So sue me, I happen to be watching a lot of Japanese content on Youtube at the moment.
This one is a couple of years old, and is from one of several channels The Guardian has (I didn't know until Google suggested it), and it's a pretty fascinating explanation of how you can get cheaper rent there if you are the first person to live in an apartment or house after someone has died in it. I hadn't heard of that before, although I did know that housing is treated as more "disposable" in that country than in most of the West.
Who knows - maybe it's easier for Westerners to rent one of these apartments too: I have seen several Youtubers explaining that Japanese landlords and letting agents really are not welcoming of foreign renters. They consider them a high risk of skipping the country with rent arrears, and unreliable tenants generally speaking. (Japan is a fantastic place, but there are some residual, slightly problematic, cultural issues like that.)
And speaking of abandoned Japanese residences, Chris Broad and his friends visited a Japanese island which has a population dwindle to (I think he said) 150, but it has scores of apartment blocks from when 10,000 people lived there, now being slowly taken over by plants in a very post-apocalyptic look. Because people do actually still live there, anyone can go visit on the ferry. It's apparently near the more famous "battleship island", but you can't go to that one alone. Fascinating:
2 comments:
Absolutely awesome. Thats the way communities should look. Perfection at last.
I mean the medieval Dutch stuff. Not the lost island.
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