Inside a FREE TINY HOUSE in Japan

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  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2023
  • Today were taking a peek at a FREE Tiny House. Japan is filled with abandoned properties and many of them are Free (Yes we will cover how you can get an abandoned home in Japan!) With millions of abandoned Japanese homes (or Akiya) up for grabs, I thought it would be time to take a peek inside of one!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2 тис.

  • @TokyoLens
    @TokyoLens  Рік тому +436

    The big question being... *Would YOU Live Here??* - Join the discussion below!! Let me know what you think
    ||||||||||||| CHECK THIS OUT BELOW!!! |||||||||||||
    ----- **OFFICIALLY FOUND JAPAN'S WORST TINY APARTMENT:** ua-cam.com/video/R4oQDnHlrR0/v-deo.html -----
    *For anyone new: HUGE LOVE to the Comment Squad!! - I spend the first while of every new vid chatting in the comments, so always leave me something below!*
    Definitely was a bit tricky to get to... But had enough signal that Wifi woulnd't be an issue!
    For those who love tours, here's a whole playlist! ua-cam.com/video/y-1Dwhh7dEc/v-deo.html

    • @zelchews
      @zelchews Рік тому +9

      old cabin on a forest, no thanks 😱

    • @wingsofthunder170
      @wingsofthunder170 Рік тому +23

      @@zelchews Complete opposite answer for me lmao.

    • @sandmansleeps657
      @sandmansleeps657 Рік тому +28

      If the internet connection is good enough, and I had a fully online business (to eliminate the hindrance of location beyond needing a stable internet connection), then absolutely.

    • @skywobleross5203
      @skywobleross5203 Рік тому +1

      I wouldn't, not with my anxiety

    • @meph3676
      @meph3676 Рік тому +2

      would not live in there but trying to convince the wife to find an old style house.

  • @alecangelo7443
    @alecangelo7443 Рік тому +3555

    Another tiny house video... As an introvert who wants to get away from all the drama that comes with dealing with people, this is my kinda place...

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +149

      haha theyre perfect~

    • @statusdisarray9598
      @statusdisarray9598 Рік тому +22

      💯 agree i would never leave

    • @retrohipster1060
      @retrohipster1060 Рік тому +74

      Yeah, that's essentially my dream place. LOL if I can get a job where I could work remotely in Japan and live in one of these places then I think my life would feel complete. Haha

    • @xReaghan
      @xReaghan Рік тому

      I mean it looks cool, but in the end it is very unhealthy to not socialize with people, humans are social animals introvert or extrovert..

    • @nBasedAce
      @nBasedAce Рік тому +49

      No insulation, winters as cold as New England. Sounds great.

  • @tammi6771
    @tammi6771 Рік тому +391

    8 million abandoned homes? That does seem excessive. I'm glad you explained the reason for so many akiyas and that there is a lot more involved with buying one. Thank you for showing us around the cabin. Enjoyed it as always

    • @MaShcode
      @MaShcode Рік тому +26

      They say the percentage of abandoned houses in Japan that are actually available is around 10-20%.

    • @amythistxue1
      @amythistxue1 Рік тому +63

      one thing to remember is that Japan is experiencing negative population growth, so as people grow older and pass away they may not have any family to pass the property on to, then combine that with how modern/urban Japan is, meaning a lot of the work that people are doing needs them to be closer to cities leading to many of Japans rural communities turning into ghost towns, it's kind of a sad state, seeing all these beautiful old properties abandoned and slowly rotting away just because there is no one to take care of them

    • @allisonisis
      @allisonisis Рік тому +28

      @@amythistxue1 as someone who can barely afford my tiny apt, I long for an opportunity like this.

    • @nate_d376
      @nate_d376 Рік тому +5

      @@amythistxue1 correct. And it is sad.

    • @amythistxue1
      @amythistxue1 Рік тому +1

      @@denisehill1215 that's part of the problem, Japan's population is shrinking, then combine that with many of these houses being like this one, out in the small villages/towns while most of the work is in the cities and other urban areas and there's just not much reason for people to want them

  • @damocles8417
    @damocles8417 11 місяців тому +138

    I suffer severe depression and I’ve had this recurring thought that I need to live in Antarctica for a year. I’ve convinced myself I want to write about the experience, but deep down, I realize it’s a part of me that wants to hide in darkness. I’m terrified I might actually succeed in detaching myself.
    I see the same thing in many Japanese people in these videos. I instantly feel their loneliness, as unexplainable as it is, with so many people living so close together.
    There is a charm to these enclosed living spaces, but also a feeling that these are tombs.

  • @JustAnotherFox
    @JustAnotherFox Рік тому +255

    I build custom homes for a living, so fixing one of these things up for myself would be easy and fun. I've wondered about these houses and how to get into them. I didn't even know where to start, but you've pointed me in the right direction! Thank you!

