
Japan's elevated gardens reach new heights
On walls and rooftops, vertical green spaces blend artistry with sustainability
Much of the Azabudai Hills shopping complex in Tokyo is devoted to planted elevated areas. (All photos by Stephen Mansfield)
STEPHEN MANSFIELD
TOKYO -- Perhaps it is a law of spatial gravity that when you cannot go out, you go up. What has long held true for urban architecture is now being applied to gardens, with Japanese landscape designers increasingly eager to requisition rooftops and walls to create gardens at higher elevations.
Sometimes it feels as though contemporary Japanese gardens can be read as message boards pointing to the near future. Substituting for hills and mountains, high-rise buildings are being requisitioned as borrowed scenery, while rooftop garden designers, conscious of weight issues, are resorting to hollowing out natural rocks, or replacing them with fiberglass equivalents.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Asahi Shimbun
19 minutes ago
- Asahi Shimbun
Japan fighter jet crashes, lone pilot ejected and rescued, NHK reports
An Air Self-Defense Force F-2 fighter jet, foreground, parks at Oita Airport during an SDF joint exercise on Nov. 13. (Takayuki Kozaki) A Japanese Air Self-Defense Force F2 fighter jet crashed off the coast of Ibaraki Prefecture in eastern Japan during a training exercise, public broadcaster NHK reported on Thursday. The lone pilot ejected from the aircraft and was not in a life-threatening condition after being rescued, NHK reported.


Japan Today
an hour ago
- Japan Today
Grandkids of 2 men who experienced both A-bombings now work for peace
Ari Beser, left, and Kosuzu Harada, right, pose for photographs after an interview with The Associated Press in front of the Atomic Bomb Dome in Hiroshima on Tuesday. By MARI YAMAGUCHI When the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, Ari Beser's grandfather was on board both of the American B-29 bombers that carried the weapons. On the ground, Kosuzu Harada's grandfather survived both attacks. Neither of the men — U.S. radar specialist Jacob Beser and Japanese engineer Tsutomu Yamaguchi — met during their lives. But both became staunch advocates of nuclear abolishment. Decades later, that shared goal has brought their grandchildren together. Ari Beser and Harada are telling their grandfathers' linked stories and working to seek reconciliation and understanding about an attack that continues to divide people in both countries. During this week's commemoration of the 80th anniversaries of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki attacks, the grandchildren visited a station in Hiroshima where Yamaguchi, badly injured, boarded a train back to his hometown of Nagasaki a day after the Aug. 6, 1945, attack. The two grandchildren then went to the Hiroshima peace park where they spoke with The Associated Press about what their grandfathers experienced during two of the 20th century's most momentous events and their consequences. Yamaguchi was 29 when he was burned severely in the Hiroshima bombing. He was in the city on a temporary assignment as a shipbuilding engineer. After Yamaguchi arrived in Nagasaki, and was telling colleagues about the attack he'd witnessed in Hiroshima, the second bomb exploded. Harada first learned about her grandfather's experience of both bombs when she interviewed him for an assignment in elementary school. Yamaguchi didn't talk about his experience in public until he was 90 because of worries about discrimination. He then became a vocal activist for peace until he died in 2010. In 2013, Harada learned that the grandson of an American who was on the planes that bombed both Hiroshima and Nagasaki wanted to hear about Yamaguchi's story. 'I had mixed feelings as a family member of the survivors,' Harada said, recalling Ari Beser's first visit. Ari Beser quietly listened as Harada's mother talked about Yamaguchi. Harada and her mother were surprised when they learned the senior Beser was exposed to radiation during his missions. 'We used to see ourselves only from the victims' perspective," she said. "We learned that war effects and ruins everyone's lives.' 'I feel it is my role to keep telling about the horror ... so that the same mistake will never be repeated," Harada added. She tours Japan to talk about her grandfather's story and to push for a nuclear-free world. Yamaguchi used to say that he could never forgive the U.S. government for dropping the bombs, but he had no hatred for Americans. Even as his health deteriorated, Yamaguchi still spoke of his past, holding an interview from his hospital bed. Beser, a visual journalist and producer, has since regularly visited Nagasaki, and he and Harada have become friends. Harada believes the U.S. government should formally apologize for the bombings. 