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A Western architecture enclave

LOS ANGELES TIMES

Meiji Mura in Inuyama preserves historic buildings from Japan’s history including the main lobby of the Imperial Hotel designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.

INUYAMA, Japan >> This nation may have more theme parks per capita than any other country. Besides Disneyland, Legoland and Universal Studios, there are smaller parks featuring a miniature Spain, a miniature Holland and celebrations of Pokemon and Thomas the Tank Engine.

Then there’s Meiji-mura in central Japan, northeast of Nagoya. The open-air museum pays homage to Western-inspired architecture that appeared in Japan as it opened its borders to foreign trade after 200 years of isolation.

The 250-acre site, open since 1965, is home to more than 60 structures from the Meiji era (1868-1912), including schools, police stations, bus terminals, administrative buildings, churches, private residences and even a regional prison.

These aren’t reproductions or replicas like those found in Japanese parks devoted to samurai and ninjas. They are actual buildings, each procured, dismantled, moved and painstakingly rebuilt on site.

The prize of the park, for some visitors, is the original lobby and first floor of architect Frank Lloyd Wright’s Imperial Hotel, opened in June 1923. It’s one of the few major structures to have withstood the 7.9-magnitude Great Kanto quake three months later and the World War II firebombing of Tokyo.

Wright’s masterwork was demolished in 1968, and the park’s owners shipped the remnants of the lobby and reflecting pool to their then-new theme park.

I spent five happy hours last summer traipsing around the park’s wide boulevards and narrow hillside trails, wondering at the Japanese workers’ houses relocated from Hawaii and Brazil.

Also lovingly recreated are a lighthouse, several bridges and homes once occupied by writers Lafcadio Hearn (“Kwaidan”) and Natsume Soseki (“I Am a Cat”). There are also factories that once produced beer and sake.

My favorites were the bathhouse, the butcher’s shop and the barber shop — all with period-correct vintage equipment and implements — and the Foreigner’s House, its interior accurate down to the last 1887 detail.

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