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +14

      No worries 😊
      Thanks for watching~

    • @fatonyalmitchell3281
      @fatonyalmitchell3281 8 місяців тому +1

      How you clueless but build housing

    • @SlurmDude
      @SlurmDude 7 місяців тому +4

      Its 7 months later, hows the house XD. Also, how does "im so amazing japan gave me a free home as long as i agreed to live in japan for a year" work with the ladies at the american bars?

  • @abdulm2609
    @abdulm2609 Рік тому +747

    Surprisingly roomy little cabin. From first glance I thought it was a tiny shed but it's really nice and cozy insides. Hopefully someone is able to acquire it and keep it going.

    • @doublesalopetoimcre
      @doublesalopetoimcre Рік тому +14

      depends how far it is from civilization. you still need to get food and go out sometimes, even if you work from home.

    • @abdulm2609
      @abdulm2609 Рік тому +17

      @@doublesalopetoimcre as a primary home it would definitely have a very niche target audience. As a second home or something to rent out it would be a better fit.

    • @Elmithian
      @Elmithian Рік тому +8

      @@doublesalopetoimcre If there is no decent internet connection, this would be out for work-from-home approach as well.
      In many cases at least.

    • @nubreed13
      @nubreed13 Рік тому +3

      @@Elmithian well there are ways to get reliable internet even that far in the woods. If that was viable and I was able to put actual heating and air conditioning into the house I could see having a cabin full time.

    • @MangaGamify
      @MangaGamify Рік тому

      Sadako would keep people company there

  • @icepriestess
    @icepriestess Рік тому +553

    I don't think I could ever live somewhere like this permanently, but staying for a few months and just working on the house, enjoying the outdoors and maybe doing some writing and craft just quietly alone in that space sounds pretty amazing

    • @kayla7562
      @kayla7562 Рік тому +7

      I’m crochet and punch needling there sounds amazing. So relaxing.

    • @NiSE_Rafter
      @NiSE_Rafter 7 місяців тому +3

      Right? It's a bit much for full time living but it'd be a wonderful little place to escape to.

  • @Aramakie98
    @Aramakie98 8 місяців тому +38

    I did insurance repair work for almost a decade (fire, water, storm damage kind of stuff). You never open the fridges, lol. Just unplug them and leave either leave the doors propped open or wheel them away... All-in-all this property looks really nice for an Akiya. Thank you for showing this to us.

  • @redline1916
    @redline1916 Рік тому +669

    Man.. I always wish I had my own property here in the US. Just finding a house like that for 40k would be a dream in itself.

    • @nathaliebazinga
      @nathaliebazinga Рік тому +25

      Given that you have Tesla as your profile pic, you can get houses for even cheaper in Serbia

    • @redline1916
      @redline1916 Рік тому +11

      @@nathaliebazinga that is true

    • @katty3116
      @katty3116 Рік тому +8

      Look in ohio.. parts of Ohio are cheap as hell

    • @nakkiperuna5723
      @nakkiperuna5723 Рік тому +104

      @@katty3116 but the downside is Ohio

    • @cunjoz
      @cunjoz Рік тому +7

      @@katty3116 inb4 average house in Ohio meme

  • @seandobson2682
    @seandobson2682 Рік тому +461

    Loved the idea of buying an abandoned home in Japan but now it seems it might be a little harder than I thought. Great video and great insight!

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +141

      Anything in Japan will be harder and more paperwork than you can possibly imagine lol
      but its usually worth it~

    • @seandobson2682
      @seandobson2682 Рік тому +2

      @@Cha4k well there is some truth to that, it is just a possibility. Also I don't disagree that the process being difficult doesn't have positives, I was just unfamiliar with some aspects of the process.

  • @PepperMyr
    @PepperMyr Рік тому +853

    I find it very surprising that, adding up all the expenses, buying an akiya isn't much cheaper than buying a new house. I'd love to see akiya become more affordable and easier to acquire, since it would help reinvigorate rural communities and provide another incentive for foreigners to move to Japan.

    • @ladyflimflam
      @ladyflimflam Рік тому +317

      Japan isn’t exactly looking to incentivize foreigners to move there. That’s part of their depopulation problem.

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab Рік тому +37

      Well, I'm not sure the takeaway is 'Just as expensive,' ...assuming the structure of that place is good, for instance, most of what it conspicuously needs or wants is stuff I have the skills to do pretty easily, so I'd mostly just be in it for materials. Which can be a thing but you get that regardless of what you're putting it in and that's ...pretty small when it comes to quantities.
      Most of the key issues seem to be is it's a log cabin not really set up for year-round living , so I'd want to be doing certain insulation and moisture control under that easily-accessible floor and the ground underneath, probably add a better-insulated roof and sheathing to preserve the interior woodwork depending how that's put together. And that deck should probably be better-sheltered: I'd probably change the roof to something more opaque and extend it a little further, then do a little landscaping out where the hill's subsided a little too high for the wood and make a nice little rain garden with included better drainage. (Actually probably pretty important for the longevity of the place but it'd probably be pretty fun and simple to do. )

    • @thisdude9363
      @thisdude9363 Рік тому

      @@ladyflimflam Good approach, in my opinion. They don't need to incentivize Westerners and have them all flocking to Japan eager to screw with its culture and fix anything they deem "problematic." Their declining birth and marriage rates would fix themselves if the Government there would get off its fat, old asses and do something about the toxic work culture that is literally killing their country one salary man at a time.

