A ryokan with only 3 rooms managed by a couple. Mizuki, Natsumi and Kaori guest rooms have a terrace with a beautiful view. Spacious rooms furnished with wood, washi paper (Japanese traditional paper) and tatami mats have modern Japanese taste. Its hot spring water is directly supplied from a source in the premises to baths.
Even if you stay multiple nights, the rooms cannot be used during the daytime between 11am and 4pm, so please refrain from making reservations if you work the night shift or use the rooms during the day.
Tateyama Station is right in front of you! You can reserve a time for the Tateyama Cable Car at the ticket counter at Tateyama Station, so you can buy your ticket the morning of the day and relax in your room until your departure time. The bath at Senjyuso is a natural hot spring created by the sacred mountain Tateyama! You can feel the blessings of the earth on your skin. (Our bath is a Japanese style. There is no separate shower.) For meals, we prepare seasonal meals such as fresh fish caught in Toyama Bay and wild vegetables from Tateyama. Please eat your fill of Toyama Prefecture's Koshihikari rice! *Please note that you will need to use stairs to get around at this hotel. *The rooms do not have baths or toilets, so they are shared. The baths in the building are separate indoor baths for men and women. The toilets in the building are separate toilets with washlets for men and women.
Recharge your energy for the day Simple relaxation. With a compact and functional space and carefully selected bedding, Have a refreshing morning. With convenience, cost performance, and comfort, A gift for customers who spend a fulfilling day on business or sightseeing. A simple and comfortable hotel stay.
This facility is located in the Ochiai village of Higashi Iya. Generally speaking, villages are formed at the foot of a mountain, followed by fields, which is the so-called ``Japanese satoyama landscape.'' However, the village of Iya was carved into the slope of a mountain. Ochiai village is a village with a height difference of approximately 390 meters, and old private houses built from the middle to late Edo period are still dotted around the cliffs. These old private houses have structures and floor plans typical of mountain villages, and together with the village roads that wind through the village, and the surrounding stone walls and cultivated land, they create a unique landscape. In 2005, in recognition of the rarity of this historical landscape, the entire village was selected as an Important Preservation District for Groups of Traditional Buildings. https://www.tougenkyo-iya.jp/