
Otaru Canal District
A preserved 19th-century canal lined with stone warehouses once used by herring merchants — now converted into glass studios, sake breweries, music boxes and acclaimed sushi restaurants serving just-landed Hokkaido seafood.
2–4 hours
Free
Canal: always accessible; warehouse galleries and restaurants: 10:00–22:00 (varies)
Year-round (snow lantern festival: Feb)
12-min walk from Otaru Station
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Gas lamps along the canal are lit each evening, reflecting in the water for the most romantic scene in Hokkaido
- 2
Otaru has more sushi restaurants per capita than any other city in Japan
- 3
The glassware craft tradition dates to Meiji era fishing lamp production — studios offer blowing workshops
- 4
Nikka Whisky's Yoichi Distillery is 30 minutes away by train
Local Tips
The historic canal district is most atmospheric at dusk when 630 gas lamps light up along the stone-paved banks. The warehouses converted into glass-blowing studios (Kitaichi Glass) and music box shops (Otaru Orgel-do) are Otaru's signature activities. The morning fresh herring and salmon from Otaru fish market is outstanding. Combine with the Nikka Yoichi Whisky Distillery (30 min by JR train).
Add to your AI itinerary
Let AI build a multi-day trip around this spot.
Advertisement
More in Hokkaido

Abashiri Drift Ice & Aurora Icebreaker Cruise
Each winter the Sea of Okhotsk freezes in Siberia and vast sheets of drift ice — up to 1 metre thick — flow south to Abashiri, turning the sea into a grinding white plain. The Aurora icebreaker smashes through these floes on 1-hour cruises, and on calm days visitors can step onto the ice itself. This is the southernmost naturally occurring drift ice on the planet.

Asahiyama Zoo
Japan's most innovative zoo, which rescued itself from near-closure in the 1990s by pioneering "behaviour exhibits" — glass tunnels through penguin tanks, polar bear pools with underwater viewing, and orangutan sky-walks overhead. The winter penguin parade, when keepers walk the birds through snow for exercise, has become one of Hokkaido's most beloved daily spectacles.

Biei Patchwork Road
Rolling farmland hills west of Biei town that resemble a giant patchwork quilt — wheat, potatoes, lavender and sunflower fields stitched together across gentle knolls. Best explored by rental bicycle in summer.