Inside a Mansion in Japan’s RICHEST Neighborhood | Japanese House Tour
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- Опубліковано 19 чер 2024
- Thought Tokyo was where all the wealth was? Think again -- in this video, Alex takes you around Yamate, the wealthiest area of Yokohama and shows you a grand estate for sale there.
Interested in learning more about this particular property or want to find the perfect place for you? Contact us at tp@blackshiprealty.com
Check out our website for more listings, and contact us if you're looking to buy or rent houses or storefronts in Tokyo, or find an investment property in Japan.
🌏Website: tokyoportfolio.com/
Videographer/Editor - Julian Domanski @KantanJapan
🌏Company Website: blackshiprealty.com
🌏Property Listing Website: tokyoportfolio.com/
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Yes, the window is an octagon, I know...
extrodenary house the awesomess you ever done bravo . from canada
Saved me from commenting. I love your channel! You're great to watch... wish you showed me my house. Still would have bought it otherwise... obviously, but you're fun to see work.
such a Bourgeoisie house and NO POOL ?
Such a house in JAPAN WITHOUT WASHITSU ?
One more question, Do superstitions in Japan influence house building ? and what about this house ? Thank you !
I was actually expecting this kind of pinned comment lol
@@Obsidian-Nebula
please answer my question
As a Japanese living in Yokohoma, it makes me happy to know that so many people from abroad are interested in this video. 😊😊
Don't forget to include the bay area when you visit Japan.
^_^
ただのベットタウンに住みたい外国の方いないでしょ日本の貧乏学生と貧困家庭以外で😂
汚い海と録な仕事もない神奈川に住まないよ外国の方は東京に住むよ日本人と違って😂
I recently visited Yokohama just a few weeks ago and really enjoyed it. it was nice to be beside the sea again as this reminded me of my home which was also a port city. Living in Tokyo its hard to see the sea sometimes!
Please remind Californian's & Oregonian's in particular that Japan too has A "Bay Area". Everyone knows California's highly populated Bay Area but, mostly only Oregonian's are aware of Oregon's Version. Neither likely are aware of Japan's.
As a Canadian, I would still have taken off my shoes, because that's what we always do. Also, I have that same parquet flooring in my home as well. I find that floor pattern very warm, homey and relaxing. Thanks for showing this.
as a scandinavian i would still have taken off the shoes.. because thats what we do aswell.. i believe its mostly US ppl and people living in mudhuts that walks indoors with shoes.
When my relatives from California came to visit, they stepped all over the carpet with their shoes. It’s just uncomfortable to have outside shoes inside since you don’t know what you’ve been stepping on.
@@ExtroLurkerhaz
American sitcoms, have kids lie down on bed with their street sneakers !
I think in Canada and Europe in ancient times, as houses were built with wood & stones, had no tatami or anything else to cover floor, had only chairs ; people didn't feel the need to take of shoes, they did not lie down on floors ! you know the image of Canadian lumberman living alone in his wooden hut or shelter with only a bed table and a chair , will he take off shoes ???? haaaaa???? he won't lie down on floor !
@@ExtroLurkerhaz
I think in Canada and Europe in ancient times, as houses were built with wood & stones, had no tatami or anything else to cover floor, had only chairs ; people didn't feel the need to take of shoes, they did not lie down on floors ! you know the image of lumberman living alone in his wooden hut or shelter with only a bed table and a chair , will he take off shoes ???? haaaaa???? he won't lie down on floor !
The challenge for the next owner is to refresh without completely eliminating all of the handcrafted aspects to it. Especially the floors.
Handmade downstairs is worth saving. Upstairs a house this old probably has hardwood T&G plank flooring underneath. Adhesive-backed wood tiles were popular because it was faster than refinishing a floor.
I was thinking the exact same thing. It has the most extraordinary potential, really exciting to look at properties and imagine how they could be turned into something magnificent without needing to destroy/remove architecturally important historic features and also as you said, handcrafted features that are timeless and not necessary to remove, like that floor. I wonder what sort of family lived in that property before? The wine cellar was absurd and it looked more like a panic room for rich blokes who do dodgy things for money. It wasn't created for fermenting food or storing alcoholic beverages, no chance. It's far too awkward, steep and cramped a descent for someone who may be carrying crates of expensive wine or trying to transport something heavy like an onggi filled with kimchi. I laughed out loud at that 'wine cellar'. Or whatever it is. 😅
While the house is extremely dated, I appreciate the charm that it gives and the care the owners have given it. Reminds me of my childhood home in Toronto, where the house was built around the 1970s as well with its wood floorings. And the garden is absolutely gorgeous, I can only imagine it being used for garden parties or something of the sort.