'A reconciliation takes time. It's a long process which takes generations,' Harada said. When he was asked about the attacks during his first visit to Hiroshima 40 years ago, Jacob Beser did not apologize, but said: 'I wouldn't say it was our proudest moment.' He said the world needed to make sure it doesn't happen again. Growing up, Ari Beser was told that his grandfather's bone cancer was presumably from his radiation exposure during the bombing missions. In 2011, Ari Beser traveled to Japan for the first time to learn more about the bombings. He has since met many survivors and is eager to hear their stories. 'Before, I think that we all believed in the same justifications. I can't justify it anymore,' Ari Beser said about the bombings. 'For me, all I focus on is trying to convey it to people so that it doesn't happen again." Because his grandfather was on both B-29s, Ari Beser was always interested in meeting a double survivor. That led him to Harada's family 12 years ago. 'It's passing the baton and it's leaving the record. … We are the keepers of memory,' Ari Beser said. He was young when his grandfather died and never got to talk with him about the bombings. 'I also want to interview him or just want to ask him so many questions' and find out if there were other options besides dropping the bomb. Despite language difficulties, the two grandchildren keep communicating and working together on projects, including a book about their grandfathers. As the world increasingly becomes a divisive place, with fighting in the Middle East and Ukraine, Ari Beser believes his work with Harada is more important than ever. 'It makes you nervous, makes you worry because if this history repeats with today's nuclear weapons, it's almost unimaginable how much would be destroyed,' Ari Beser said. Visiting Japan and meeting with Harada, he said, 'makes me little bit more hopeful. ... Everybody needs hope and this is how I get hope." © Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.


The Mainichi
7 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Britain marks 80th A-bomb anniv. with church service, film screening
LONDON (Kyodo) -- Commemoration events were held in British cities on Wednesday to mark the 80th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima, ranging from quiet memorials to film screenings. At Coventry Cathedral in central England, roughly 300 people mourned those killed in the Japanese city on Aug. 6, 1945, and in Nagasaki just three days later. The participants also made origami paper cranes, a symbolic gesture organizers say was meant to "pray the world may be rid of the threat of nuclear war for all time." The major urban cathedral has hosted a memorial service almost every year since 1987 to commemorate the people killed by the atomic bombs in the final stages of World War II, including an estimated 140,000 people who died by the end of the year after being exposed to the Hiroshima bombing. The cathedral burned down following a Nazi air raid and its ruins were partially preserved to serve as a reminder of the war. High school teacher Lisa Hagan, 38, attended the event alongside her students. She said she thought it was important not to forget that all life deserves respect. Letters exchanged between the mayors of Hiroshima and Coventry prior to the service were read aloud during the event. They each expressed their urgent hope for peace and noted the concerning state of global affairs, reaffirming that calling for peace was more important now than ever. In central London, a short film about the Hiroshima bombing, entitled "I Saw The World End," was shown at a public space at Piccadilly. Set to music and minimalist visuals, and displayed onto Europe's largest LED screen, the 10-minute-long work showed the text of survivors' testimonies, alongside quotes from people involved in the Hiroshima bomb's production. The video ends with footage of the bomb's explosion, that gently fades to give way to a clip of a blue sky. London resident Paddy Kelly, 50, said after the screening that the piece was "very moving, very powerful." He added that the film being set in a crowded public space with people coming and going was a "very stark contrast to remember about what happened 80 years ago." The work was originally created in 2020 by Es Devlin and Machiko Weston, two Britain-based artists, after being commissioned by the country's Imperial War Museum. Speaking in a brief interview after the screening, Devlin said she wanted this work to be for the survivors and that she sought to delve into the root causes of conflict. "If we can't recognize that we are all continuous and there is no other, then this will continue to repeat itself -- as it is doing as we speak. "There are more nuclear weapons now than there were five years ago, nothing's improved yet, but as artists, all we can do is keep offering rehearsals of other ways to be."