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Let’s be honest about Kyoto. It’s magnificent. It’s also, at this point, a theme park of itself, a city so overrun with selfie sticks and group tours that finding stillness (or even a hotel room) there now requires either extreme luck or 5 a.m. alarm clocks. Japan drew a record 42.7 million international visitors last year, and you can feel every one of them lining up for ramen in Gion. Which is exactly why the smart money—at least among the seasoned Japan hands I trust—is pivoting two hours west by bullet train to Kurashiki, a picturesque small city in Okayama Prefecture that most Western travelers have never heard of.
If you haven’t been to Kurashiki yet, you are running out of time to experience it as it exists today: calm, intact, and steeped in 400 years of mercantile history. The travel insiders are already talking. The boutique hoteliers are moving in. The window is open, but it won't stay that way forever. Book now. Thank me later.
Historic canal in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan.
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Kurashiki means, roughly, “Warehouse Village,” and that etymology tells the story. In the 1600s, the city was designated a direct territory of the Tokugawa shogunate, becoming a crucial hub where rice from the surrounding provinces was collected and shipped to Osaka and Edo. The canals that thread through the heart of the old quarter were built for barges. Today, those same waterways carry small wooden tourist boats, propelled by boatmen with bamboo poles, gliding beneath weeping willows and arced stone bridges, past white-walled storehouses (kura) whose grid-patterned walls haven't changed in centuries.
This is the Bikan Historical Quarter (officially designated an Important Preservation District for Groups of Historic Buildings) and it is, without exaggeration, one of the most photogenic neighborhoods in Japan. Do a Google Image search. The municipal government long ago buried the telephone wires underground. What's left is a scene so cinematic it has been voted the most picturesque merchant quarter in the country in a national survey. And yet, on a weekday morning in the off-season, you can have stretches of those stone-paved lanes almost entirely to yourself.
If you're going to do Kurashiki properly, you’ll want to stay at Yoruya, which Condé Nast Traveler selected for its 2025 Hot List (as a backup, Ryokan Kurashiki is a stately traditional choice). The 13-room property occupies a lovingly restored machiya, a traditional Japanese townhouse originally built over 110 years ago as the residence and shopfront of a Meiji-era kimono merchant. It sits on a quiet lane on the eastern edge of the Bikan Quarter. The entrance is so discreet most people walk past it. Instead of a neon hotel sign, a knotted curtain of local igusa (rush grass) marks the threshold, handcrafted by a fifth-generation artisan.
Yoruya's 13 rooms combine contemporary minimalism and tradition in a century-old building in the historic heart of Kurashiki
Yoruya
Inside, Tokyo design studio Simplicity (the same firm behind Ogata Paris) has updated the historic building with contemporary minimalism. There are white walls and soft curves alongside exposed wooden beams, tatami platforms, and washi paper in abundance. Three suites in the restored rear building are the highlight, with high ceilings, private courtyard gardens, deep wooden bathtubs where you soak while watching the evening sky. Scattered through the rooms is a curated anthology of local craft: ceramic cups from nearby Kurashiki Aoiki Kiln, bespoke glasses from Yamanome Glass, bengara red coasters from the Kurashiki Dyeing and Weaving Institute. Even the calligraphic art splashed across the walls comes from a local temple priest.
At Yoruya's intimate hinoki-wood counter restaurant, executive chef Fumio Niimi works with the 72 micro-seasons of the Japanese calendar, composing an elegant kaiseki-influenced menu built from Okayama's extraordinary larder—arrowhead fish, Nagi beef, foie gras with Chinese cabbage, turnip preparations of unanticipated beauty.
Opened in 1930 and located at Kurashiki Bikan Historical Quarter in Okayama, the Ohara Museum of Art is the first collection of Western art to be permanently exhibited in Japan.
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Start at the Ohara Museum of Art, Japan's first private museum of Western art, where an improbable Okayama industrialist named Magosaburo Ohara assembled a collection of Greco, Monet, Matisse, and Gauguin in the 1930s. It remains one of the most underrated museum collections in the country. Then wander the adjacent Kurashiki Museum of Folkcraft, which opened in 1948 and fills converted storehouses with ceramics, textiles, lacquerware and everyday objects from across Japan.
For special gifts and one-of-a-kind souvenirs, Toutou has two galleries selling Japanese handicrafts, and a hotel with seven guest rooms in the Kurashiki Historic District. If you have children (or a collector's instinct), do not skip Nyochiku-do, a stationery shop in the heart of Bikan that stocks over 800 varieties of masking tape—washi tapes, limited-edition townhouse patterns, cult-brand collaborations—and offers a free ten-minute hands-on station for sampling designs.
Then there is the denim. Kurashiki and its neighboring district of Kojima hold a legitimate claim as the birthplace of Japanese denim. Those are fightin’ words in a country where selvedge jeans have achieved something close to folk-art status. Kurashiki Denim Street, in the Bikan Quarter, is a focused strip of boutiques selling local labels, indigo-dyed textiles, even blue-colored buns and ice cream. For the full experience, make the 40-minute train journey to the Betty Smith Jeans Museum and Village in Kojima, where you can trace the global evolution of denim through vintage displays, choose a fit, pick your rivets and buttons, and walk out wearing a pair of Japanese jeans assembled the old-fashioned way. Book the workshop slot online in advance.
Save an evening for the river. The Kurashiki River Boat Tour runs daily, and at around $4.50 for adults, it's one of Japan travel's great bargains: a wooden boat, a bamboo-poled boatman, willows overhead, white walls rising from the water. At night, with traditional paper lanterns glowing on the historic facades and reflections trembling on the canal, you could convince yourself you've slipped 200 years into the past.
From Kyoto: approximately 75 minutes by Shinkansen to Okayama, then 20 minutes by local train to Kurashiki Station. The Bikan Historical Quarter is a 10-minute walk from the station. The quarter itself is compact and best explored on foot. The best time to visit Kurashiki is early spring, when cherry blossoms frame the canal, and autumn. Weekdays are noticeably less crowded than weekends year-round.
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