Satsuki and Mei's house, Expo park, Nagoya (Photo: 5d mkII + EF 24-105L IS USM – katsuuu 44 / CC BY-ND 2.0)

Satsuki and Mei's Totoro House

A Studio Ghibli fan's pilgrimage site

Satsuki and Mei's house, Expo park, Nagoya (Photo: 5d mkII + EF 24-105L IS USM – katsuuu 44 / CC BY-ND 2.0)
Chris Glenn   - 3分鐘閱讀時間

Want to see your children’s eyes pop? Take them to see "Satsuki and Mei's House," a life sized recreation of the house from internationally acclaimed Japanese director and animator Miyazaki Hayao’s famous 1988 animation movie “Tonari no Totoro” (”My Neighbor Totoro”). 
Set in rural 1950s Japan, the film humorously depicts the wonderfully strange experiences of Satsuki and her four-year-old sister Mei when they encounter the magical creature "Totoro".

The house was a sell-out attraction when it debuted in 2005 as part of the World Exposition, and now remains a popular drawcard to the Expo Memorial Park (Ai Chikyuhaku Kinen Koen), also known as Morikoro Park after the two furry characters that were the mascots of Expo ‘05.

The theme of Expo 2005 was “Natures Wisdom” and it boasted many “green” features, from the lush parklands to high tech green transportation systems and recycling programs. Many of the Expo structures were built from recycled materials. Following Expo, the grounds were temporarily closed while most of the pavilions were removed and recycled, and the grounds reverted to parkland. The few remaining buildings have been transformed into a swimming pool and ice skating rink facilities. The popular Ferris Wheel, the last remaining major symbol of the Expo, still operates and provides a wonderful view of the eastern Nagoya suburbs towards the city, and over the former Expo site. A small Expo-related museum has opened too, and is worth visiting even if just to see what the site looked like mid 2005.

The park is located in Nagakute-cho, about 40 minutes out of Nagoya city. One of the world’s first maglev trains, the Linimo, was used to get the Expo site and surrounding suburbs and has become a major part of the area’s infrastructure. It’s an attraction in its own right, and still the best way to get to the site.

Central to the park, nestled amongst a small, thick forest, is the Totoro house, a replica of the typical Japanese styled home of the Kusakabe family in the Studio Ghibli production. The home is not just a recreated film set, but a glimpse into Japanese home life in the mid to late 50’s. Re-opened to the public on July 15, 2006, visitors are allowed to freely explore the house, furnished to faithfully reproduce the movie, and complete with a book lined study, classic living room, old fire-heated Goemon bathtub, even a well in backyard. Can’t promise you’ll meet the Totoro, but keep your eyes open just in case!

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Chris Glenn

Chris Glenn @chris.glenn

Chris Glenn is an Australian born radio DJ, TV presenter, helicopter pilot, and advertising copywriter. A follower of samurai culture , he is a member of the Japan Armor and Weapons Research and Preservation Society, has black-belt in Kendo, 2nd black-belt in Chanbara sword fighting disciplines, ...