Overall, a fantastic find! Appreciate the work you do!
Extremely dated?!? Where do you come from, the future?
Very few things was dated in that house, maybe the original wood flooring and master bathroom wall tiles but not much else. A normal person don’t renovate every five years like you seem to be doing.
@@gigiatlas2364 From 2024. The house is nice looking but extremely old.
As a non Japanese Florida man, we take our shoes off when we come inside. I grew up doing it, didn't even know it was also a Japanese thing till I was 10.
Same, I’m from Ohio. It’s just good manners to not track dirt all over someone’s carpeting.
I still remember one of my older brothers screaming at my friend when we were teenagers because she didn’t take off her shoes. 😂
This is probably the closest feeling of 'yea I could live there forever' I've experienced while looking at a property. The price isn't even that bad (cries in canadian) for that same amount you can get much smaller/crappier places here. I think my fav part is how the wood floors in the bedrooms are identical to the wood floors in my apartment LOL so it feels very familiar. The privacy/size of the garden is my favourite!!
BTW when you mentioned that you rarely see grass lawns, I thought of the youtuber Tokyo Llama! He's Japanese/Australian and has renovated a classic Japanese house with modern/western touches (has a fabled grass lawn!) Idk if you take suggestions, but I would love to see you interview him & look at his property for a video. He's done a STUNNING job and I like how it shows that anyone can do anything with enough passion and the will to do it. It's a little more relatable for average viewers rather than looking at super expensive places. (I do enjoy these videos when it comes to maladaptive daydreaming LOL)
I like how Alex will always be so enthusiastic abt every property he shows and he sells them very well....to his bellow 1000 dollars/month salary watchers
I feel like your house presentation style has gotten so good and comes across really well in this video, great job!
$3.2M seems very reasonable for this place. Here in Canberra (Capital City of Australia) you can get similar properties (similar size house and land from 1920 eras). Most are also in very nice areas of the city and would be well over the asking price of this place! Many of them are leased out to other countries to use as Embassies, or residences for Ambassadors and their families.
I think it’s 3.2M USD which is 4.98M AUD.
@@NoneHandle2023 still reasonable in our current Australian market
@@lexnite22 that’s true…
Australias just down right cracked with real estate prices and the current interest rates…
you are looking at probably about 5 to 7 mil CAD to upwards of 9 mil CAD for this place in Toronto depending on location
in my area of the US, that house might go for about 600-700k USD, especially with no renovations done
This house has a very summer house/vacation house type feeling where I’m from (Denmark). Except it’s well, gigantic. But everything else.
What I love about this house is how every room has its own "flavor". So many modern houses every room feels the same, just bland, rectangular rooms that just feel so sterile and devoid of uniqueness. I would adore this house if I lived in Japan.
such a Bourgeoisie house and NO POOL ?
Such a house in JAPAN WITHOUT WASHITSU ?
One more question, Do superstitions in Japan influence house building ? and what about this house ? Thank you !
Very very cool video!!! It’s so uncanny that you posted this! My husband and I just got home from a 2 week stay in Tokyo yesterday, and we also stayed in Yokohama for 5 days. It was our first time in Yokohama and we loved it! It felt like such a water-oriented city (I don’t know best to say it). The breeze coming off the water at night was so nice! We loved doing a late night walk to get ramen or get snacks from Lawson with that amazing breeze. We’re really excited about seriously looking for a vacation home in Japan soon (I think we will do a short term rental first, to test run how working will be with the time difference between Japan and Tennessee lol). We assume it will be in Tokyo, but we want to consider other areas. We have never heard of this area! I’m sure there’s so many places that would be so nice to live in that we don’t know about! During our trip we kept walking around and saying to each other “I can’t wait to have a place here. We’ll have to hire Alex to help us!” Haha ☺️
As a non-japanese scandinavian person it feels so wrong not taking off your shoes when going inside. Nice house!