    • @LordJagd
      @LordJagd Рік тому +85

      @@ladyflimflam Much rather have a depopulation problem than an overpopulation one

    • @haner2940
      @haner2940 Рік тому +127

      @@ladyflimflam Japan is completely right with that. Trying to tackle low fertility rates with importing masses of migrants who will change society, culture and tradition forever and make the country lose its identity is never the right way to go.
      Japan has btw still more than 125 million inhabitants, with almost 335 inhabitants per km². For comparison: France has 123 inhabitants per km², Germany 236 per km², China 138 per km² or the USA has 33 inhabitants per km².
      So you see, Japan is incredibly crowded. And even with their population going down in the decades to come, they are expected to still have 103 Million inhabitants by 2050, which would be 238 inhabitants per km². Even with losing 20 million people, they would have a higher population density than a lot of other first world countries.
      The economy and daily life will have to adjust to having fewer people available, but in fact, there is no "depopulation problem". A few million people less in Japan will give the country itself more air to breath. And eventually, the fertility rate will rise again on its own, because that`s how things work.
      The is absolutely no reason for mass immigration.

  • @0bjectr
    @0bjectr Рік тому +72

    As someone who has grown up in rural areas I would absolutely love living is a house like that. Being out in the woods is something special. As a school teacher the school turned coffee shop is a place I plan to visit on my next trip to Japan. I would love to have a place like that.

    • @aaftiyoDkcdicurak
      @aaftiyoDkcdicurak 5 місяців тому

      If you're an American teacher I feel for you.

  • @knowledge4741
    @knowledge4741 Рік тому +13

    Exploring Japan and documenting all of the abandoned places is actually so overwhelming at times, but so beautiful as someone that has been doing this since I was 15.
    I don't even focus on the houses too much because there are just way too much of them. I focus on bigger properties such as Hotels and old Onsens, which I have found hundreds of abandoned hotels across Japan, some so massive you couldn't understand why they were abandoned.

  • @dblock5one4
    @dblock5one4 Рік тому +429

    This is quite huge for a "tiny home". That loft area really is most likely intended to be the bedroom but looks perfect for it! I could see this being really well decorated and making an absolutely beautiful home!

    • @SarcasmicGlory
      @SarcasmicGlory Рік тому +6

      It's bigger than my normal sized home 😆

    • @dreamingflurry2729
      @dreamingflurry2729 Рік тому

      @@SarcasmicGlory It has about the same amount of space as my apartment, but while my place has small rooms, this one has a large open space, which I like (ok: I would want to kitche-stuff separate, so that cooking doesn't "stink up the place", because if you use for example garlic, the smell tends to stick around!

    • @HowManyHintsDoYouNeed
      @HowManyHintsDoYouNeed Рік тому +2

      No air, no heat. You're cold? Go for a jog, your hot? Open the windows and pray for wind.

    • @DoubleMonoLR
      @DoubleMonoLR Рік тому

      @@HowManyHintsDoYouNeed Adding heating & cooing is pretty trivial. Being in the mountains I'd imagine it may not get particularly hot anyway. In many places here in NZ, traditionally people haven't used/needed ac in summer, though it's become more common as heat pumps have become very common - they'd still get used far more for heating though.

  • @Tokyo-Slim
    @Tokyo-Slim Рік тому +183

    Being 98% through the purchase process of buying a home in Japan, I obviously looked into Akiya and did a bunch of research on what it would take/how much it would cost to go that route. Being as it's meant to be a "vacation" home for me for a few years and then a place that I'd spend several months of the year at during my retirement, I was looking at some more urban ones or ones with better access to infrastructure. There are Akiya that have been repossessed (financially abandoned but maybe still inhabited!) or abandoned for various other reasons even in/closer to urban cores - but I quickly found out that it would require many other hoops and processes, like possible eviction of squatters or previous owners, disposal of thousands of pounds of collected trash, retrofitting or renovating the whole structure for code compliance, the cost of tearing down and the depreciation price on new construction, some property is illegal to rebuild upon due to zoning, the fact that as a foreign national not currently living in Japan - you cannot get a bank loan or mortgage, etc. I decided that the relatively straightforward process of just buying regular real estate was more appealing. haha
    I'll be in Japan in 3 weeks to do my first in-person viewing of my new house before I wire transfer the final payment!

