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Jinpūkaku

Jinpūkaku
仁風閣
Jinpukaku39 1920.jpg
Jinpūkaku is located in Japan
Jinpūkaku
Location within Japan
General information
Architectural style Neo-Renaissance
Address 2-121 Higashi-machi, Tottori City, Tottori Prefecture, Japan 680-0011
Town or city Tottori
Country Japan
Coordinates 35°30′26″N 134°14′15″E / 35.5071263°N 134.2374716°E / 35.5071263; 134.2374716Coordinates: 35°30′26″N 134°14′15″E / 35.5071263°N 134.2374716°E / 35.5071263; 134.2374716
Construction started 1906
Completed 1907
Renovated 1973
Cost 43335 yen
Client Nakahiro Ikeda
Owner City of Tottori, Tottori Prefecture, Japan
Technical details
Floor count 2
Floor area 1,046 square metres (11,260 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect Katayama Tōkuma
Website
http://www.tbz.or.jp/jinpuukaku/

Jinpūkaku (仁風閣, Jinpūkaku) is a Western-style French Renaissance style residence of the Ikeda clan located in Tottori, Tottori Prefecture, Japan.

Jinpūkaku was commissioned in 1906 by the 14th lord of the Ikeda clan, Nakahiro Ikeda (1877–1948). The residence was designed by the Meiji period architect Katayama Tōkuma (1854–1917), and covers 1,046 square metres (11,260 sq ft) on a site of 7,200 square metres (78,000 sq ft), and was completed in 1907. Jinpūkaku resembles Tōkuma's Nara National Museum (1894) and Akasaka Palace (1909), and cost 43,335 yen to build. Jinpūkaku was built in close proximity to the ruins of Tottori Castle, which was long controlled by the Ikeda clan, and Kōzen-ji, the temple of the Ikeda family.

Ikeda ostensibly commissioned Jinpūkaku as a detached residence for the family, but it was likely constructed to house Crown Prince Yoshihito, later Emperor Taishō on his tour of the San'in Region in 1907, the same year construction on the residence was completed. Ikeda was closely associated with Tōgō Heihachirō (1848–1934), Fleet Admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy, who accompanied the Emperor Taishō on the tour and gave the residence its name. A nameplate with Tōgō's inscription is prominently displayed in the second floor hall of the structure. Jinpūkaku was the first residence in Tottori to be electrified, and as such was a symbol of the progress of the Meiji period to local residents.


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