Eh, I think most of the world feels the same way, not everything is like in the US when you leave Japan after all. :P
As a European person who lived in the Scandinavia, central Europe and now south of Europe in the rivieras, I know there are plenty of reasons and occasions when you do not remove your shoes while inside and it's common all over Europe.
It's often done because of comfort and hygiene (feet hygiene), not the floor hygiene. I left a wallet, just let's grab it quickly I'll vaccum and wash the floors soon like a normal person does at least once a week if not more often. It's not like you go everywhere in shoes or rooms
as a Canadian this was bizarre to me as well
In Belgium they don’t take em off 😭 I have to remind my landlord everytime he comes to visit that my apartment is a Finnish apartment now so he has to take his shoes off😂
@@solstickanmost of the world doesn’t feel that way. I’ve never been in a country yet where anyone has taken their shoes off when entering a home. From Europe to the U.K. to Australia to New Zealand to Singapore.
Honestly that's a fantastic price for the size, style, and location. Feels like New England but in Japan, crazy.
I never get tired of seeing these beautiful homes! I can't believe they found the grandson of the original woodworker who did the floors! The real selling point to me is the garden.
Having studied at YNU and spending a lot of time in Motomachi. I really appreciated this. It was my favourite area. At that price it’s tempting to buy.
welcome back hope you and your family are well, keep up the good work.
Stunning. Thank you for the tour, Alex.
Absolutely love this house; working in real estate throughout SLO and LA County, California this house gets you a lot of bang for the buck...especially for that location! People often overlook good bones and sweat equity. It has beautiful craftsmanship.
This is really a mixture of really 1970's paneling, 90's kitchen design with the light wood, the openness of a back yard. It is a good mixture of everything.
Absolutely crazy floors in this house. In a good way. It's unbelievable. Not only the part he told a story about, but the entrance hall and dining hall especially, and the master bedroom as well. It'd be many, many thousands of dollars anywhere to have it installed. Wouldn't be surprised to have a 100.000+ dollar price thrown at me, if I were to ask for it.
The Annex is definitely my favorite. If I were a teen on summer vacation, I would spend my time reading books, doing homework, and playing games there. Enjoying the breezing wind while spending the day lazily
CHRIS introduced me to your channel.
Love the properties that you showcase :)
Feels like a time capsule, absolutely everything is from the 70s and not changed! I can't believe they lived there so long and didn't even change like the wardrobe door or something 😆. Love the house though but absolutely everything needs redecorating and redesigning except the floors. If I had the money it would be such an exciting project and that garden is absolutely phenomenal. Would love to see a recap in some years time if that would ever be possible!
Love it so much, I would not even update it. Renovations are over-rated. Thanks for showing us this treasure
7:17 Honestly, this is such a nice hallway. There is something cozy about the lighting, the wood reflecting it, the plush carpet and the creme curtains. It is giving Japanese overnight train and vintage cruise ship hallway and such a contrast from the usually wider, brighter and more decorated hallways seen nowadays.
11:45 Also the upper level of the garden and the pieces right outside the house, although painted black for strange reasons (instead of Swedish red, sky blue, yellow or wood), looks pleasant and hygge. I think it's because there are bushes, small trees and flowers in narrow distance to the house giving shade and a direct connection to nature instead of empty, open spaces.
I wish the garden (12:20) was more than just a squared grass area with a swing. Perhaps a little pond, fountain, some stones, flower pots, bushes or a big tree in the middle with a wooden bench could be a nice addition.
Oooooo, I was looking forward to this video! I caught that little livestream you did while you were there!
Interesting video as always. Thanks for sharing.
Yamate! I remember the livestream here :) thanks for the edited video!
Much to like. Much to be updated, but it seems well kept. The lawn is spectacular.
The flooring in the Master and 4th bedroom looks like regular “parquetry” found in most Quebec homes built in the ‘70s 😉 Inexpensive alternative to hardwood……Would LOVE to see how this wonderful home will be renovated/updated by the new owner
All the wood floors are just different styles of parquet
Every wood pieces in those rooms was handmade, that is NOT cheap in the slightest.
Such a beautiful house and a great location too. Very nice.
