This is my third time in Sapporo, but I've never seen this city in all its winter glory before. A combination of uptight office buildings from the 80s, shabby wooden huts and modest apartment blocks that looked slightly faded in summer is now completely refreshed by a thin layer of snow.
🎙 New content for Russian speakers! Happy to announce that my friends from Steklo.Beton podcast have published an episode featuring me. It lasts an entire hour and there will be a second part coming soon… Our original call continued for more than 3 hours — these guys made an enormous effort to cut and edit my endless ramble. Despite me going off-topic every 5 minutes to explain some big-picture cultural phenomena, the podcast focuses on Japanese architecture and why it often gets misunderstood by Western observers.
Вы можете послушать первую часть подкаста с моими мега-развернутыми рассказами о японской архитектуре по ссылкам:
▪️ Apple Podcasts
▪️ Google Podcasts
▪️ Яндекс Музыка
▪️ Podster
Заранее предупреждаю, я никогда не изучала архитектуру по-русски и уже седьмой год живу вдали от родины, поэтому говорю странновато, долго подбираю некоторые слова и использую англицизмы. Но я стараюсь не бояться делать ошибки, чтобы не застопорить прогресс, и надеюсь, что вы меня поддержите ♥️
Вы можете послушать первую часть подкаста с моими мега-развернутыми рассказами о японской архитектуре по ссылкам:
▪️ Apple Podcasts
▪️ Google Podcasts
▪️ Яндекс Музыка
▪️ Podster
Заранее предупреждаю, я никогда не изучала архитектуру по-русски и уже седьмой год живу вдали от родины, поэтому говорю странновато, долго подбираю некоторые слова и использую англицизмы. Но я стараюсь не бояться делать ошибки, чтобы не застопорить прогресс, и надеюсь, что вы меня поддержите ♥️
Messy but classy — this is how I would describe Sapporo in three words. In my opinion it has the highest concentration of retro aesthetics in the air among all major Japanese cities. Modest Toyota Crown Comfort taxi cars that are slowly disappearing from Tokyo and Kyoto are in abundance here and take you back to the 90s at every traffic light. Same thing with the trams that run in a ring through the city center: they are an extremely rare sight for Japan and add to the grand nostalgia.
It's surprising how quiet it is outside when it's snowing heavily. There are hardly any people on the sidewalks and almost no private cars even in the normally busy commercial district. Taxis took over all the transportation tasks of the city, but I decided that no blizzard can stop me from walking to my new hotel and taking a good look at Susukino area. Right beside posh love hotels and boring apartment towers I found these charming old buildings.