    • @Tokyo-Slim
      @Tokyo-Slim Рік тому +39

      I just saw your comment below "Anything in Japan will be harder and more paperwork than you can possibly imagine" and I can confirm. The Japanese bureaucracy LOVES actual, physical piles of paperwork. :)

    • @allisonisis
      @allisonisis Рік тому +2

      @@Tokyo-Slim 😆

  • @TAILLGUNNERR
    @TAILLGUNNERR Рік тому +3

    Easily one of my favorite youtubers. I work graveyard shift And there is plenty of downtime So I get to enjoy your camping videos Including All the other adventures throughout the city as well as these housing tours, definitely a 10/10 for content, stay amazing and keep up the great work 🙌

  • @julienarrijs
    @julienarrijs Рік тому +1

    Thanks Norm! Always super entertaining stuff and real high quality content with tons of cool. Facts on Japan🇯🇵😊

  • @Luboun
    @Luboun Рік тому +263

    Got home after two weeks in Japan last night, already missing it and wishing I could move there permanently. Hopefully these videos can continue to fill the Japan sized hole until I can go back again 😊

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +19

      hope you can get back soon!

    • @Sakutora
      @Sakutora Рік тому +9

      Hey same, except it was yesterday morning. I was there for 3 weeks. I love rural areas, but most of all what impressed me was the metro system in Tokyo. If I had an opportunity to move there I'd take it in a heartbeat.

    • @morlock2086
      @morlock2086 Рік тому +11

      I feel you. Japan for two and a half weeks. I was waiting for the train to take me to the plane at Haneda and eventually home. I just didn't want to go. I had to transfer at LAX and I just wanted to scream.

    • @GamingKatten
      @GamingKatten Рік тому +5

      I was in Japan in November and December last year. I miss it really much! I am thinking of moving there to study for while

    • @saboruchan
      @saboruchan Рік тому +4

      Good luck all of you, but don't complain later😅

  • @mikevsamy
    @mikevsamy Рік тому +88

    Nice! I think the weird house tours are my favourite Tokyo Lens videos.

  • @kerrijames949
    @kerrijames949 4 місяці тому +7

    I lived in Japan for 3 months and saw a whole abandoned village in Niihama, it was magnificent! I wish i could go back and live there again.

    • @hatsufei
      @hatsufei 3 місяці тому +1

      Are the houses in that village for sale?

  • @mrKozmoz
    @mrKozmoz Рік тому +4

    I really dig the layout of that cabin, a lot of open spaces and doesn't feel too claustrophobic outside of the entrance hallway and bathroom/upstairs access hallway, and what a view too

  • @with_me_JAPAN
    @with_me_JAPAN Рік тому +138

    Love how you put Japanese social issues(lords of abandoned akiya), feelings of some nostalgia and your excitement of exploration into one video! Brought me back to my favorite memories of my relative’s old house which doesn’t exist anymore😊☺️✨

  • @sarahramos2919
    @sarahramos2919 Рік тому +33

    The dreamer in me sees all the possibilities. The realist sees my current educational and employment trajectory, as wonderful as it is, as a hindrance.
    I am so grateful for videos like this that keep the creative, dreamer side well fed. (It also reminds me of tramping through the woods of Western Washington as a child.) 😊
    Take care!

  • @dbl0fluff
    @dbl0fluff Рік тому +9

    Loved this akiya tour. The possibilities are mind blowing and the postman passing by was precious. Going to get my passport paperwork ready and focusing on the fall for travel to Japan. Thrilled for the scavenger hunt, what an exciting way to see more of Japan. I live in Oxford, Alabama. Thanks Norm for the amazing adventures. Onward and upward.😊❤

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +1

      Thanks so much for the kind comment eh!
      Love Alabama!

  • @AustinVandorn
    @AustinVandorn Рік тому +1

    Norm, thank you for bringing us content like this. That home, although in need of some tlc, is gorgeous. I wish there was more things like that here in the States (or there might be, but it's not like it is normal public knowledge). I'm somewhere in between being a introvert/extrovert, but, honestly, I would love to be in a place like this just to have an escape from everything. The location and setting is so calming, serene. It can be dubbed the "Cabin of Clarity." Great stuff. Keep up the good work!

  • @luac5829
    @luac5829 Рік тому +10

    tiny cabins in the woods always have a soothing charm to them. And it is very interesting to learn about the process to buy a house in Japan, hope I can use this information in the future

  • @MicheleJean
    @MicheleJean Рік тому +3

    I love your home tours across the county. Thank you for showing us this home, and giving a different perspective of what happens to older homes in Japan.

  • @Crim_Zen
    @Crim_Zen 7 місяців тому +6

    Seems a lot of homes like this started showing up after the dams were built. I recall you talked about it in a previous vid that focused around abandoned villages in the mountains. People had to move to stay connected to supply lines, so they dropped everything and abandoned what little they had in their mountain homes. The school house story is still a pretty cool one.

