TY - JOUR T1 - A Landscape of “Undesigned Design” in Rural Japan JF - Landscape Journal SP - 1 LP - 15 DO - 10.3368/lj.33.1.1 VL - 33 IS - 1 AU - Chris McMorran Y1 - 2014/08/18 UR - http://lj.uwpress.org/content/33/1/1.abstract N2 - Rural landscapes have long stimulated nostalgia for a simpler time and place. In contemporary Japan, real economic and social problems in the countryside have brought new attention to the role of rural communities in the formation of Japanese identity. In this paper I introduce Kurokawa, a hot springs resort that has spent the past three decades emulating the rural idyll through what it calls fūkeizukuri, or “landscape design,” en route to becoming one of Japan’s best known rural tourist destinations. I contextualize Kurokawa’s adoption of a themed landscape in the mid-1980s, and explain the design choices that have gained Kurokawa so much attention, including those found in the built and natural environment. Here, I emphasize the role local actors have played in creating and enacting the landscape. I conclude by showing how the village’s adoption of a nostalgic rural theme has strengthened its status as not only an exemplar of the idealized aesthetics and social relations of the past, but also a rare rural community successfully adapting to the present. ER -