Walk up the slope from central Kobe for less than 15 minutes and the world turns into Europe in miniature — steep-roofed Meiji-era merchant houses, red brick, copper weathervanes, a cafe inside an old wooden house, and a ropeway to a herb garden above the city. We've put everything you need to know on one page.
Picture a neighbourhood barely a 10-minute uphill walk from a central train station, yet once you arrive the houses around you turn into red-brick mansions with steep roofs, fretwork timber balconies, and copper roosters spinning in the wind. This is Kitano, a hillside district in northern Kobe where, after the city opened as a foreign treaty port in 1868, Western merchants and diplomats built homes in the styles of their own countries all over the slope. The Japanese call these houses "ijinkan" (異人館), literally "houses of foreigners".
Today around 20 of the ijinkan are open as museums where you can see the period furniture and interiors; some are simply lovely to admire from the outside. The real charm of Kitano, though, is in the walk itself — climbing the steep lanes past English, American, German, and Arabian-style houses one after another, stopping at a Starbucks inside a wooden house over a century old, taking the shrine steps for a city view, then riding a ropeway up to a herb garden above town. This page walks you through it point by point, with ticket prices, access, and where to stay in the area.
There are several ijinkan houses, each charging separate admission or sold as multi-house set tickets. If your time is limited, pick the two standout houses below and admire the rest from the outside for free (2026 prices may change, so check the official site before you go).
| House | Style | Known for | Hours | Admission (adult) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weathercock House風見鶏の館 · the rooster house | German | Red brick, copper rooster — the district's icon | 9:00–18:00 | 500 yen |
| Moegi House萌黄の館 · the mint-green house | American | Pale-green house right beside Weathercock | 9:30–18:00 | 400 yen |
| Combined ticket, 2 housesWeathercock + Moegi | Best value | Cheaper bought together (usually 900 → 650) | per house | 650 yen |
| Other ijinkan houses~20 in the district | Various styles | English, French, Arabian, etc. — set tickets at several prices | around 9:00–18:00 | varies by house |
| Exterior viewingacross the Kitano district | Free | Walk the Kitanozaka slope and photograph the houses for nothing | all day | free |
Six stops that make a half-day in Kitano worth it — from the standout ijinkan houses to a cafe in an old house, up the shrine steps for the view, and finishing with the ropeway to the herb garden above the city.
🏛️ The district's icon1
A red-brick, steep-roofed house topped by a copper rooster that turns with the wind — this is the image of Kitano that gets photographed most. Built in 1909 for the German merchant Gottfried Thomas, it still holds the furniture and German-style rooms of the period intact, and it's the only ijinkan in the district built of actual brick.
Kobe Travel Guide →A few steps from Weathercock House stands this mint-green house, built in 1903 as the residence of the American consul Hunter Sharp. Its highlights are the timber hall, the cornered verandas, and the Kobe city view from the upstairs windows. The pale green plays beautifully against the red brick next door, and the two photograph well together.
All Kobe Attractions →The real heart of this district isn't any single house but the walk itself — climbing the steep lanes and meeting foreign-style houses one after another: English, French, Arabian (the Uroko "fish-scale" House), and many more. Turn a corner and you'll catch the Kobe skyline and the sea behind. Wandering and stopping to take photos as you go is simply the best way to see it.
Kobe Travel Guide →This Starbucks sits inside a Western-style wooden house called Kitano Monogatari-kan, built in 1907 and listed as a registered tangible cultural property of Japan. The building was badly damaged in the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake, then restored in 2001 before opening as a Starbucks in 2009. Sipping coffee in a timber room a century old is an experience you won't get at an ordinary branch.
Eat & Drink in Kobe →A small shrine at the top of the district, right behind Weathercock House. Climb a few stone steps and you reach the upper terrace, where a viewpoint looks down over the rooftops of the ijinkan houses and the Kobe skyline stretching all the way to the sea. Dedicated to the deity of learning (Tenjin), it's a place locals often come to pray for exam success.
All Kobe Attractions →
🚡 Ropeway + herb garden6
Finish your Kitano day with the ropeway that climbs from beside Shin-Kobe Station up to a hillside herb garden. The ~10-minute ride opens up a wide view of the Kobe skyline and the sea. At the top, terraced gardens are planted with seasonal herbs and flowers, and there's a cafe, viewpoints, and a walking path back down past Nunobiki Falls — a legendary waterfall that appears in classical Japanese literature.
Kobe Travel Guide →Kitano sits on a slope on the northern side of central Kobe, with two main stations to start from. Pick the one that fits where you're coming from and what you want to do next.
Sannomiya is Kobe's big hub, where the JR, Hankyu, Hanshin, and subway lines all meet. From there it's about a 10–15 minute walk up the Kitanozaka slope to the ijinkan area, passing the Starbucks in the old wooden house on the way. Steep, but not far.
If you're arriving by Shinkansen, just get off at Shin-Kobe and walk down and west into Kitano. The bonus is that this station sits right next to the Nunobiki Herb Gardens ropeway (~5-min walk), so you can ride up to the garden first and then walk down to tour the ijinkan houses.
Don't fancy the climb? Take the City Loop bus (Kobe's tourist loop) and get off near Kitano Ijinkan. It's handy if you're travelling with kids or older family. Within the district itself there are no vehicles — it's all on foot, so bring comfortable shoes.
As a port city, Kobe took to Western bread and pastries from the moment it opened, so Kitano and the neighbouring districts are full of inviting cafes and confectioners. For the serious eating — Kobe beef and the rest — see the full Kobe food guide.
See clearly where the main ijinkan houses, the shrine, and Shin-Kobe Station (the herb-garden ropeway base) sit — it makes planning your route up from Sannomiya much easier.
Kitano itself is an old residential district with few places to stay, so most people base themselves around Sannomiya in the city centre, which is a 10–15 minute uphill walk to Kitano and an easy train ride on to Osaka and Kyoto.
Browse our ranked picks around Sannomiya, or open the Kobe city guide to see every district, the sights, and how to get around, before you book a stay close to Kitano.
An overview of every Kobe district — Kitano, Sannomiya, Chinatown, Harborland, where to stay, and how to get around.
Kobe Guide →All the top sights across Kobe, from the ijinkan houses and Meriken Park to the Arima onsen.
Kobe Attractions →Kobe beef teppanyaki, port-city sweets, bakeries, and cafes — the full Kobe food guide.
Kobe Food →Lay out your Kobe days to cover every district — Kitano, Chinatown, the waterfront — in one day or more.
Kobe Itinerary →10 top picks in central Kobe, within walking distance up to Kitano, with prices and direct booking links.
Sannomiya Hotels →Visa · eSIM · IC cards · JR Pass · yen · power plugs · Japanese etiquette — everything before you fly.
Travel Prep →Start by opening the Kobe city guide for every district, the sights, and how to get around, then line up a hotel near Kitano around Sannomiya before your trip.