  • @homeostasis360
    @homeostasis360 Рік тому +4

    Plz make more of these tiny house videos. I really enjoy watching them

  • @Freeo4th
    @Freeo4th Рік тому +10

    Your content is always similar but different and that is just amazing. Most UA-camrs in Japan do either the same as all others or show the wacky side of Japan. I love that you also cover the obscure but fascinating side

  • @justahippiekid
    @justahippiekid Рік тому +5

    I’m a pretty new viewer and I’m already loving waking up to new Tokyo Lens videos! It’s nice to be transported to a place like this tranquil cabin first thing in the morning. 🏡 Thanks for sharing all of your adventures and the insights you discover!

  • @YYZatcboy
    @YYZatcboy Рік тому +8

    One minute in and this is already the nicest abandoned home I've seen on youtube!

  • @TeeBoyd88
    @TeeBoyd88 Рік тому

    You have quickly become one of my Top 5 house tour guides on YT. I can't believe you came down the steep stairs holding your camera. Keep up the great work :)

  • @clintonfernandes1139
    @clintonfernandes1139 Рік тому +2

    It's always something new and unknown with you every time. Love that about this channel

  • @wellnessinsider
    @wellnessinsider Рік тому +1

    Thank you! ❤
    We really appreciate your work 👍

  • @ShadowPuppet3001
    @ShadowPuppet3001 Рік тому +3

    great video, the video was awesome, the bloopers at the end were funny, the log cabin in the video looked amazing 👏, the best part of the video that I liked was the refrigerator, I liked the hide away that was on the second floor 😀, looking forward to more great videos and hope that they will have bloopers in them

  • @ehlersdanlosandi
    @ehlersdanlosandi Рік тому +17

    The cabin appears to have so much potential as a little mountain getaway! I really enjoy these house tour videos, thank you!

  • @lanstar94
    @lanstar94 Рік тому +22

    It would be amazing to renovate and reinvigorate houses like these. They feel like they have so many more stories to tell.

    • @winterprism9227
      @winterprism9227 5 місяців тому

      Yeah, seems like Japan would be an amazing place for those who flip houses.

  • @Hi_I_am_Ed
    @Hi_I_am_Ed Рік тому +3

    Having a tiny cabin somewhere is my dream. Maybe not 100% of the time but to get away on holidays or weekends it'd be amazing.

  • @lostinjapanglish5202
    @lostinjapanglish5202 Рік тому

    Simple life, nature, freedom, life on your terms, amazingly beautiful 😊

  • @SamuelYoung
    @SamuelYoung Рік тому +8

    Can I just say, your production value has gone up so much over the last year! Not sure what you've been working on, but I've been watching your videos with my 2 year old son who can sit through a whole episode, and that's saying something! Thanks Norm!

  • @davidgensemer502
    @davidgensemer502 Рік тому +85

    Man that is like my dream house, I would love to be able to take over a place like that. It would be so fun to work on and improve it over time, and the location is amazing! Please keep showing off awesome places like this, it's amazing!!

  • @JennieRose8
    @JennieRose8 9 місяців тому

    Very cool. Thank you for sharing!

  • @yikes7963
    @yikes7963 Рік тому +6

    As a resident of Oklahoma, I once lived in what was called the littlest house. It literally was the size of a two car garage. The shower was a square stall room for only one and when you were on the toilet, your feet were basically in that stall. 🤣 and I hated it.

  • @acloseuppictureofacat
    @acloseuppictureofacat Рік тому +47

    This couldn't have been posted at a more synchronistic time for me. I've only recently learned about the existence of akiya and have found myself incredibly drawn to it. I appreciate the information you've provided. It's giving me even more to think about than I have already been mulling over. Thank you!

  • @kevinholt2648
    @kevinholt2648 Рік тому +20

    Great insight into the little gotchas with the Akiya. The house was unexpectedly pleasant would make a great little getaway. Seeing the Japanese Postman driving by on his motorcycle just let you know you hadn't stepped off the world completely. Thanks for the video

  • @MarieMaker
    @MarieMaker 28 днів тому

    I love this little “log cobin.” 🤭 I always love the music you choose, too.

  • @milissasilks2174
    @milissasilks2174 8 місяців тому

    I love this place!!!! It's beautiful!

  • @Hacckyy
    @Hacckyy Рік тому +226

    This little cabin seems lovely to live in. Except that it would be quite creepy to live by yourself at night 😂. Anyways, Keep up the good work Norm!

    • @Yogachara
      @Yogachara 11 місяців тому +11

      Personally, I'd love to meet a Japanese ghost 👘

    • @dalexfilms
      @dalexfilms 10 місяців тому +14

      You get used to it very quickly. It's really not a problem unless you're a gregarious extrovert. You could always invite friends to stay with you...

    • @solitarelee6200
      @solitarelee6200 10 місяців тому +18

      Ooooh that's a good point, all those big windows into your house, alone in the woods, in the middle of the night....? Creeper magnet! Probably not a place for a woman to live alone I guess.

