Open Air Museum of Old Japanese Farm Houses

  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon
  • Trustfeed ratings Icon

Toyonaka, Japan

occh.or.jp
Open air museum· Museum· Tourist attraction

Open Air Museum of Old Japanese Farm Houses Reviews | Rating 4.2 out of 5 stars (5 reviews)

Open Air Museum of Old Japanese Farm Houses is located in Toyonaka, Japan on 1-2 Hattoriryokuchi. Open Air Museum of Old Japanese Farm Houses is rated 4.2 out of 5 in the category open air museum in Japan.

Address

1-2 Hattoriryokuchi

Phone

+81 668623137

Amenities

Good for kidsToiletsNo restaurant

Accessibility

Wheelchair-accessible car parkWheelchair-accessible entranceWheelchair-accessible toilet

Open hours

...
Write review Claim Profile

T

The Simple Environmentalist

A fun place for family and friends. I highly encourage making your way up to the North end of Osaka. It’s near enough to Umeda so not too out of the way. It’s a fun place to see what old Japan looked like in different places and times. It’s great for tourists and was not crowded when we went. We also bought some local art!

O

Oma Samo

Locate in park area. Old style japanese house. Few tourist here. Staff can speak basic English.

S

spring of Life

This is really worth visiting. When I was there were so few visitors hence I could take my time and enjoy the farm houses without the tourist crowd like the other tourist places of interest. One can enter the old houses and enjoyed the space. This is children friendly museum. If you are traveling with Children, nearby there is the horse riding Center I believe it is open to children because it is part of the Hattori Ryokuchi Park.

F

Fuzzybeanerizer

This is my favorite place to visit in the whole Osaka area, definitely right up there with Osaka Castle. It is easy to get to by subway/train. I love the beautiful traditional farmhouses from all over Japan, and the two times I've been here it was quite peaceful. It is a little like Greenfield Village back home in Michigan, but focused only on rural farmhouses and a lot less crowded and less commercialized. Pretty cheap to enter. I suppose sometimes there will be groups of Japanese schoolkids, but they'd be cute to watch too. Now that I have a 6 year old daughter of my own, I brought her to Japan with me and she loved stamping the sheet of paper at each farmhouse... as well as the HUGE park full of playground equipment located nearby. Also even on a hot day in August we found some older ladies tending an indoor cooking fire at one of the farmhouses, and they were willing to pose for photos with my daughter. Along with other pleasant experiences elsewhere on our trip, my daughter now loves Japan and says she'd like to live there.

P

Putika Ashfar

This place is very quiet and never thought that its exhausting to follow the map and visit the Japanese old farm house one by one. There is several ceremonies (Tea ceremony, etc) by months that you can come and plants that you can see by the seasons.