The interior displaying everyday folk utensils

Highlights

The museum has a collection of 3,000 folk implements and 3,000 local toys, and strives to display them in a way that shows how people's lives have changed.

Learn how the masses lived and how their lives changed

The founder of this museum originally worked as a teacher in Kyoto and often used old farm implements from home as teaching tools in social study classes. This highlighted the significance of actually examining real objects and became the catalyst for opening the museum.
Today, based on the ideal of showing modern generations the actual tools of everyday people from the past, the museum has a collection of some 3,000 day-to-day implements from years gone by. On the 1st floor, there are agricultural tools for rice planting, threshing and polishing as well as weaving equipment. Notably, the agricultural exhibits, such as a must-see water treadwheel and thresher, allow visitors to see the massive changes and advances in farming over the ages. The theme on the 2nd floor is food, clothing and shelter. Here, there are many utensils that have been used in daily life. In the annex building the theme is commerce, with the exhibits being the tools of business.

Facility Information

Facility name Kyoto Country Tool Museum
Address 2 Koyama Ogawa-cho, Yamashina-ku
Closed day Mon, 29/12~3/1
Admission Adults ¥500, Junior high and high school students ¥400, Elementary school students ¥300
Access A 5-min walk from Koyama Stop of Keihan Bus
Parking Available (Free)
Contact 075-501-8862