In between jobs on a weekday some friends and I headed down to the
Edo Tokyo Open
Air Architectural Museum as they were having a special exhibit related to
Studio Ghibli and in particular the
movie
Spirited Away (Sen to
Chihiro no Kamikakushi)
According to the announcement, Mr. Miyazaki came here for much of his
inspiration for Spirited Away. In the main building at the museum they had
a room full of production materials from the movie and they had a few pictures
of Mr. Miyazaki walking around the grounds checking out the buildings. If you've
seen the movie you'll probably see some of his inspiration in these pictures.
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The sento (bath) above is supposedly the inspiration for the giant onsen in
the movie where Chihiro works and the scenes inside the bath as well. The
buildings in these pictures inspired the town where Chihiro's parents turn into
pigs. The old train was clearly inspiration for the train in the movie.
I think the one I found the most interesting was the store full of a zillion
little drawers just like the room Kamaji the 6 armed man was in.

The museum grounds are at least 5 or 6 times as big as they probably look from
these pictures but most of the rest is full of buildings from other eras. In the
map above the pictures on this page are from only the right most road.
The museum is not far from Tokyo, maybe 25-30 minutes on the Chou Line out of Shinjuku.
It is a little hard to find though. Once you get off the train at Musashi
Koganei Station you'll have to ask someone which bus to take. The bus we
took was different than all the other buses that come to that station, smaller
and newer. I think it's a local bus only. You should probably tell
the driver that you are trying to go the Edo Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum
or in Japanese the Edo Tokyo Tatemono Hakubutsukan (tah tey moe noe ha coo boo
tsoo kahn - coo boo and tsoo rhyme with stew). It actually took 15 or 20
minutes from the station. Maybe the buses have changed since the
instructions on the museum's webpage were written. When the driver drops you
off your are on a small one lane road that is separated from a fairly busy 2
lane road by a river or stream. You need to cross the stream and the 2 lane
road and walk in the same direction the bus you just got off of was going for 5
or 10 minutes, down the 2 lane street and eventually you'll see a road on your
right that looks like a park entrance with greenways and trees down both sides
of the road.
The museum is actually inside a much larger public park called Koganei Park. You could easily make a whole day of this if you felt like taking
advantage of the park although if you want to check out all of the museum's
buildings expect it to take you 2 or 3 hours.
If you are a fan of Mr. Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli I highly recommend this
place. It was very cool to see some real stuff and far far more interesting than
the disappointing Ghibli
museum.