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Otaru Canal at dusk

Otaru (小樽) is a port city in Hokkaido, Japan. The city is near Sapporo and it is a tourist destination for its food, its historical buildings and its shops.

Understand

Approximately 30 km to the west of Sapporo, Otaru is a port city with a canal and well-preserved architectures of early modern Japan in the Meiji era. Most of the attractions are found in the city center surrounding the Otaru port.

Otaru's original name in the local Ainu language was "Otarunai" or "Ota-or-nai", meaning "river flowing through sand". The area's recorded history goes back to the 16th century, when an explorer from the Honshu island reported settlement. Otaru's early modern history as a port city started in 1871, when Japan's Meiji government opened a colonization office in Sapporo. Rapid development followed with expanding trades, especially after a railway was built in 1880 between Otaru and Sapporo, as the first railway in Hokkaido. Once busy with exporting coal and trades with Russia, today's Otaru has a thriving tourism industry.

Winter in Otaru is less severe than in most other cities in Hokkaido; the yearly average temperature is 8.6 degrees Celsius.

Get in

By train

Otaru is a major station on the JR Hakodate Line from Sapporo, with very frequent train runs. At a cost of ¥620, there are at least five trains per hour; the fastest service, the Airport Rapid, reaches Otaru in 30 minutes. The complete journey on the Airport Rapid from New Chitose Airport to Otaru takes 70 minutes.

By car

Otaru is 25 minutes away from Sapporo by car.

By ferry

Otaru is one of Hokkaido's key ferry ports, and the closest to Sapporo. Shin-Nihonkai Ferry(+81 6-6348-1120) operates a daily service between Otaru and Niigata (18 hours, ¥6,200+) and between Otaru and Maizuru near Kyoto (20 hours, ¥9,600+). Both services are overnight, and private cabins are available for a higher fare (the base fare buys sleeping space on the floor).

Get around

Outdoor Noh stage

On foot

Many of its historical buildings, restaurants and shops are within easy walking distance so walking is a very easy (and cheap) means of getting around. A suggested walking itinerary begins from the Otaru Music Box Museum at one end of Sakaimachihondori Street, follow the street until it crosses a small canal, walk up the street until the Museum of the Money, and then follow the canal down and then keep following the canal when it turns left and widens up.

See

  • 1 Otaru Canal (小樽運河), 色内1丁目, +81 134 32-4111. The canal was completed in 1923. The canal has been developed as a walkway. It is lit at night by gas lamps and walkway lights. Located 10 minutes walk from Otaru Station. Free.
  • 2 Otaru Music Box Museum (小樽オルゴール堂), 1-2-3 Irifune, +81 134 22-1108, fax: +81 134 21-2531, . 9AM-7PM. A museum that contains exhibits about the development of music boxes, a collection of several notable music boxes, as well as an extensive store that carries many different types. For a fee, customers can build their own music boxes. The museum is also part of a larger complex of buildings in the surrounding area, which include a stuffed animal collection as well as an antiques museum. Free.
  • 3 Steam Clock (蒸気時計 jōgi tokei) (at the "meruhen" intersection (メルヘン交差点, meruhen kōsaten)). Outside of the music box museum, the steam clock was a gift from Vancouver to Otaru. Powered entirely by steam, the clock plays a chime every 15 minutes, and features the main steam whistle on the hour.

Do

A scene of Otaru's famous Snow Light Path Festival (Yuki Akari no Michi) at the Otaru canal
  • Create your own music box at the Music Box museum.
  • 1 Otaru Snow Light Festival (小樽雪あかりの路 Otaru Yuki Akari no Michi). held annually in February. Called "Yuki Akari no Michi", this Winter festival features paths illuminated with lanterns made of ice. The most scenic view is from the Otaru canal. You can also view many ice lanterns clustered along the abandoned railway a few blocks away from the canal. The festival runs in the first-second week of February.

Buy

Music boxes. You'll find these in Hakodate and Sapporo as well, but shops dedicated to music boxes are especially prevalent here. The two museums selling music boxes are well worth a look, particularly for the hand-cranked variety which emit tunes using a piece of cardboard with holes punched in it.

Antiques. If you walk from central station straight towards the canal district, you'll see a karaoke centre called Thriller Karaoke with a bat gargoyle above the sign. Turn right until you see an eatery called Kongetsudo on the left hand side. Across the road are two antique dealers, one male and one female, on the second storey of a small building that sell mainly kimono. This place is worth a visit as you can pick authentic kimonos quite cheap here. Just remember that you may have to haggle up to 50% off the price of a kimono with the male dealer if you are a foreigner.

Glassware. Otaru is famous among Japanese for its glassware. You can buy all types of articles made of glass, from useful cups, bottles and plates, to tiny decorative fishes.

  • 1 Kitaichi Glass (北一硝子 Kitaichi Garasu), 堺町7−26, +81 134 33-1993. 9AM-6PM. Otaru hand-made crystal is one of the most famous in Japan.

Eat

Otaru is the best town in Hokkaido for sushi, and it ranks high on the national scale too. Sushi restaurants near Kitaichi are expensive, but if you walk to the canal you can find cheaper but good sushi.

  • 1 Kitaichi Hall (Next to the Kitaichi glass shop). Located in an old warehouse, this restaurant resembles a grand hall fully decorated in wood and offers local meals (but no sushi) at a reasonable price.
  • 2 Kaiten sushi. This kaiten sushi place is very popular but worth the long queues.

Stay safe

Like most of Hokkaido, the footpaths of Otaru tend to accumulate a lot of ice in the winter. Try to wear shoes with corrugated soles that will grip the ice. Alternatively you can buy metal-studded wraparound bands to put on your shoes from roadside shops for about ¥1700.

Drink

  • Otaru Beer (小樽ビール), 港町5−4 (By the Otaru Canal), +81 134 21-2323. Decorated with medieval props, this beer hall sells their own beer.

Sleep

  • 1 Otarunai Backpackers' Hostel MorinoKi (おたるないバックパッカーズホステル 杜の樹), Aioi 4-15 (10 min on foot from JR Minami-Otaru Station), +81 134 23-2175. Check-in: 3PM, check-out: 10AM. Top notch hostel, with a laid back owner and interesting decoration but you're gonna have to be OK with dogs to stay here. ¥2800.
  • 2 Hotel Dormy Inn Premium Otaru, 稲穂3丁目9-1 (Right across the road from Otaru Station.), +81 134 21-5489, . Check-out: 11AM. You get a free bowl of ramen at night in the downstairs buffet room from the guy with the glasses, who is an all-round customer service legend. There is a LAN cable sort of hidden next to the phone in the rooms that you can use to get free internet. Lovely, clean and extremely well-serviced rooms. ¥6000 for a twin.
  • Otaru Emina Backpackers, 緑2丁目15−17 (bus stop in front of Otaru Station, platform 3, bus #9, get off at Shinsenbashi ( about 10 minutes) or a 20 minute walk from the station), +81 134-61-1279. Check-in: 14:00-20:00, check-out: 11:00. A cozy hostel that opened April 2011, run by a great couple who can speak English. Very friendly, laid-back atmosphere. Separate male and female room, but it's not strict. 18900¥ for a week. 3000¥/day.
  • Grand Park Otaru, 11-3 Chikko, Otaru, Hokkaido, 047 0008, Otaru, +81-134-21-3111, . Check-in: 3 pm, check-out: 12 pm. 296 rooms. Starting from USD 47.

Go next

Routes through Otaru
Hakodate Yoichi  S  E  Sapporo Asahikawa
END  W  E  Sapporo N S


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