English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

12 answers

Roxy is correct.

My house for 9 years was a very modern style, outside. Inside there were 2 tatami rooms, traditional bathrooms and bedrooms, and the kitchen and TV room were very modern. We had central heat and Air conditioning, the best hot water system in the world, and in the winter, my friends would turn off the heat so they could sit under the blankets with an under table heater system, because that is more Japanese!

When I had to cook rice on the stove, my gf was shocked, and she immediately bought me a computerized rice cooker (And a great thing it is, too)!

As Roxy noted, the mix is eclectic and wonderful, you should go live in Japan for a while.

2006-12-14 16:40:20 · answer #1 · answered by Longshiren 6 · 4 5

My apartment is a very modern dwelling. There are some traditional features to almost every Japanese living space. For example, every apartment or house will usually have a entrance way called a genkan. The genkan floor is usually lower than the flooring of the rest of the house. Sometimes the height difference is a symbolic, 5CM. The Genkan is usually some sort of hard flooring like tile, while the rest of the house is carpet or hardwoodfloors or a combination of the two. Most apartments have a separate toilet room from the bathroom.

In Tokyo most apartments and homes are newer and have modern designs with traditional features. Out in the country side and small to medium cities, the homes can be older and more of the traditional design.

Japan is surrounded by sea and thus has a large source of sea sand. This is used to make cement is used as the primary contrstruction material for modern homes and buildings. Wood is imported from New Zealand, Canada and other nations. Wood is an expensive building material in Japan.

There is a really cool Sunday TV called Before and After, where they show homes creatively redesigned.

2006-12-14 17:17:20 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 3 4

Most of the Japanese are stay around Tokyo.

And Tokyo is one of the modern city in the world, hence you got the answer to your question. However there are still few places to remember Japan's old day culture.

2006-12-17 19:02:04 · answer #3 · answered by siva_kum 3 · 0 1

Most Japanese live in Modernish apartments, they have the genkan (entryway where you take off your shoes) separate toilet (usually with a little sink on top of the tank to wash your hand with (makes a lot of sense, the water you wash your hands with is going to waste so why not use it for the next flush) A shower/tub room, usually at least 1 older style tatami room where they have mats of woven reeds that have a slightly springy feel when you walk on them, and the smell of fresh tatami is a great sensation. Usually in any room designated as a bedroom they have a closet for storing futon.

Oh, and if I could find one cheaply in the usa, I would definitely get a Kotatsu, basically, its a low table with a mat under it, on top of the table is a blanket, and then a table surface on top of the blanket, what makes the kotatsu special is that there is a heater underneath the table (older ones use kerosene, newer ones are electric) It is so nice on a cool day to sit under the kotatsu and relax, eat, sleep, read or whatever. My friends cat at her apartment loved sleeping under the blankets as well (and playfully attacking any feet that invaded HIS space)

Oh, and if you happen to get a place that has a traditional squat toilet, it is possible to get a cover that adapts it to be like a regular toilet, not sure where you would buy one, but the apartment I was at had one.

2006-12-15 17:02:34 · answer #4 · answered by Norsehawk 4 · 3 2

What you call "classic homes" in Japan are very uncommon recently because of the fact it takes experienced craftsman to maintain them. the styles of skills and crafts that are loss of existence out in Japan because of the fact youthful eastern do no longer opt for to artwork contained available. The sliding paper panels made out of timber and paper are so high priced because of the fact very few human beings comprehend a thank you to cause them to. Even the traditionally made tatami's are so high priced that greater decrease priced plastic retros/replicas are greater undemanding. the final public of the "classic homes" you spot in photos are often historic preserved museum homes. an incredibly few are owned by using very prosperous families and incredibly because of the fact they're relatives properties or component to it handed down from the previous generations. the cost of this type of abode could be a ways above the common eastern abode that's incredibly over 970,000 British pounds Sterling.

2016-10-05 08:18:59 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Modern japanese style homes.

2006-12-14 16:34:43 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

The house I have been living in for more than 2 years is a western-style home, but it does have a tatami room and the bathroom is split with the toilet in one room and the sink/bath/shower in another - this is japanese style. In my neighborhood, there are many old wooden houses, but also many new modern western-style apartment complexes. And a few homeless people living on the streets, too! I think this is rather typical for the yokohama/tokyo areas.

2006-12-14 20:18:30 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 4 4

a bit of both - there are places which are western like our houses, and then there are places which have the tatami mats, roll out futons, sliding paper dorrs, etc. but most places are a combination, with houses which are westernized, but might have a tatami floor room, japanese style bathroom and western kitchen.
thats why japan is so interesting its such a mix

2006-12-14 16:32:39 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 6 2

Given that their per capita income is about as, if not higher, than that of Americans, its safe to say they don't live in "traditional" homes. But then again, given the lack of space on the islands, most might live in small appartments and the like.

2006-12-14 16:35:51 · answer #9 · answered by Walter 5 · 1 4

Combination of both and also depends on the location. Tend to agree with Roxy

2006-12-14 16:52:45 · answer #10 · answered by warasouth 4 · 1 4

fedest.com, questions and answers