Kiyotaki
nature
清滝地区
The leafy district of Kiyotaki sits on a steep hillside with a splendid view of the Kanmon Strait below.
Hillside district in Moji with views down to the Kanmon Strait, its name meaning pure waterfalls, a reference to the springs where sailors once filled water casks before departing. Around the turn of the twentieth century it was Moji's entertainment center, a neighborhood of geisha houses and high-class restaurants with a notably racy reputation. The celebrated prewar restaurant Sankiro still operates here, though on a quieter scale. As Moji's commercial importance declined, the geisha left and the pleasure quarter quieted into a residential area. Today small galleries, cafes, and boutiques line its stone-walled lanes. Kiyotaki Park, designed in 1916 by Japan's first forestry professor Honda Seiroku, sits further up the hillside.
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