Stay 3 hours, half a day, or as many times as you like! How to visit

©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

Upopoi (Symbolic Space for the Coexistence of Peoples) was established in July 2020 on the shores of Lake Poroto in Hokkaido. It is a national Property themed on Ainu culture, with a museum, experience spots, and an Exchange Hall for Experiencing Traditional Performing Arts scattered throughout its vast grounds. Where should we start our tour? Staff/staff members at Upopoi advised us on a course that would take about three hours to half a day.

Hoshino Resorts KAI Poroto is adjacent to Upopoi, a field museum where visitors can experience Ainu culture. The museum area and park area are spread out in a rich natural setting on the southern shore of Lake Poroto, and the site is about two times the size of Tokyo Dome. Upopoi means "to sing (in large groups)" in Ainu language.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

Visitors are greeted at the "Corridor of Izanai" leading to the entrance with shadow puppets of animals and plants that can be found in Hokkaido and the music of the mukkuri, a traditional instrument of the Ainu tribe. There are about 80 species of animals, including foxes, Ezo sika deer, red-crowned cranes, and brown bears. This approach reminds us of the Ainu people who have lived together with nature.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

After purchasing tickets at the entrance, we went to the gate. The National Museum of the Ainu People stands in front of the gate, and its logo on the wall is based on the "tripod (ketunni) structure" found in traditional Ainu houses (chise). The museum boasts a collection of approximately 10,000 items, and exhibits are changed on a regular basis.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

To the left is the Experience Exchange Hall (Uekari Chise = a house where people gather) and the Experience Learning Center (Yaihanokkara Chise = a house where you learn by yourself), and behind the museum are the workshops (Ikara Ushi = a place to make things) and traditional kotans (Teeta Kane An Kotan = old villages) scattered along the lake. Pamphlets and guides are written in Ainu, and the more you learn about them, the more interested you will become.

So, where to start?

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

Ryota Hayama, Upopoi's public relations manager (as of 2022), gave us a standard course that takes about three hours to half a day to tour the museum. Three hours may seem a bit rushed.

The theme of Upopoi is to "experience Ainu culture with all five senses. For example, if you are interested in (Ainu) food, try the Dining Area, if you like experiences, go for the full experience, and if you want to learn about history and culture, visit the museum," says Hayama. Upopoi is also a park, so many visitors spend time relaxing in the plaza," he advises.

Let's take a look around!

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

First, visit the Experience Hall. The key is to find out the performance time of the traditional performing arts and get a ticket (free of charge, included in the admission fee) for the desired performance ahead of time. Once the time is determined, you can smoothly visit the museum or have a meal before or after the performance. This time, we started our visit with the "Traditional Performing Arts Performance" (20 minutes) in the Experience Hall.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

The performers are all Upopoi employees and Ainu cultural traditions. The world of the Ainu people is expressed through a performance that incorporates the latest video technology and beautiful images of Hokkaido. The person in charge of the dance gave the following message to our readers.

It is said that the traditional performing arts of the Ainu people were performed by people who gathered for ceremonies and festivals to enjoy themselves with the Kamui (so-called gods). They also sometimes improvise changes to what has been handed down, such as verses and movements, depending on their feelings at the time. It shows the diversity of Ainu culture."

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

Next is the National Museum of the Ainu People. The first floor houses a theater, library, and museum store, while the second floor is a panoramic lobby overlooking Lake Poroto and exhibition rooms.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

The exhibition rooms are presented in six major themes. Itaku (Our Language), Inomi (Our World), Ulesipa (Our Life), Upasikuma (Our History), Nepuki (Our Work), and Ukoapkasi (Our Exchange). There is no sequential tour, but the intention is that visitors are free to start with what interests them.

In the "Inomi (Our World)" section, the reciprocal relationship between "Ainu (humans) and Kamui (so-called gods)" is explained in an easy-to-understand manner through animation. Through exhibits of ritual implements (ikupasui, inau, etc.), the museum introduces the Kamui's view of the world, nature, and life and death, which are central to the Ainu people's worldview.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

The "Ulesipa (Our Lives)" section focuses on clothing, food, and housing. The Ainu people's cotton garments, with their strikingly unique patterns, show that there are differences in patterns, colors, and production methods depending on the region. Also on display are the tamasai, a ball ornament worn around the neck, and the shitoki, a decorative board worn by women in formal ceremonial dress.

Ms. Hayama explains, "There are many different dialects of the Ainu language. This is the reason why each region has its own characteristics and lifestyles, which leads to a sense of diversity," says Hayama.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

Now we will go to the "Traditional Kotan". A kotan is a village. The houses (chise) of the Ainu people in the Shiraoi region have been recreated, and the songs, dances, and stories of the Ainu people passed down in their daily lives are performed in the hearth room. If you have time, be sure to visit the "Kobo" to see a demonstration of folk crafts and experience wood carving and embroidery.

 ©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
©️ Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

Recommended restaurants include Café Limse, where you can enjoy Ainu cuisine in a casual setting. Please enjoy the traditional cuisine devised to survive the cold and harsh Hokkaido winters.

By the way, the photo is an Upopoi souvenir I bought at the museum store.

How was your tour of Upopoi?

Experiencing Upopoi will deepen your stay at Hoshino Resorts KAI Poroto. For example, the symbolic pointy bathhouse has a "tripod (ketunni) structure," and Guest rooms are inspired by the square furnace at the center of a traditional chise.

We asked Mr. Shinji Fujino, Staff/staff member of Hoshino Resorts KAI Poroto, who has already visited the hotel dozens of times with an annual passport to Upopoi, about the charms of the hotel. The more you learn about Ainu culture, the more you learn the importance of "feeling with all five senses. It is not a matter of reason, but of feeling. At the same time, you realize that there are rational reasons for the way of thinking to live in the harsh natural environment. An inheritor of the Ainu culture also taught me that "knowing is more important than understanding. I hope you will experience it at Upopoi.

 (Ainu Folk Culture Foundation
(Ainu Folk Culture Foundation

We invite you to visit Upopoi during your stay in Hoshino Resorts KAI Poroto. Stay for 3 hours, half a day, or as many times as you like! Staff/staff members recommend the best time to visit Upopoi is at sunset.

Finally, I would like to share with you some words that particularly moved me. The "Symbolic Space for the Symbiosis of Peoples" is "uainukoro kotan" in Ainu language, which means "a village where people respect each other. Diversity and mutual respect" is taught in Upopoi. I felt that by knowing the correct meaning of the word, interest in and respect for the other is born.

Upopoi (symbolic space of ethnic coexistence)
  • Address 2-3 Wakakusa-cho, Shiraori-cho, Shiraori-gun, Hokkaido MAP
  •  Direction 10 minutes walk from JR Shiraoi Station (North Exit)
  • Business Hours 9:00 - 17:00 (open seasonally)
  •  Closed Mondays (closed the following weekday if Monday is a national holiday), year-end and New Year holidays, and other special opening and closing days.
  •  Admission Fee Adults: 1,200 yen, high school students: 600 yen, junior high school students and younger: free (Annual Passport: 2,000 yen for adults).
  •  TEL 0144-82-3914
  •  Parking Paying admission (500 yen per visit) (246 cars)
The information in this article is current as of the date of the update. Please check before visiting as they are subject to change.