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Tangible Cultural Property (Building) (2)

[CAM] January 31, 2016 18:00

Yoshiume Yoshicho-tei

IMG_2651.JPGIMG_2656.JPGIMG_2655.JPG

Before Showa / around 1927

2-story wooden building, tile roofing, building area 81m2

1 building

1-5-2, Nihonbashiningyocho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo

Date of registration: 20020821

 

It is a two-story wooden house built during the reconstruction period of the earthquake, with five girder lines and four and a half beams, gabled, and flat ground. The outer wall has been changed to mortar coating, but the interior uses high-quality materials for makeup, such as ceiling boards and board columns, and has a Sukiya-style design such as floors and basement windows, indicating the standard of Japanese style in the early Showa era. (From Cultural Heritage Online)

 

Edoya store and house

IMG_2642.JPGIMG_2643.JPGIMG_2644.JPGTaisho/1924

2-story wooden building, steel plate roof, building area of 94m2

1 building

1-5, Nihonbashiodenmacho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo

Date of registration: 20140425

 

 A two-story wooden building facing the street, a so-called signboard building with an artificial stone washout finish. The front design represents a brush. The frontage is 6.2 meters deep, 19.6 meters deep. The first floor is a store, office, warehouse, and the second floor is a living room and warehouse. There are few renovations both inside and outside, and the fittings and safes remain original. (From Cultural Heritage Online)

 

 Onoya Sohonten Store

IMG_2648.JPGIMG_2649.JPGIMG_2650.JPG

Taisho / Around 1924 / around 1955

2-story wooden building, tile roofing, building area 27m2

1 building

2-6-13, Shintomi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo

Date of registration: 20140425

 

 It stands on the north side of the corner. It is a two-story wooden pantile roofing with a gabled roof. The first floor will be a store, and Tabi will be produced on the second floor. The upper and lower floors have high eaves, and the second floor is made of girder. The exterior wall is sashiko clapboard, and handrails are provided on the second floor window. One of the few prewar Machiya buildings in the area, built immediately after the earthquake. (From Cultural Heritage Online)