A few months ago we traveled to Fukuyama (about 400 miles southwest of Tokyo & 35 miles east of Hiroshima) to meet with our client and present the first phase of the project.
Our client is a shipbuilder (large cargo ships), so naturally their office is on the coast in a small bay enclosed by islands which offer a bit of protection.
While hotels rooms are not generally that exciting, they do become memorable when they are almost as big as your house.
View of the bay and part of the shipyards from my hotel room
The hotel bar
and library (lounge)
View of the bay from the bar terrace
Outdoor hot tub that was part of the hotel's onsen (hot springs)
View to the bay, and the marina that is part of our clients office complex
View from my room of the massive cranes at work building a ship
Marina at our clients office building. The vertical white columns at the end of the pier are part of an aquarium built and operated by the client
Miroku no Sato (Village of Miroku) is an amusement park constructed and operated by our client, that Miyakoda-san helped design over 20 years ago
What amusement park is complete without a drunken sailor who runs a fish camp?
Amusement parks look pretty much the same all over the world
Hanging out with the other white guy
Mainstreet, Japan - a recreation of what an older historic Japanese village may have looked like
Inside the school house
Why principals should never fall asleep on the job
An interesting sign...for what I have no idea
All cultures love wrestling
and Go-zilla!!!!
After touring the amusement park, we toured the rest of the Chairman's land. (over the years his family has accumulated a lot, and each generation has shaped it through development as they see fit) The building above is the family memorial, which is adjacent to the zen school they operate
The rock garden outside the Zen temple and school
The gateway leading into the garden (it began to snow while we were there)
Looking back up the hill at the gate leading into the temple garden
Before heading back to Tokyo, we had about an hour to tour Fukuyama. This allowed us to see Fukuyama Castle
The shinkansen (highspeed train). Not the one we rode, but exactly the same model.
A slightly different model, the JR500 series
A different model of the JR500 series
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