One of the joys of being a long-term gaijin in Japan is eventually building a house here. Houses in Japan are almost never pre-built by a developer as part of a community of homes as is often the case in California, or bought “used” from people who have lived in them previously. Instead, at least outside of large cities like Tokyo where people tend to live in “mansions” (an apartment that’s owned rather than rented), houses are generally built from scratch, starting with an architect who will create a design based on your specifications and budget. For a foreigner, this is a great opportunity to go crazy designing the Japanese home of your dreams, adding tatami rooms, shoji paper doors, and perhaps a toko-no-ma recessed area for displaying some ikebana flowers. Of course, houses in Japan don’t go up in value like they (historically) do in the U.S. and Europe — unless you’re talking about a huge house that a movie star lived in, only land has value here — so when you build a home you’re building just for yourself and your family. Which is actually kind of nice, since your house becomes a place to live in and enjoy, rather than a potential source of stress. For the record, buying a plot of land in our prefecture, about 100 km north of Tokyo, will set you back about $100,000. For a custom-built house, budget around $300,000, although you can cut that down a bit by considering one of those “import homes” where all the materials, from wood to concrete to nails, are boxed up in Canada and shipped over by container.
No, Japan Is Not Xenophobic. Here’s Why.
Last night I was finishing up my evening social media work when I noticed a phrase was trending on X....