prison that is,
spending
the night in jail is usually not a good thing, unless of course you’re staying
in Japan’s Nara Prison, a historic red-brick structure built in 1908 with
western archways and onion domes that lend an air of castle more than
incarceration,
the prison
shut down last year but is being preserved for its architectural and historic
significance, the renovated structure will reopen in 2020 as a hotel. Nara
Prison was built in 1908 and
was designed by architect Keijiro Yamashita, the grandfather of prison
architecture and the architect behind what are known as The Five Great
Prisons of Meiji (located in Chiba, Kanazawa, Nagasaki, Kagoshima and
Nara), in 1946 it changed names to Nara Juvenile Prison and housed juvenile
criminals but with a strong emphasis on rehabilitation,
moving beyond the façade, the prison is set up with five elongated buildings that radiate out of the center where guards can easily monitor all hallways, from the air it almost resembles an outstretched palm and fingers, contrary to its elegant façade, the interior of Nara Juvenile Prison is cold and utilitarian, small rooms are behind the heavily bolted doors and the hallways have openings throughout their center to assist the guards,
the
main watchtower where guards have views down the hallways of all 5 buildings,
the intimate rooms,
and what would a hotel be without a swimming pool? it will be interesting to see how
much is preserved and how these interiors will be translated into lodging, three
separate hotels are
being planned, one is even being managed by MUJI, with close to 300
rooms, so there is the question, do you want to go to prison?
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