Institute for Social Vision Design

Traditional Townhouses and Small Concessions — Why 4 of 7 Projects Involve Kominka [2026 Edition]

横田直也
About 12 min read

An analysis of why 4 of the 7 municipalities selected for Japan's Small Concession Formation Support Program are activating traditional townhouses (kominka). Covers case studies of Manazuru, Anjo, Himeji, and Nara, along with cultural property compatibility, renovation considerations, and revenue models for accommodation, dining, and cultural experiences.

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TL;DR

  1. 4 of the 7 FY2026 Small Concession Formation Support Program selections involve traditional townhouses or historic buildings — outnumbering closed schools and former offices combined.
  2. Traditional townhouses are favored for their location advantages, narrative appeal, alignment with tourism demand, and compatibility with Small Concession eligibility requirements.
  3. Culturally designated buildings carry renovation restrictions and management obligations, but these constraints can be reframed as sources of brand premium.

Why Traditional Townhouses Dominate

Four factors explaining the concentration of townhouse projects — location, narrative value, tourism alignment, and institutional fit

Of the seven municipalities selected for FY2026, four involve traditional townhouses or historic buildings as target facilities — outnumbering closed schools (two cases) and former offices (one case) combined. Traditional townhouses have become the de facto primary arena for projects.

Five structural reasons explain this concentration.

Reason 1: Locational Advantage

Most traditional townhouses were built at the historical centers of their communities — along the main streets of post towns, in merchant districts of port towns, in samurai residence neighborhoods of castle towns. This is a distinct kind of locational advantage from modern notions of "convenience," but it is highly valuable as content for tourism, hospitality, and dining.

Unlike rural farmhouses scattered across agricultural land, traditional townhouses that survive in historic town centers benefit from walkable proximity to other attractions, transportation, and commercial activity — making them inherently capable of drawing visitors.

Reason 2: Narrative Value and Brand Identity

A building that is over a century old carries a story. Historical context, architectural style, the lives of previous occupants — these constitute an intangible value that no new-build facility can replicate.

In tourism marketing, the framing of "a restaurant in a former domain elder's residence" or "a guesthouse that was once an Edo-period merchant's home" functions as a powerful visitor acquisition narrative. As inbound tourists increasingly seek "authentic Japan" over generic tourism experiences, the narrative power of traditional townhouses continues to grow as a competitive advantage.

Reason 3: Strong Alignment with Tourism Demand

Surveys by the Japan Tourism Agency consistently show that visiting traditional buildings and cultural sites ranks among the top priorities for inbound visitors. Traditional townhouses directly serve this demand category.

Domestic travel trends are equally favorable: the demand for photogenic traditional townhouse cafés and guesthouses is robust among Gen Z and Millennials drawn to experiential travel. The aesthetic appeal of aged wood, tatami, and traditional architectural details resonates strongly across generational and cultural boundaries.

Reason 4: Compatibility with Small Concession Requirements

Small Concessions are designed for projects with total costs below 1 billion yen. Traditional townhouse renovation falls comfortably within this range (typically tens to hundreds of millions of yen), unlike large-scale new construction.

Moreover, the emphasis on "activating existing buildings" sits at the core of the Small Concession framework. Rather than new construction, the entire model rests on renovating and reusing what already exists — and traditional townhouses are perhaps the most semantically appropriate match for this principle.

Reason 5: Increasing Public Ownership Through Donation and Transfer

As townhouse owners age and succession becomes uncertain, more traditional buildings are being donated or transferred to municipalities and community organizations. This "from private to public" trend is accelerating, expanding the stock of publicly-managed townhouses available for Small Concession activation.

Compared to privately-owned townhouses where activation attempts must navigate individual owner preferences and rights, these publicly-held assets are more directly accessible to the Small Concession institutional framework.

