Japan's Most Faithful Wooden Reconstruction
Ozu Castle was reconstructed in 2004 after a 130-year absence using exclusively traditional methods — no nails, no power tools for structural work, no reinforced concrete. The reconstruction relied entirely on traditional Japanese wood joinery techniques: hand-cut mortise-and-tenon joints, wooden pegs (dowels), and the same species of timber (Japanese cypress, hinoki) used in the 17th-century original. The result is considered the most architecturally faithful castle reconstruction in Japan — not a concrete shell with a castle exterior, but an actual traditional wooden structure built the way the original was built.