now
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#5 |
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DON'T PANIC!
![]() Join Date: Mar 11, 2005
Location: In my cerebral cortex
Age: 34
Posts: 1,598
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I like to burn candles and I would be afraid of burning the place down!
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#6 |
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Regular Member
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I would love to live in the house that looks like a Japanese style from outside and tatami mats in one room, where I can take a nap or have some tea, and keep the other parts of the house as they are.
It would need to be built sturdy and well-insulated enough to bear snow, though. |
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#7 |
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Decommissioned ex-admin
![]() Join Date: Jul 17, 2002
Location: Austrasia
Posts: 6,647
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Originally Posted by misa.j
Do you mean something like the one we see in comercial for green tea on Japanese TV ? Something more similar to Ryoan-ji Temple in Kyoto or the chaya in some Japanese gardens, or even the old Heian-era Imperial Palace than any inhabited house I have seen in Japan. If that is what you mean, I agree that it looks nice, but I would only built it in my garden to take the tea, not to live inside.
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#8 |
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Regular Member
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Yeah, the garden and "engawa"(wooden hallway to look over the garden) of Ryoan-ji is something I would love to have in my property.
Originally Posted by Maciamo
That's even better.
I'm thinking of houses like these ones.
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#9 |
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Decommissioned ex-admin
![]() Join Date: Jul 17, 2002
Location: Austrasia
Posts: 6,647
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Originally Posted by misa.j
I have only seen that kind of architecture in gardens or temples. Do you know anybody who live in such a house ?
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#10 |
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Regular Member
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No. I don't know anybody who lives in a house that nice.
I don't know if there are even carpenters who could build a house like that now. I have been to friends' houses that were very old, had a long hallway, and a huge entrance space. The ones in the pictures are the tea houses and gardens with stepping stones, which were popular in 1500's(Momoyama era) and first designed by Senno Rikru. |
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#11 |
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Wanderer
![]() Join Date: Aug 25, 2005
Location: Pecrot (Belgium)
Age: 33
Posts: 221
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I wonder how much it would cost to ask a japanese achitect to come and manage such a construction in our own country...
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#12 |
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okonomiyaki=bliss
![]() Join Date: Apr 2, 2004
Location: British Columbia
Age: 25
Posts: 277
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i want to have many japanese elements in my future home. although it could be in japan so who knows....
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ooo~ |
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#13 |
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Junior Member
![]() Join Date: Mar 23, 2005
Location: woo London! Most expensive city in Europe!
Age: 21
Posts: 6
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Beside from the cold, I don't like the idea of how badly sound-proof they are...a friend who went to Tokyo a couple of years ago commented on how she was able to hear everything going on in the house she was staying in. Anyone else had that experience? Ifd find it really disconcerting, especially as I like my music really loud – neighbours wouldnft like me.
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Most men are within a finger's breadth of being mad. Diogenes the Cynic (412 BC - 323 BC)
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#14 |
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Decommissioned ex-admin
![]() Join Date: Jul 17, 2002
Location: Austrasia
Posts: 6,647
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Originally Posted by Libby
We have discussed this in a few threads actually. Almost anyone who has lived in Japan has experience hearing the neighbours through the walls - and not just talking !
Have you read this article : Japanese houses compared to European ones |
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#15 |
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tsuyaku o tsukete kudasai
![]() Join Date: Jan 19, 2005
Location: aberdeen, scotland
Age: 24
Posts: 1,334
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It seems nice but i agree, not practical up in northern climates here in europe.
Still if you could have a room in your house made to look like a traditional japanese dwelling i guess it would be alright. |
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#16 |
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Booyah!
![]() Join Date: Sep 25, 2005
Location: Denmark
Age: 21
Posts: 269
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It could be very stylish having a house like that. Though not so practical in the north as Nurizeko said.
But if i were to move into a special kinda house, it wouldn't be Japanese architecture. I would go for something old viking alike with a long hall and wodden cuts of heroes, trolls and the old gods. with lots of bear fur or other kinds of fur lying all over the floor. That would be nice
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#17 |
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Regular Member
![]() Join Date: Sep 23, 2005
Location: England, Somerset
Age: 23
Posts: 1,064
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I realy like the japanese style of architecture, i have bought a house recently and i would like to make some of the rooms japanese style but as before mentioned, it wouldn't be very practical to do everything traditionally as it would be very cold(and it gets very cold here in england somtimes).
I have a little summerhouse/garden shed that i would like to make japanese style at the bottom of my garden and i wouldn't mind doing that up very traditionally as i wouldn't have to live in it and so if it got too cold in the winter that would be ok . It would be realy cool to have some tatami mats and soft floor with a little table i could drink green tea at and look out over my ponds once they are finished .
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#18 |
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JREF Resident Alien
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I would love to have a Japanese room complete with tatami and shoji paper doors/windows in my house, but since I plan on returning to Japan permanently in a few years why bother with the expense?. However, I hear that you can have a room built to Japanese standards much as you would see in any Japanese restaurant you might visit in your own country.
For example you can buy tatami mats imported from Japan and you can have plans drawn up for a room at a price of course. Quite a few ex-patriots from Japan living here in the US do that if they are living here permanently and have the money to do it. Fo me this would be my dream house. A little too big maybe, but similar in style. Copyright: http://nicolas.delerue.org/And this would be one of the rooms ![]() Copyright: www.aisaninfo.org.
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Do What You Love And You'll Never Work Another Day In Your Life! ![]() |
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#19 |
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Confused
![]() Join Date: Sep 29, 2005
Location: London.
Age: 23
Posts: 37
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No, it's too cold for that type of house in my country
Though, it would be nice in a country which has a warmer climate.
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