Structural Analysis of Four Cases

Comparative analysis of Manazuru, Anjo, Himeji, and Nara — their target facilities, selected experts, challenges, and project directions

Case 1: Manazuru Town, Kanagawa — Former Folk Museum

Scale and location: A small port town of approximately 6,600 residents. The former folk museum — a facility with traditional townhouse architectural characteristics — sits within walking distance of Manazuru Station on the JR Tokaido Line.

Selected expert: Enjoy Works (a community development company based in Kamakura)

Challenges and direction: Creating a facility that serves as an anchor drawing visitors into this small port town, while also maintaining functions that serve the local community. Enjoy Works has particular strength in renovation projects utilizing crowdfunding, with a track record of community-involved project formation and capital raising.

Key observation: This case demonstrates that even a municipality of just 6,600 people can potentially build a viable project around the traditional townhouse × tourism combination.

Case 2: Anjo City, Aichi — Former Kamiya Residence

Scale and location: A mid-sized city of approximately 190,000 residents. The former Kamiya Residence (a traditional townhouse) is located within the grounds of Anjo Castle Historic Park — a historic site park in the city center.

Selected expert: Deloitte Tohmatsu (global consulting firm)

Challenges and direction: Designing a viable commercial scheme for tourism, dining, and cultural experience operations under the constraints of a historic site designation (limited renovation freedom). Commercial use within a designated historic site zone requires coordination with cultural property conservation authorities.

Key observation: This case — pursuing Small Concession commercialization within the dual constraints of park law and cultural property law — may establish a precedent applicable to comparable situations across Japan.

Case 3: Himeji City, Hyogo — Former Hamamoto Residence

Scale and location: A core city of approximately 530,000 residents with the extraordinary locational advantage of being home to Himeji Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The former Hamamoto Residence is a traditional townhouse situated within the castle town context.

Selected expert: Hankyu CM (a construction management subsidiary of Hankyu Railway Group)

Challenges and direction: Positioning the former Hamamoto Residence as "the next destination after Himeji Castle" — extending visitor dwell time and increasing per-visitor spending. Hankyu CM brings large-scale development and operations expertise, though applying large-project methodologies to a small-scale traditional townhouse may require careful calibration.

Key observation: The rare locational advantage of adjacency to a World Heritage Site provides powerful appeal potential for accommodation, dining, and cultural experience operations. Depending on revenue model design, this may be the case with the strongest near-term profitability prospects of the four.

Case 4: Nara City, Nara — Former Yagyu Domain Elder's Residence

Scale and location: A historic city of approximately 360,000 residents. The former Yagyu Domain Elder's Residence is a culturally designated historic building located in the Yagyu area in northern Nara City — the ancestral home of the famous swordsman lineage.

Selected expert: PwC (global consulting firm)

Challenges and direction: The Yagyu area sits approximately 40 minutes from Nara Station by car — a significant accessibility barrier. On the other hand, its identity as the birthplace of the Yagyu Munenori swordsman lineage provides a compelling narrative for history enthusiasts, martial arts practitioners, and inbound tourists. PwC brings expertise in sophisticated financial modeling and internationally aligned project scheme design.

Key observation: This case tests the viability of a strategy that compensates for locational disadvantage (remote, mountainous) through narrative strength. Resolving access challenges (shuttle services, secondary transit infrastructure) and capturing overnight stay demand will be critical to project viability.

Coexisting with Cultural Property Designation

The constraints and possibilities of designated historic buildings — reframing limitations as brand value

Some traditional townhouses carry cultural property designations by national, prefectural, or municipal authorities. Activating designated buildings requires understanding both the constraints and possibilities these designations create.

Primary Constraints of Cultural Property Designation

Renovation restrictions: Modifications affecting the appearance, structure, or design of a designated historic building require permission from cultural property authorities (Agency for Cultural Affairs, prefectural or municipal education committees). This can extend timelines and increase costs.

Use restrictions: Depending on the nature of the designation, certain forms of commercial use or significant changes in purpose may be restricted. Commercial facility installation within designated historic site zones often requires separate permits.

