I never been these places even though I'm Taiwanese, thanks for sharing!
@lagaffe912 күн бұрын
Wake up babe, good old house japan just posted a new video !
@danlin83102 күн бұрын
There was a Japanese Shrine in Singapore too, Syonan Jinja (昭南神社, Shōnan Jinja, lit. "Shōnan Shrine") was a Shinto shrine at MacRitchie Reservoir, Singapore. Built by the Japanese Imperial Army during the Japanese occupation of Singapore in World War II, the shrine was destroyed directly before British forces re-occupied Singapore
@mariondavia81782 күн бұрын
I used to go into Taiwan many many times when I was in the Navy and Taiwan is a beautiful place so be careful you and your family have fun and enjoy and see you in Japan😊😅😂
@mariondavia81782 күн бұрын
I am so glad to hear from you or see a new video of yours and we've been I'm pretty sure everybody else has been waiting for more this is does not matter where you at what you're doing just stay in contact with us and show us videos I am so waiting patiently for when I get to Japan to meet with you so you can help me find a house
@lagaffe912 күн бұрын
Agree
@whistlebirdproductions62493 күн бұрын
thank you for sharing!
@JadeByre4 күн бұрын
did you just go there and just wearing shirt? isn't cold there?
@mindcache56504 күн бұрын
$90,000 to fix and design. You’d be bored after 3 months. $100,000 buy a brand new beach condo in SE Asia.
@ThorParker4 күн бұрын
Even the rain in japan seems so polite
@AhmedKakhdar4 күн бұрын
Is very nice house I want I'm from iraq I want to movies for Japan
@whistlebirdproductions62494 күн бұрын
Very nice comfortable home brother!
@alycechew96654 күн бұрын
Extremely useful information. Thank you so very much. You made it so easy to understand and well put together. Big thank you again
@andersnielsen97314 күн бұрын
Cheap houses in the Japanese countryside is it THRU ? or hot air like most thing on youtube.
@xr2nightmare5 күн бұрын
Thanks for showing off this area!! I killed a man here back in the 70s and fled to Russia, really wonderful area in Japan that not many have payed attention to.
@josephlai97595 күн бұрын
Hi, may I ask how taxes are paid? Is there a gyro system that we can set up with the bank for deduction to the authorities? Or do people physically pay up at the municipality office or a post office payment service? Or could you send a cheque through mail? How would a foreigner without the benefit of a bank account in Japan pay taxes for the house he bought?
@marshallkohlhaas805 күн бұрын
Brothel hahahahahahaha
@astrotheshiba875 күн бұрын
it looks luxurious
@JohnLee-sm8op5 күн бұрын
Why are Japanese still wearing masks?
@bouchecaldwell3305 күн бұрын
Tell the Spirits inside I said Konnichiwa😊.
@leewmlee5 күн бұрын
What's with the doll pls? Is it some kind of an evil thing to stay away from?
@CarpeLink6 күн бұрын
Remember land only goes up. Could be a good investment for later in life.
@Chris.Davies6 күн бұрын
How is it supposed to be kept warm with no insulation in the ceiling or roof? That's plain crazy!
@dkmljfujii53716 күн бұрын
Hmmm. There is a reason why Japanese people move away or leave these houses empty. I suggest living out in the area for at least 6 months before buying ANYTHING. It may be inexpensive but once you buy it, you will find it is difficult to sell. Access to medical care, supermarkets, gasoline stations, etc. etc. are all things that people may take for granted but in the out regions of Japan it is not very convenient thus the migration away from these locations. Living in one of these homes in the Japanese rainy season summer or dead winter, there is NO insulation and your AC has to work overtime. It is frigging hot and humid or cold enough to see your breath in the winter. We have been in the process of selling multiple inherited properties over the past 18 years in much much nicer areas and homes and it was a struggle. SORRY! Not trying to kill everyone's enthusiasm but I know from experience how much it costs to renovate places to make them livable to sell off and it was the same or more than the property was worth!! This is why people choose to allow it to become akiya insttead since they don't want to invest the time or moeny for zero profit or loss. GOOD LUCK out there but figure out all costs of buying, fixing up and what type of lifestyle you will have!!
