A Greater Share for the Japanese Sharehouse

Society Lifestyle

In a bid to reverse the damage to community ties wrought by the increase in single and two-person households over the past three decades, a growing number of people in Japan are embracing collective living arrangements in an echo of the global “sharing economy.”

Dingy Past, Fashionable Present

A whole host of sharehouses centered around common interests have rapidly emerged over the past two years. Colish, a website for current and prospective sharehouse operators to advertise for roommates, shows a wide range of homes with unique selling points—everything from cat-filled apartments for feline fans to enormous kitchens for wannabe chefs and garden plots for organic growers.

This is quite different from Europe and North America, where the existing housing stock of former family homes with multiple bedrooms makes sharing a financial necessity. In Japan, a rapid rebuilding cycle allowed for a proliferation of affordable one-person apartments throughout the 1980s and 1990s as an increasing number of young people clamored to move out of their family homes. Sharehouses, which have roughly equivalent rents while offering less privacy, have to promise benefits beyond financial incentives to attract people.

In their earliest incarnation, sharehouses were “guesthouses” designed for foreigners who came to Japan during the economic bubble years and found it hard to rent private apartments because of their prohibitive initial costs and discrimination by landlords. This association with foreigners negatively shaded the word “sharehouse” for many older people in Japan, who fear that having one of these facilities in the neighborhood will lead to raucous parties, incorrect dumping of household waste, or even criminal activity.

But sharehouses have moved well beyond the dingy apartments they originated in. After the bubble burst and demand for low-rent lodgings grew, shared “dormitories” began to emerge, in which individual bedrooms shared a corridor and facilities like a washing machine, toilet, and shower. The next evolution for sharehouses came in the early 2000s, when the boom in “designer mansions,” slickly designed apartments marketed to young professionals, led to the creation of “designer sharehouses” as well.

The emergence of the community-based model came around 2010, as Japan slumped to the end of its second postbubble “lost decade.” The increasing difficulty of finding a suitable marriage partner led many people to reconsider their living environment and the expansion of their social circles. A 2011 movie called Sharehouse helped to popularize the concept and change the image of these homes from “dodgy” places to fun ones in which friendship, and even love, could be found.

Hunger for the Human Touch

Another factor in the spread of sharehouses was young people returning from studies or travels abroad who wanted to re-create the easygoing and friendly atmosphere that they had experienced in shared apartments or hostels in other countries.

Toya Hirotaka shows off Well Yōkōdai's well-stocked pantry.

One of those was Toya Hirotaka. Having spent four months in a small village in India, he no longer felt at home in Japan. To try to recapture the feeling of living in a village, he moved into a sharehouse called Well Yōkōdai in Yokohama in 2007. But like most other sharehouses at the time, it operated more like a dormitory, with residents seldom talking to one another. Along with a British man also living there, Toya started “a small revolution” to get people talking and interacting with each other more.

“Sharehouses are harder to do in Japan than in a multicultural country. When you live together, naturally there are things you disagree on, so you need to discuss them. Foreigners can be better at that because their societies are multicultural,” he says. “In Japan, people often focus on harmony and unity, but if you force it, it’s kind of a low-quality unity.” Currently, around five of Well Yōkōdai’s residents are non-Japanese.

Toya met his wife at Well Yōkōdai, where they now live together with their three-year-old daughter and around 30 other people, including four other couples and a baby. Toya has gradually built up the community, starting a permaculture garden and instigating a sharing scheme in the kitchen, where people can leave food, drinks, and even meals they’ve made for others to share. He tries to avoid making rules for the house, preferring to let people govern themselves. Unlike many other collective houses, there is no set mealtime when people are obliged to gather.

“Our philosophy is to let people be free and independent so they don’t need to eat together. There are no obligations. For everything, including the cleaning, it’s up to people to do it as they like,” says Toya.

The Well Yōkōdai kitchen is a lively place; the lack of rules doesn't mean a lack of cooperation at mealtimes.

The residents say this conspicuous lack of rules is what makes Well Yōkōdai work so well. Without predetermined rules, they feel naturally motivated to contribute when they have free time, and are relieved to be exempt from chores when they’re busier.

Toya says one of the central principles they share is “the freedom to bother others,” as people are bound to annoy each other when they live together, particularly when children are involved. “Once my daughter drew in red pen on the walls. That’s the sort of thing that may bother others, but it gives everyone the freedom to do their own thing and to accept one another,” he says.

Not everyone in Japan is prepared to live in such a way. It may be difficult for sharehouses to make a serious dent in the growth of single-person households, but for growing numbers of residents, they offer a refreshing alternative to being home alone.

(Originally written in English in February 2016. This article is based on a Rebuild Japan Initiative Foundation study on the living environment in Japan. Banner photo: Well Yōkōdai residents sit down for a meal together. All photos © Sophie Knight.)

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housing lifestyle community sharehouse sociology

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