A Modern Japanese Neighborhood | Tokyo
Information | History | View | Sightseeing | Video
Tour starts: 2:45 This is what a modern Japanese neighborhood looks like.
Comments
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500,000$ you can buy big ass house in texas
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creepy
nobody is outside -
Where are the humans tho
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Nice houses!
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Japan has such a big technology, but they can not dig their fucking ugly power, network and telephonewires in the ground. These Airwires looks shit as hell.
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The sapporo city and its downtown neighborhood in hokkaido district is far better than above. I was there for 5 years... really like heaven...
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Are they all inside playing video games?
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Most houses arent like this in japan. Most of them look very old school and traditional. These are probably western influenced houses built within the past 5 years.
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i dont know why you think it's a japanese thing to have fences in their houses
besides Canadians and North Americans the rest of the world has fences around their houses -
If it cheers you up at all, even in western countries the house itself loses value. It's the land that increases in value.
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Japan houses are small, usually 2,000 square foot and not much of a yard either. Not like that of the U.S. where it is 4,000 square foot, two car garage and 1/3 acre lot!
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역시 선진국이라 마을이 예쁘고 깔끔하구만!
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I like to think it's Kylo Ren from Star Wars talking because of the similar voice
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What kind of car is that @ 8:15 ?
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I wish my neighbourhood was like that :c
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I lived in a new terrace house in Tokyo and it was big and very comfortable. I am 6'4" and I felt it was great. It was not the size of a "western" house but it had "western" high ceilings, standard sized doors, large bedrooms. I visited friends places in the outer suburbs and their places were equally comfortable and roomier... There certainly are many very small places but they are usually older.
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Aye, that's a pretty neat looking neighborhood all-around. I wouldn't mind a compact house like those (if it was that much cheaper for it), but of course, if I couldn't enter a room without ducking my head down, then forget it. I'm left wondering how tall exactly those doorways are, now. I, too, adore the sunlight and prefer larger windows, most of those windows are way too damn tiny. Not only do they let in too little light, the rooms must feel somewhat claustrophobic. That last house did seem better, with more windows and overall larger. The other big downside though is no front or backyards. But again, if the price were lower enough to make up for it, that might do. Strange to hear about properties devaluing over time, I wonder why exactly that's so. Could it really just be the cultural norm of buying new? Sounds rather wasteful. In case of cars, though, I guess if they keep them at least 10-15 years, then they've had their worth, even if a well built car can last for a few decades -- there's a couple of 20+ year old Mercedes parked on my street. But most folk here aren't big on keeping cars for more than, say, 6-8 years, often times much less than that long. It's quite the inverse situation compared to Japan (as far as cars and houses go).
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it's quite similar with my neighbourhood in Edogawa-ku
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Really at minute 4:19 Ryan said the real estate prices go down over time. Wow, sounds like Detroit! What city is this? would the same apply to Tokyo Metro area too? Everyone should just rent then.
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Wheres is this neighborhood? Tokio? What is the name this neighborhood? I would linke to visit,It is very nice.