Top 10 Japanese ghost towns
Posted by staff / April 28, 2010Stereotypical views paint Japan as a tiny island nation crammed from shore to shore with people living one on top of the other. But similar to most regions, there are more gaps on the map than you’d imagine. Creepy abandoned theme parks, destroyed U.S. Air Force bases, remnants of a closed-down factory—you get the idea. In Japanese, these places are known as haikyo (ruins), and Japan has many haikyo. Asylum has compiled the ten best Japanese ghost towns.
See three below:
Keishin Rdiology Hospital
Osarizawa Factory and Mine
Akasaka Love Hotel
Learn more about all ten at Asylum.
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