Man, Yokohama may be my favorite japanese city. Highly underrated! And I love that house and neighborhood.
Always intrigued how these houses looks like from the inside 😊 Thank you very much for making a video on this. I hope you can also do in one of the houses in One Hundred Hills Asumigaoka in Chiba 😊😊
I’d keep the older wood floor but I’d be doing a LOT of remodeling and updating.
That wine cellar looks like a dungeon.
It’s too small, won’t fit any toys or furniture at all ;)
Speaking from own experience.
Excellent video & channel. Please keep up the good work.
Wow what a house! I'm recently home from Japan, really wish I went to explore this area. Next time!
your finally back!!!! let's gooo
I love all of the use of natural wood tones in Japanese architecture/interior design. Something about it is so cozy. One day I hope I can live in a house as pretty as this one (although maybe smaller for maintenance/utility reasons).
I love your videos. You, showing us all the cool properties in good quality. But there is one thing that I find could be really nice: Maybe put another minute max into showing more of the neighbourhoods these properties are situated
Very 70's decor with the wood panelling and certainly appears tired in places. It looks like a set from Man In The High Castle. Once refurbished and modernised, it'll easily add 50% value to it. Gorgeous property and grounds. Made a great change from the usual Tokyo setting.
Absolutely love this place! Also, I must be a bit jaded with Lexington (Kentucky) housing costs because $3.2 million sounds like a steal.
😳😢
Same here in Nashville TN 😭
This home is very beautiful and unique, it is a lot more spacious than the average home in Japan, it was very interesting you talking about the history of this home, great video.
Love this video and your presentation style in general as usual B) I think the audio on this might be a little low however? Just in case pointing it out helps!
Super interesting. Thank you!
Man love your videos, you show us many different places. The story about the installation of the floor was kinda unique, i dont think you can have the opportunity to know about those kind of cases that often. One last thing, i usually cant hear your videos, i need to put the volume at 100% and stop anything else that i'm running in the background to be able to listen, is just a comment of a techinal issue that you might have on the output of the audio when you finish your video. Good videos bro, keep it going.
Yokohama, definitely visit again...that home was huge, definitely a baby making home, I'd clear out the lawn, probably turn it into a green-house, but keep the garden.
Love all the woodworking in this home.
Beautiful and yes, unusually spacious in Japan.
You did a good job explaining.
Thanks
Love your videos. Greetings from Tampa Florida
I want this house so much. I've already decided to use the annex as my hobby room 😂
It's mine, and it stays as is 😂😂
Let me know when you want to put in the offer
@@TokyoPortfolio If I had the money, I would have paid cash for it 😭
Definitely needs some updating. I'd probably try to emulate the 1920s as much as possible, but with a few touches from the 2020s.
A lawn? In Japan? MADNESS!
Such a cool retro vibe 😊😊
Me the Midwesterner from Wisconsin is screaming at my screen for you to take off your shoes. It's a thing we do here too.
Wow. The wood work of the floor is amazing! Love the exposed beams on the ceiling too. It's even a big home in the standard of California! This is def a very interesting home
thank you for the tour
This area is GORGEOUS wow😮
Beautiful copper fireplace, to die for. This house has a lot of design collectables.
Really reminds me of older homes in San Fransisco. Cool vibe.
Amazing place, garden is wonderful, feels so peacefull. In Europe, there is no genkan, but we usually shoes change into slippers
Just wanted to say that I love your videos and also that wine cellar is terrifying.
Were I a rich man, I'd be totally sold. I could see myself enjoying naps in the wine cellar. All of that wood flooring looks to be made from gem-level selected woods with curl everywhere. Thank you for sharing this place with us. I could see this place fetching a far higher price in certain places within the USA.
Stunning!
just half an hour ago thinking when a new video is coming... lo and behold 👍
You have some crazy foresight
Lovely. Thank you.
