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Let’s Enjoy Nasu with Kaori!

30. Blueprints are the scenario

設計図はシナリオ
Jotoshiki is a customary ceremony, and recently it is often skipped along with the ground-breaking ceremony. However, Jotoshiki is very effective as an opportunity to confirm the work and communicate with the carpenters, so it is worth considering. For that reason, even if people do not hold a ground-breaking ceremony, they may still hold only the raising ceremony. Kaori wanted to meet the people who would build her vacation house and greet them properly, so it was natural for her to hold Jotoshiki. The first-class architect Mr. Tsuburaya, who Kaori asked to design the house, was also enthusiastic and gathered all the craftsmen involved in the construction. In this way, a Jotoshiki was held as a meet-and-greet with a total of eleven craftsmen.
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▼ What is Jotoshiki?

Jotoshiki is held on an auspicious day when the framework of a building has been completed. A decoration called a heigushi is displayed, and prayers are offered for safety during construction. A Shinto priest is not invited; instead, the master carpenter (the head of the building company) serves as the officiant. In Kaori’s case, the ceremony was carried out in a simplified form led mainly by the master carpenter and Mr. Tsuburaya. After the safety prayer, sake, salt, and rice were scattered at the pillars on the four corners of the building to purify it, and the ceremony ended in about ten minutes. After that, everyone drove to Nasu Club, which Kaori had borrowed as the venue, chatted with the craftsmen for a while, ate catered bento lunches together, and then dispersed.

Now then. The ceremony was actually scheduled to start at 11:00 in the morning, but an incident happened: Kaori overslept. When she woke up, it was 9:30 a.m. She had planned to take the 8:00 Shinkansen, so there was no way she could make it on time.
“Oh no… this is terrible. What time can I even arrive in Nasu Kogen?”
She jumped up in a panic, turned on her PC while brushing her teeth, and thought as hard as she could while her head spun.
“Which Shinkansen can I take at the earliest?”
“If it’s after noon, can I make it to Nasu Kogen?”
“I have to contact Mr. Tsuburaya, call the bento shop, and call Nasu Club!”
Once things had come to this, she had to calmly adjust every schedule and rebuild the plan—quickly.
She thought it might be hopeless, but after finishing all the arrangements, she rushed out of the house. In the end, she somehow made it in time for the craftsmen’s lunchtime, and in a friendly, lively atmosphere she was able to finish the raising ceremony safely.

Looking back, the date was “Sakimake,” and she felt it might have been better to avoid holding the ceremony in the morning, so Kaori convinced herself that the ceremony shifting into the afternoon was actually the perfect result (to all the craftsmen—sorry for making you wait).

She will also admit this: she had completely forgotten to arrange the lunch bento until the day before, and when she hurriedly searched, she happened to find a truly wonderful place. Kaori ordered catered bento from the “Nasu Shopping Center” (sadly now closed). They could prepare and deliver bento in a range of budgets. Kaori ordered a bento priced at 2,000 yen, and it included tender Nasu beef steak, shrimp, even melon—very luxurious and plentiful. Kaori ended up leaving about half. The craftsmen also said there were “so many side dishes,” so it did not seem that anyone was lacking, and she was relieved that they appeared satisfied.

The venue she borrowed, “Nasu Club” (Takakuhei, Nasu-machi 1224 / TEL: 0287-76-1242), was a great help because the fee was an inexpensive 500 yen per person. There happened to be a pressed-flower exhibition, and the walls were decorated with many beautiful works, giving an elegant atmosphere that she loved. The owner’s wife kindly took care of them, even preparing simmered potatoes and peeled persimmons, which made Kaori feel humbled. On top of that, she even accepted the trash from the catered bento with the warm words, “It’s local, so it’s fine,” and Kaori felt deeply grateful.

Even though Kaori arrived late and most of the building had already been assembled, the goal of communicating with the craftsmen—while being helped by many people—was properly achieved, and she felt, “Good, good.”

For reference, the celebration gifts Kaori prepared were: five beer vouchers as a small token; 10,000 yen each for the master carpenter and the designer; 5,000 yen each for the craftsmen; and small packets of Godiva chocolate as sweets. She also rented a room at Nasu Club as the venue, and everyone ate the catered bento together (a 2,000 yen bento plus warm miso soup and warm bottled tea).

After completing Jotoshiki, Kaori felt it was truly good that she could meet the craftsmen face to face. Buildings are made by people. When craftsmen see the client’s face and think, “We are building this person’s vacation house,” their approach to the work naturally changes. With person-to-person communication, the final quality at completion can be completely different. That, she believes, is what proper home building should be—what do you think?

▼ Photos
上棟式1
The ceremony was conducted in a simplified form, led mainly by the master carpenter and Mr. Tsuburaya.
上棟式2
Sake, salt, and rice are scattered at the four corner pillars to purify the building.
上棟式3
They reserved Nasu Club for lunch and gave small packets of Godiva chocolate as sweets.
上棟式5
The catered bento lunch that was arranged separately.
上棟式6
Mmm… delicious!
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