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  • 丸山 俊明
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2008年 73 巻 623 号 191-196
    発行日: 2008/01/30
    公開日: 2008/10/31
    ジャーナル フリー
    The aim of this paper is to clarify the transition of townhouse' warehouses of the early modern period in Kyoto. After the division of public area, warehouses were built in the backyard of townhouses at the end of 16th century. After that, another type of warehouses appeared in the street frontage, these were full of the expression wealth. However, these were extinguished by the architectural control of Kyoto- shoshidai in the middle of 17thh century. As the result of that, warehouses have been placed in the backyard of townhouses.
  • 1972年から2018年を対象に
    川辺 成美
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2022年 87 巻 802 号 2430-2439
    発行日: 2022/12/01
    公開日: 2022/12/01
    ジャーナル フリー

    Numerous historic spaces with alleys can still be found in central Kyoto and measures to preserve them for future generations have been proposed. However, when considering a preservation policy, it is necessary to understand the history of these alleys since most date from before World War II. The purpose of this study was to acquire foundational data for research on these alleys in addition to describing the modern and historical states of alleys in central Kyoto from 1972 to 2018.

  • -元学区単位の分析と仁和学区・有隣学区におけるケーススタディ-
    森重 幸子, 髙田 光雄
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2016年 81 巻 728 号 2095-2103
    発行日: 2016年
    公開日: 2016/10/30
    ジャーナル フリー
     There are numbers of alleys in the central area of Kyoto City. Alleys in Kyoto are built in its long history of urbanization from medieval times. Along alleys there are a lot of Machiyas remaining. Machiyas and alleys together are seen as elements of historical streetscape. Building activities on sites along narrow alleys are limited in several ways by the building standard law. Those restrictions are set because of the disadvantages of alleys in the viewpoint of urban disaster prevention, but it is also doubted it might be a cause of decrepitude of houses and housing vacancies along alleys.
     City of Kyoto recently announced new alley policy, which added the conservation of historical streetscape along alleys as a new policy objective. Historical streetscape depends a great deal on the existence of Machiyas. This paper analyses the relationship between the distributions of sites along alleys and that of Machiyas in the central area of Kyoto city.
     First, this paper shows the distribution of sites along alleys in the central four wards, Kamigyo-ku, Nakagyo-ku, Shimogyo-ku, and Higashiyama-ku. By ordinary, the number of miles of road is used to show the amount of alleys, but here the number of sites along alleys is chosen in order to compare the distribution of Machiyas. We use the information of the number of sites of which is indicated by the former investigation executed by Kyoto City in 2006. The alleys narrower than 1.8 meter width are eliminated by that investigation, so that we count up the number of sites along those alleys using the information of the location of those and the residential map. As a result of comparing the distribution of sites along alleys and Machiyas, it clarifies sites along alleys and Machiyas are closely overlapping, especially those of blind alleys and Machiyas. Sites along alleys and Machiyas both locate a lot especially in Nishijin area, which is the west part of Kamigyo-ku.
     Next, this paper examines the detailed overlapping location of sites along alleys and Machiyas on two specific areas. One is Ninna district, which is in the west of Nishijin area, and the other is Yurin district, which is in the south-east part of the urban center of Kyoto city, so-called Tanoji area.
     Through the analysis on Ninna district, it is pointed out that the sites along alleys, especially blind alleys, are clustered inside blocks and make up crowded wooden dwellings area. In Ninna district, almost half of the all sites in this area are the sites along alleys. By the examination of the relationship of the sites along alleys and Machiyas, it is clarified that Machiyas do not situate exclusively on the sites along alleys. It means, Machiyas and alleys both situated much in this district, but the both sides are not necessarily lap over. To make an observation on individual alleys in this district, it can be found that several Machiyas locate alongside alleys and make historical streetscape.
     The characteristic of distribution of alleys on Yurin district is that relatively short blind alleys extended into the city blocks are dominant. The percentage of Machiyas on the sites along alleys is considerably higher than the percentage on non-alleyside sites. It can be said that Machiyas located more on the sites along alleys than other sites in this district, contrary to the result of Ninna district.
     The conclusion is about as follows. Sites along alleys and Machiyas are closely overlapping in regard of the distribution of those in the central four wards. The concentration of Machiyas on the sites along alleys is not applicable in Ninna district, to the contrary in Yurin district.
  • 境界装置・街区のかたち・直線か凹凸か
    早見 洋平
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2009年 74 巻 639 号 1221-1229
    発行日: 2009/05/30
    公開日: 2009/11/30
    ジャーナル フリー
    This paper deals with the formation process of neighboring boundary.
    Kyoto had a variety of neighboring boundaries at Edo period. This paper classified the neighboring boundary into three kinds based on fixation. The main current was vague neighboring boundaries, and bending neighboring boundaries without boundary devices, before urbanization of the 17th century. The block changed a vague neighboring boundary to a lucid device, by the process of modenization. The neighboring boundary with the ruggedness in an architectural scale was maintained as it used to be, or was replaced by a straight line neighboring boundary.
  • 遠藤 正治, 松田 清, 益満 まを
    近世京都
    2014年 1 巻 45-145
    発行日: 2014年
    公開日: 2020/12/29
    ジャーナル フリー

    This article will introduce three newly discovered student registers from Yamamoto Dokushoshitsu School. Although in total these registers cover 70 years, from 1807 to 1876, this analysis is based on the Monjin meibo of 926 students over three generations of principals, Fūzan, Bōyō and Yōshitsu, covering the years 1807-1864. The number of new entrants peaks in the years 1839-1855, with an average of 26 students per year. The distribution of students' birthplaces covers all 51 provinces, but generally the Kinki region from the west of the Hokuriku and Tōkai districts is the most prevalent. In terms of social class, Buddhist priests, bōkan, and shodaibu make up the largest single group (19%). Subsequently, in decreasing order of frequency, doctors range from machi'i, son'i, han'i, to ten'i. This composition reflects the character of a Confucian physician's private school in the ancient city of Kyoto. In addition to reproductions of these three lists of 1557 student names (1600 if Endo's supplement is included), biographical notes have been added where known.

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