Not a single high tech JPN toilet in sight! I bought a house in JPN, but couldn’t afford to buy enough land to include a lawn, so I put a real one on my flat roof. The house maker, with roughly 30yrs experience in sales said I was one of three homeowners that he sold a house with a roof lawn. Great for bbqs and star gazing
I love how the Japanese utilize wood paneling. This place is amazing.
i love how the hallway on the second floor resembles the hallway of a ship
The style of this house makes me think of those Art Deco / 1920 properties that you can find around Belgium in Brussels and Waterloo. The kitchen and bathrooms give 70s vibes indeed and could do with a revamp. Overall the house is lovely, charming, unique and definitely worth its price for Tokyo.
i love it whenever you show us a new property in Japan haha. maybe someday i could get one for myself ;v; more power to you :3
Literally, when you went into the master bathroom, I thought 1970's vibe before you mentioned it. I am showing my age now! I am not ever that old! 😂😂😂
I love his style of outfits ❤ It's like 1950's meets modern
They use the half acre well. We had an acre (obviously not in japan) and even that seemed small because it wasn't well designed (a few sheds here and there, gardens that blocked access).
Stunning back yard.
This house looks good . Just a little paint , polishing and it will look as good as new . Many of the 70s wooden design kitchen and is coming back for some strange reason , so don’t be surprise to see some expensive houses looking like 70s wooden kitchen . I would replace all the kitchen fridges to newer ones though :)
You really could forget you're in Japan in this house. Looks like quite a few homes I've been in from the 70s.
After living in Japan, I will NEVER wear shoes in a house. Wearing shoes in the house is like taking a dump in the living room.
Love The 70's Bathroom, Quite Beautiful. I Personally Wouldn't Change The Kitchen Either Just Due To How Utilitarian It Is. Happy To Keep That Wonderful Chinese Drum As Well.
The kitchen looks very similar to the home i grew up in located in the SF Bay Area California. Unsurprisingly it was built in the 90s with slightly different woodwork but it even has the exact same ice machine as the fridge on the right. Definitely dated aesthetically, but none the less a beautiful home that seems like a solid price for what's included.
Meiji /taisho architecture is the best imo. THAT GARDEN Is everything. The downstairs floors are nice but they touched it a bit too much in the 70s but I hope this house survives and doesn’t get demolished 😢
I would totally live there - would need some renovating in some places. Forget the greater Tokyo area. Yokohama seems to have it made.
What a wonderful video and a gorgeous house. Might have to add Yokohama to my dream Japan trip because it looks so fascinating 😁
You should!! My husband and I just visited Yokohama for the first time a few weeks ago, and it was so lovely! ❤ You can feel a really beautiful breeze coming off the water at night while walking around ☺️ it reminded me of being at the beach
@@LiterallyJustAnActualPotato Oooo that's good to know, thank you for letting me know 😊.
I have soooo many ideas to renovate this place without ruining the charm
Lovely to see a house with a real garden! I have barely seen any Japanese houses with one.
The price of the house feels worth it to me, but it might need a little renovation.
This house is incredible
I like the light features 😁
If I'm a millionaire, I'll
just buy a house in Japan and
spend all day playing
games and visiting arcades. I
love JAPAN so much.
Nice property! I like the lot size!
I just watched you in Abroad in japans tiny apartment vid, the last one you showed at a few Meters square is smaller then this house’s entrance at the front door
Damn, I was expecting it to cost more. I'm from Orange County CA where 3.2 million for something that size is a steal. Especially with it being so close to the biggest city in the world.
As big as it is, the Kaminka I'm going to renovate will be on another level. They are missing some basic things, like incorporating nature inside the house, and also the simplicity of Tatami rooms, floor to roof glass windows.
I grew in houses like this, the only thing interesting is that they brought a very regular western styled home to Japan.
Thanks for the videos though. Would love to see more about renovated Akiya, along with cost breakdown and purpose, as Akiya are not only homes, can be property, business, schools, etc.
Those square wooden shiny floors are the exact ones we have in the immigrant area rental apartments! We used to live with those floors! So strange to see them in a rich house there! But I think the reason is bc they are so durable and long lasting.
Very cool
Definitely you're buying the lot and location because that house is a complete teardown to a modern and much more sophisticated space, although I may save the wood floors or repurpose them somehow...
Man what a beautiful property
Great video, Alex! The closest I’ll ever get to wealthy housing. Your insights are very informative 🙇♂️
You're more than welcome to live vicariously through my videos. Tell Kupo I said hi.
this place reminded me of the house in the setting sun by osamu dazai (such great book btw), where the family was staying before they had to move