    • @LHyoutube
      @LHyoutube 8 місяців тому +3

      @@Yogachara - Presumably that's what the disconnected attic phone is for, it speaks to you via it! 😂

    • @SlurmDude
      @SlurmDude 7 місяців тому +4

      Japanese monsters cant climb stairs. Well, not even japanese people can climb those stairs, but hey, take a win where you get one. Monster proof bedroom. Please remember to clean up the monsters that die falling the stairs in the morning, they rot quicker than you think

  • @waffles3782
    @waffles3782 Рік тому +12

    Stayed up for this one!
    I've been thinking about getting a place like this for years. Hard to reconcile with young kids though.
    Biggest issue all around is just the pain of Japanese bureaucracy. Visas, taxes, just everything feels like a nightmare to get anything done while outside the country.

  • @Kimnyan
    @Kimnyan Рік тому

    Always love seeing the houses you check out!!

  • @lazytommy0
    @lazytommy0 7 місяців тому +4

    I love the floor plan and layout of this place. Super cool log cabin feel too. My only issue is those dreaded death stairs and the way the home is raised and supported.

  • @catwatson2795
    @catwatson2795 Рік тому +4

    What a cute little cabin, I love the layout and random placement of items like the phone? I would definitely live in something like this or build a tiny house on this design. Thanks again for a great video :)

  • @IKyrax
    @IKyrax Рік тому +21

    Love catching your videos so early into the day! Thanks for sharing this lovely little cabin in the woods! ❤
    P.S. that was almost a nasty fall!!! 😅

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +12

      lol WAS a nasty fall actually lol
      still recovering haha

    • @IKyrax
      @IKyrax Рік тому +3

      @@TokyoLens Oof! Sorry to hear that- Hopefully you’re not in pain for too long 🤕
      Stay safe, friend!

  • @MissMunkii
    @MissMunkii 10 днів тому

    That bathroom mirror placement used to be quite common in NZ. My grandparents had their mirror to the side because the window was above the sink. The bathroom layout didn’t (and couldn’t) lend itself to a mirror above the sink.
    Seeing it in this house invoked a weird feeling of nostalgia for me.

  • @martymcpeak4748
    @martymcpeak4748 Рік тому +2

    I could completely live in a house like that and love it, especially with that view of the forest. Subscribed my only regret is not finding your channel sooner. Cheers

  • @wardenprinny5367
    @wardenprinny5367 Рік тому +3

    Such a cool location for a house. Would be neat to see a variety of other abandoned houses in a variety of areas that fall into the free or very cheap category.

  • @leahnardo
    @leahnardo Рік тому +24

    The hidden fees and strings do make it a hard sell even if it’s free. But that log cabin was actually in REALLY good shape! Curious what kind of house you were looking at before you gave it up.

  • @cabellism
    @cabellism Рік тому +2

    Lived in Kentucky my whole life, this place looks better then 60% of most homes ive seen from the road here locally in Somerset, Kentucky. Not to mention the beautiful view you would have.

  • @Kitty-ig4yh
    @Kitty-ig4yh 11 місяців тому +47

    Ugh we need this program in USA! My dream has always been to live in nature with my furbabies. I'd spend my days foraging, gardening, writing books and creating art!

    • @xxlCortez
      @xxlCortez 11 місяців тому +10

      It needs revision, given all the money you'll spend on taxes and renovation.

    • @mostlypeacefulguntraining
      @mostlypeacefulguntraining 8 місяців тому

      lol no. the property has been seized by those with means and youll struggle to rent for life and be happy about it, slave

    • @SlurmDude
      @SlurmDude 7 місяців тому +12

      Spoken like someone who has no idea how much it takes to go innawoods. Foraging? this aint age of empires. gardening maybe, but not as a hobby, serious work. writing books and art? Maybe if youre in range of a super market...... No, youll be spending literally all day every day hunting, splitting wood, and repairing broken things. Without lights or heat.....

    • @dedstar2132
      @dedstar2132 7 місяців тому +1

      You could move to Jarbidge, Nevada. Peaceful place and could use some people

    • @BraveFencer
      @BraveFencer 7 місяців тому +7

      I highly doubt something like this would fly in uncle Sam’s dystopia

  • @TJ-Games
    @TJ-Games Рік тому +3

    This place is amazing! I would totally live somewhere like this, although I know log cabin style houses are a lot of upkeep. That may have been apart of the reason the previous owners decided to let it go. So cool to learn stuff like akiya are even a thing!

  • @aotr_vlog
    @aotr_vlog Рік тому +9

    Akiya are fascinating, I'd love to see more videos exploring them! I'm also a little surprised these aren't scooped up and renovated by the vacation rental/air BnB market

    • @JasperForge
      @JasperForge Рік тому +1

      I'm sure there people doing that

  • @xSwordLilyx
    @xSwordLilyx Рік тому

    the wood is so warm and comforting!

  • @art_of_Miko101
    @art_of_Miko101 Рік тому

    I always wanted a small house to avoid drama and stuff that pressure me constantly. But this video is very informative on what you said on this.