@Automedon26 күн бұрын
Just as is in the US, you can find very cheap houses in dying towns but once you put a lot of money into them and if you decide to leave, you would never be able to recoup your investment. There is a reason why young people leave small towns. For me, I'm retired and would stay anyplace for life, but if you're a young person, and even if you can currently work remotely, there is never a guarantee that your job will last. I had a friend who worked remotely for IBM for 15 years and was suddenly laid off. So, there are a lot of reasons why buying a house in Japan, for a foreigner, is not practical. My nephew lived in Japan for many years in the military and is planning to move back in a few years, but he can always work for the US government there. He told me yesterday that of the 137 countries he's been in, Japan was the only place that felt like home. He is fluent in Japanese (as are his wife and kids) and had many friends in the custom car world there. He says America is unrecognizable from when he left and doesn't feel comfortable here anymore.
@Magnus-qr7lj6 күн бұрын
Well I would have gone for the $4000! Location! Million dollars!
@ZeIsAnEnemy6 күн бұрын
During the room tour no one left healthy. Each got cold or raining nose at least. It’s interesting to see as a process or as architecture/renovation result. I don’t see myself leaving in such conditions. Honestly for western people see windy holes pretty much everywhere else is like nonsense same as walls from a paper instead of modern insulation and energy, heating effective materials. Beautiful but no thanks to change habits for living in Japanese “normality” of “normal” old house thermal conditions.
@rustyshackleford55096 күн бұрын
I'm always blown away by the politeness and consideration the Japanese have for each other. The spotless streets, not a spec of trash anywhere in sight. I'm embarrassed by our loud, trash everywhere, culture here in America. Part of me also imagines going to Japan, getting drunk and loud, and throwing my trash everywhere.
@Automedon26 күн бұрын
I don't know where you live in the US, but my town is spotless and people are polite. If you're imagining yourself getting drunk and throwing things around, perhaps you are part of the problem.
@rustyshackleford55095 күн бұрын
@@Automedon2 don't crucify me, I live in Houston Tx. I imagine lots of things that I can't do, don't you?
@uplbdevcom6 күн бұрын
Magnifico !!! 🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷
@fgregerfeaxcwfeffece6 күн бұрын
All houses sub 10k I looked at had partial roofs at best. And that's not an exaggeration. Literally all of them had partially collapsed roofs.
@KaranSingh-jl4kx7 күн бұрын
Saw the intro to your "I decided tonbuy an Akiya house in rural Japan... Noto" and immediately jumped to your channel panicked lol. Relieved your OK. Great videos bro
@usmanbradley8 күн бұрын
WARNING: Smoking kills and causes cancer
@nayumicraig524812 күн бұрын
I wonder if it would be worth "jacking up" the building that is close to the ground. I wonder if there are tradesmen who have the skills to do that there. Jacking up a home "one level" to make a house larger and even moving houses around town, or even barging them to locations far away is a common practice on the coast of BC Canada. I was also left to wonder. One house you mentioned was not connected to the Sewer. I take this to mean its on a private septic system? Lorne.
@FoxyfloofJumps15 күн бұрын
It feels like a good space. Lots of potential.
@ronisworld291615 күн бұрын
i love this! downside is i dont see any parking space of your own.
@kamanama367115 күн бұрын
How does it still have electricity?
@user-wy7nu7kc3j17 күн бұрын
I am 80 years old and have visited Japan four times for extended periods. I love your culture, history and life style. I would have loved to have purchased a Kyomachia and lived in it. Loved seeing your home.
@lawoei18 күн бұрын
Where the Jan 2024 quake hit?
@liquidsnake687918 күн бұрын
It's almost a crime to remodel a building like this, you really have to just restore it to how it was at best, it's like a historic monument in of itself, sadly i could never do it, looks like something that requires years of training to even begin to think about pursuing
@user-fj1be6qc2t18 күн бұрын
посмотрел весь ролик, не зная ни японского, ни английского
@eriklebeau361319 күн бұрын
Why do you put this mask on since you’re alone talking to the camera ?
@cromandum21720 күн бұрын
damn dat dude be gettin hella lit up in da club
@debbiecurtis402121 күн бұрын
Stunning. That house would cost 1 million GBP in the UK
@debbiecurtis402121 күн бұрын
Can these houses be made into bed and breakfast accommodation?
@debbiecurtis402121 күн бұрын
Esperanto is a manufactured language based on English, German and Romance languages. It was designed to unite the world with a lingua franca to prevent war.
@IkePaz21 күн бұрын
bough my second home in Fukuoka, i didn't take into account the nuclear power plants we have here. hmmmmmmmmmmmmm
@lasvegas375723 күн бұрын
I'm interested of the house
@titiwa576828 күн бұрын
Good video! Curious to know the cost of the property. Huge renovation works!
@LeeGeeEd29 күн бұрын
If you don’t live in Japan and ca speak zero Japanese, you can’t buy this Machiya house? All I want is a place for me when I retire. Can you help me?