Management and public access obligations: Some designations require periodic public access or management reporting, which can constrain operational flexibility.

Reframing Constraints as Brand Premium

At the same time, cultural property designation carries substantial brand value. The framing of "overnight stay in a nationally designated historic building" or "café in a Preservation District of Historic Buildings" enables premium pricing that would not be possible in an equivalent non-designated facility.

Cultural property subsidy programs also deserve attention. National, prefectural, and municipal subsidies exist for the conservation and restoration of designated buildings, potentially covering a portion of renovation costs through public funding. The architecture of "cultural property subsidies covering conservation work + commercial operations generating revenue" forms the fundamental financial structure for historic building activation.

The most operationally important element is strong internal coordination between the cultural property management department and the project promotion team. Obtaining clear information about what can and cannot be modified — early in the design process — allows project design to proceed on a realistic basis and avoids the scenario where constraints discovered mid-project require costly redesign.

Renovation Considerations

What every traditional townhouse renovation must address — seismic assessment, asbestos, heritage value preservation

Traditional townhouse renovation involves specific technical considerations that go beyond standard construction practice.

Seismic Assessment and Retrofitting

Most traditional townhouses predate Japan's current seismic standards (which took effect after 1981). Seismic retrofitting is effectively a prerequisite for private operators to use the facility, and it is typically the largest line item in the renovation budget.

Seismic retrofitting of wood-frame traditional buildings requires specialized expertise. In particular, buildings constructed using traditional Japanese structural methods (stone-based foundations, traditional joinery techniques) may not be accurately evaluated by standard seismic assessment methodologies, making collaboration with a structural engineer who specializes in traditional construction essential.

Asbestos and Hazardous Material Survey

Buildings constructed before 1975 — which describes most traditional townhouses — may contain asbestos in building materials. A mandatory asbestos survey by a certified inspector is required before any renovation work begins. If asbestos is identified, the cost of removal can significantly affect the renovation budget.

Pre-Agreed Heritage Value Preservation Policy

Before renovation begins, it is essential to reach explicit agreement among the cultural property management office, relevant specialists, and the private operator on what may and may not be changed. This protects against mid-construction surprises (discovering that a modification was not permitted), and — equally importantly — it allows private operators to plan their revenue model based on an accurate understanding of the facility's modifiable and fixed characteristics.

Constraints on Large Equipment Installation

The structural characteristics of traditional townhouses typically limit or complicate the installation of elevators, large commercial kitchen equipment, and accessibility features. The correct sequencing is to first define the intended use (accommodation, dining, cultural experience), then determine what equipment is required, and then verify through building assessment whether that equipment can be installed — rather than assuming standard equipment configurations are feasible.

Three Revenue Model Archetypes

The economics of accommodation, dining, and cultural experience operations in traditional townhouses

Traditional townhouse Small Concession projects generally operate within one of three primary revenue model archetypes.

Archetype 1: Accommodation

Description: Converting the traditional townhouse into an entire-building rental accommodation, guesthouse, or experiential lodging facility.

Revenue characteristics: Per-night rates are high (typically 20,000–100,000 yen per building), but capacity is limited — making occupancy rate the primary driver of profitability. The premium feel unique to traditional townhouses enables strong pricing, and the product is particularly competitive in the inbound tourism market.

Rough breakeven reference: 180 occupied nights per year at an average of 50,000 yen per night yields approximately 9 million yen in annual revenue (pre-tax). Whether the project covers renovation amortization and operating costs depends on the specific numbers for each project.

Examples: Vacation rentals through platforms such as Airbnb; dedicated entire-building rental accommodations (historic townhouse properties in Kyoto, Nara, and similar destinations).

Archetype 2: Dining and Café

Description: Converting the traditional townhouse into a café, restaurant, or dining establishment.