  • @leonardoiula3942
    @leonardoiula3942 Рік тому +2

    The cabin in the woods is half a personal dream and half a horror movie in my imagination. Great video! Do you have any videos of the surrounding forest or mountains? It looks really nice. I wonder if you take photos and post them somewhere. Keep up the great work! Saludos desde Argentina!

  • @laurabustos6560
    @laurabustos6560 Рік тому +16

    Always a pleasant start to the day when Tokyo Lens uploads fresh content!!🙏🖤✌️

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +4

      Glad you enjoy it!
      Thanks so much~

  • @fer_kenji
    @fer_kenji Рік тому +1

    One of the things I like in Japan is this nature side, in contrast to the cities. I can imagine myself and my family living in an akiya.

  • @caiofvr7
    @caiofvr7 Рік тому

    Amazing! Love your videos, Norm!!

  • @meghancallaghan3699
    @meghancallaghan3699 Рік тому +2

    So cool!! I love tiny homes and the idea of this kind of house, but realistically I know I wouldn't like to be that far from a city. It reminds me of the €1 houses in Italy though, definitely comes with a lot of caveats!

  • @MailMe2Japan
    @MailMe2Japan Рік тому +4

    To be able to be retired and just live tucked away in a place that is beautiful.😻😻😻

  • @GeoffreyVonbargen
    @GeoffreyVonbargen 8 місяців тому

    That's a beautiful little house.

  • @dragonsmayhem421
    @dragonsmayhem421 7 днів тому

    It's perfect for one or two people. I kind of love it. It's the home my youngest son has described wanting to live in.

  • @falloutboy9993
    @falloutboy9993 Рік тому +53

    I just bought a home in the US and it wasn’t even a fraction as difficult as what you explained. It seems that depreciating housing worth and over taxing are doing a lot of harm to the housing industry in Japan.

    • @mehoyminoy1326
      @mehoyminoy1326 Рік тому +5

      Probably on purpose to encourage city living to conserve the land. It is an island after all.

    • @falloutboy9993
      @falloutboy9993 Рік тому +15

      @@mehoyminoy1326 Doubtful. They don’t even demolish or clean up the areas in most cases. Most are left to rot and decay, which makes the land mostly unusable until clean up occurs. Abandoned buildings are everywhere in Japan.

    • @mehoyminoy1326
      @mehoyminoy1326 Рік тому +2

      @@falloutboy9993 interesting. That sucks for the citizens.

    • @Crimsontalor
      @Crimsontalor Рік тому +10

      we have an opposite problem with a similar result lots of abandoned properties but because the ever increasing need to have property appreciate in value no one can afford to have a home.
      and that is a major problem. Investors and the ever indulgent need of the economy to always go up without regard to people is disastrous.

  • @BathoryBat
    @BathoryBat Рік тому +3

    Honestly, I think that if I were looking to build a house, I probably would take on something like an Akiya. There are a lot of properties that aren't necessarily abandoned that still need the houses torn down due to insurmountable code issues and whatnot. And if you buy a property that doesn't have a house on it, you might still have a large volume of trees or large rocks to move or alter. I think for me, it might be more of a zoning issue. Like for example, I'd really like to have pet ducks and sheep, and where I live currently, there's a minimum property size to have pet farm animals other than chickens. And if I had sheep, maybe I'd like to process the wool into yarn to dye or to weave with and sell that, so it would really just be a matter of finding a place where all those things are allowed.

  • @aphelion4616
    @aphelion4616 Рік тому

    I would TOTALLY live there!!! I would just fix it up for me and my hubby!! I love the fact it's fairly isolated, but can still have things like internet and what not since it's not totally out in the boonies lol. Great little place and thanks for showing it to us!!

  • @b_ks
    @b_ks Рік тому

    Piece-en-piece log construction makes my favorite type of log cabin.

  • @AlinaTheGoblin
    @AlinaTheGoblin Рік тому +6

    My first thought was...what would Okazaki-san have thought of this place! 😅 Thank you for introducing us to yet another aspect of Japan many wouldn't know about. It's such a treat to virtually go on these adventures with you.

  • @Embarrassed_Mess_
    @Embarrassed_Mess_ Рік тому +29

    OMG, you were right! That house is so cool! I would love to live in a little cabin like that! It’s always been a dream of mine.
    It’s a shame there are so many abandoned homes out there. I can see it being really expensive to renovate something like that, but it won’t stop me from dreaming about it! 😂
    Thank you so much for sharing with us! 😊

    • @TokyoLens
      @TokyoLens  Рік тому +3

      thanks so much for being here for it!

  • @robinwc4672
    @robinwc4672 Рік тому

    Just found your channel and love it!!! Love the educational value of it. Cool!

