
Nebuta Museum Wa・Rasse
A dramatic red-mesh building on the Aomori waterfront housing year-round exhibitions of the giant illuminated paper-and-wire nebuta floats from one of Japan's most famous summer festivals. Up close, the warrior figures are monumental.
1–2 hours
¥620
9:00–19:00 (May–Aug, last entry 18:30); 9:00–18:00 (Sep–Apr, last entry 17:30). Closed 9–10 Aug (display change) and 31 Dec–1 Jan.
Year-round; August (live festival)
5-min walk from Aomori Station
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Four or five full-size nebuta floats (up to 9m wide, 5m tall) are displayed in a darkened hall — the scale is staggering
- 2
Hands-on workshops let you try the haneto dancer leaps and learn the "Rassera" chant
- 3
The real Nebuta Festival (Aug 2–7) involves thousands of dancers and hundreds of thousands of spectators
- 4
The museum building's glowing red mesh exterior is itself a landmark on the Aomori bay
Local Tips
The actual Nebuta floats from the current year's festival are displayed here at full scale — the backlit paper sculptures of warrior figures (some 5m tall) are extraordinary up close. The museum explains the construction process, which takes a full year. The Nebuta Festival itself (August 2–7) is one of Japan's most spectacular summer festivals — accommodation must be booked a year ahead.
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