Revenue characteristics: Per-ticket value is lower than accommodation (lunch at 1,500–3,000 yen, dinner at 5,000–15,000 yen), but higher visitor turnover and broader accessibility typically produce strong customer volumes. Pairing with local ingredients or regional cuisine simultaneously functions as regional brand promotion.

Rough breakeven reference: 30 seats × 25 operating days per month × average 50 visitors per day at 2,000 yen per visitor ≈ 2.5 million yen monthly revenue. Note that food service businesses typically see gross margin of 30–40% after food and labor costs.

Examples: Café/direct-sale hybrid facilities in converted school buildings (Kanayama Town, Fukushima Prefecture); Italian restaurants in traditional townhouse settings (numerous examples nationally).

Archetype 3: Cultural Experience and Arts Facilities

Description: Using the traditional townhouse for traditional craft workshops, Japanese cultural experiences (tea ceremony, kimono dressing, open-hearth cooking), artist residencies, or creative industry use.

Revenue characteristics: Per-experience prices range broadly from approximately 3,000 to 30,000 yen. High per-visitor value means smaller group sizes can be financially viable, and staffing requirements tend to be lower than in dining operations. Cultural experience offerings for inbound tourists in particular can command strong prices.

Rough breakeven reference: Three to four experience sessions per day × two to five participants × 8,000 yen per person = approximately 48,000–160,000 yen daily revenue. At 150 operating days per year, this yields approximately 7–24 million yen annually.

Examples: Ceramics, dyeing, and calligraphy workshops in traditional townhouses (Kyoto, Kanazawa, Nara); shared ateliers and creative industry facilities in renovated historic buildings.

The Hybrid Model Opportunity

In practice, most successful projects combine multiple revenue streams: accommodation + dining, dining + cultural experience, experience + retail. Designing a traditional townhouse's spaces for "multi-use" — different purposes by time of day, day of week, or season — is an effective strategy for improving overall project economics.

However, hybrid models increase operational complexity. A practical approach is to launch with one or two formats, establish stable operations, and then expand incrementally as the management infrastructure matures.

The Future of Traditional Townhouses in Small Concessions

The concentration of traditional townhouse cases (4 of 7) in the Formation Support Program reflects the organic preferences of participating municipalities rather than a top-down policy design. It indicates that traditional townhouses are simply the facility type where private-sector operators see the most attractive entry opportunities.

Going forward, Small Concession approaches will likely expand to a broader range of facility types — closed schools, former municipal offices, former recreation facilities — but traditional townhouses will retain their advantages in narrative value, locational positioning, and inbound tourism appeal, keeping them at the center of the Small Concession landscape for the foreseeable future.

For municipalities with traditional townhouses under their ownership or management, the four cases analyzed here (Manazuru, Anjo, Himeji, Nara) represent the most practically relevant reference points available. The outcomes presentation scheduled for February 12, 2027 will be the most significant source of design guidance for future projects.

ISVD provides free consultation and specialist referrals to municipalities and community organizations with traditional townhouses seeking activation strategy support.

References

Small Concession Formation Support Program — Press Release on Expert Solicitation (2026)

Small Concession Promotion Strategy (2024)

Small Concession Platform (2024)

Everyone's Closed School Project (2024)

PPP/PFI Promotion Action Plan (2024)

Let's design the right public-private partnership for your municipality

You've read the structural analysis. But whether the same approach works in your context is a different question. ISVD provides free support for prerequisite assessment, method selection, and business design.

Questions to Reflect On

  1. How many traditional townhouses or historic buildings does your municipality own or manage?
  2. Regardless of cultural designation status, which of these facilities has the strongest connection to local cultural and historical context?
  3. Is it possible to simultaneously reduce maintenance costs and generate regional tourism and revitalization value from these assets?

Key Terms in This Article

Small Concession
A small-scale PPP/PFI initiative (typically under 1 billion yen) for revitalizing underused public properties such as vacant houses and abandoned schools. MLIT established a dedicated platform in 2024.
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