  • @jazzew
    @jazzew Рік тому

    You show so many interesting places! This is a cute cabin, even though the maintenance and updating would probably be insane pricing. I love the log walls. :D

  • @tanpopo03
    @tanpopo03 Рік тому +3

    I love the setup and the whole feel of the place. But I know how cold even modern apartments get in the winter in Japan. Even with a stove in there I'd probably freeze! I'm not hardened enough to even consider it, ha.

  • @dear.ambelina
    @dear.ambelina 8 місяців тому +4

    I adore this so much. I wish they would do something like this in the United States.

    • @ashy1310
      @ashy1310 7 місяців тому +1

      They never would i government would just take the property before letting the poor get it for free lmao

  • @ashleygoodrich3252
    @ashleygoodrich3252 Місяць тому

    Love the house! And the blooper at the end 😂 thanks!

  • @frauleintrude6347
    @frauleintrude6347 Рік тому

    This little cabin looks really good. A nice holiday or weekend home. New fridge, some scandi-furnitures and you are good to go.

  • @robertsensei4082
    @robertsensei4082 Рік тому +5

    My friend has stairs just like that and I have to say that going down them in socks is one of the scariest things I've done to date

  • @LloydSeven
    @LloydSeven Рік тому +3

    I have been considering buying a Akiya home if I move to Japan but yeah, there are so many hidden cost it can be scary.

  • @briancrowley6413
    @briancrowley6413 Рік тому

    thank you for a reality based presentation... well done

  • @sleepy2906
    @sleepy2906 Рік тому +4

    You know, I actually wouldn’t mind living there! It’s an easy “fixer-upper” if you want to tweak it to your needs, and it’s obviously affordable 😂
    Thanks again Norm for another interesting and relaxing video!

    • @twitzmixx8374
      @twitzmixx8374 Рік тому

      not they are not affordable 💀

    • @sleepy2906
      @sleepy2906 Рік тому

      @@twitzmixx8374 huh

    • @twitzmixx8374
      @twitzmixx8374 Рік тому

      @@sleepy2906 it is said in the video, the expenses after getting the house itself cost a lot. the various taxes.

  • @Hyperlux
    @Hyperlux Рік тому +8

    I would be more concerned about the house's foundation as well as any termite issues. With all the earthquakes in Japan, you have to look into a lot of details before accepting a free house or buying a used one. I really like the house you are showing. I live in Yokohama and want to move out in the country side.

    • @jasonnoregretes491
      @jasonnoregretes491 Рік тому +1

      Not familiar with the termites Japan had, but even with simple subterranean termites will destroy that house in a few years

  • @gdr-oh2uv
    @gdr-oh2uv 9 місяців тому

    that's a beautiful cabin

  • @doncarleone973
    @doncarleone973 Рік тому

    That was very unique, I like it! Great work on the video 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @arat2376
    @arat2376 Рік тому +3

    Property tax is a misnomer and a terrible evil.

  • @CloudsAndCoffins
    @CloudsAndCoffins Рік тому +3

    It's so freaking cute, I would love to fix it up and move in! It's a shame they make these so hard to aquire.

  • @eh1319
    @eh1319 4 дні тому

    As a finn I got excited. Very nice base.
    I would fix that floor base first. I don't know about building laws in Japan but fire place with stone or brick wall would be nice as it stores the heat and keeps place warm. You would need your own patch of forest or buy firewood from somewhere.

  • @NamelesshunterGaming
    @NamelesshunterGaming 11 місяців тому +3

    mind boggling, 26 and no way for me to get a house in my country, and you start telling me there are enough houses empty for half the population of my country.

  • @ohchinchindaisuke1927
    @ohchinchindaisuke1927 Рік тому +5

    5 bucks says there is a haunted grudge kid living in that house.

  • @weatherwitchandfelinefamiliars

    I'm new to the concept of Akiya and stunned at the mountain of issues that sadly go with them. What also was a shock was learning that Japanese houses mostly go down in value, as I'm in the UK, earthquakes aren't something we have to consider and their damage over time to property. I have only knowingly felt one earthquake in my life which was startling even though it was so mild. This akiya shown was gorgeous and wouldn't take much to get it perfect 😊

    • @JBaughb
      @JBaughb Рік тому +2

      I dont think earthquakes can really be a primary explanation. I’m in California and we have earthquakes all the damn time and 80 year old houses over here still go for $800,000+

  • @halinara106
    @halinara106 Рік тому +1

    I don’t usually write comment, but I feel like I want to now. Three things… you are sooo cute, very informative and fun vlogger/UA-camr/tour guider ❤🥰❤️
    Thank you for you doing the things you love and sharing the experiences ✨

  • @Kirkmaximus
    @Kirkmaximus Рік тому +3

    As another tall guy (213 cm), I feel his pain at the end of the video.
    He's 100% right: Japan has a lot of stairs that are death traps for tall people.
    Found that out the hard way when I was stationed in Misawa.

  • @ajnabs
    @ajnabs 9 місяців тому +3

    The brand name of the fridge is Candy. 🤦🏻‍♂️