- Site:
- Abashiri
- Akita
- Amsterdam
- Auschwitz-Birkenau
- Baarle-Nassau
- Beijin
- Bern
- Boston
- Brisbane
- Cambridge
- Chicago
- Copenhagen
- Delft
- Duisburg
- Dusseldorf
- Eindhoven
- Essen
- Fort Worth
- Fukiya
- Fukui
- Fukuoka
- Gifu
- Goto
- Guanajuato
- Hakodate
- Hamamatsu
- Helsinki
- Higashi-Hiroshima
- Hijiori
- Himeji
- Hiraizumi
- Hong Kong
- Ike-shima
- Ikei-jima
- Ishikiri
- Iwamizawa
- Iya
- Kakunodate
- Kamiyama
- Kanazawa
- Kaneyama
- Karuizawa
- Kasagi
- Kitakyushu
- Kinosaki
- Kizugawa
- Kobe
- Kochi
- Koya-san
- Krakow
- Kudaka-jima
- Kumano
- Kushiro
- Kussharo
- Kyoto
- Laval
- Lyon
- Marseille
- Matsuyama
- Mexico City
- Moriyama
- Nagahama
- Nagano
- Nagasaki
- Naha
- Nakashibetsu
- Nara
- New Orleans
- New York
- Notsuke-zaki
- Obihiro
- Obuse
- Okinawa
- Omi
- Omihachiman
- Osaka
- Otobe
- Paris
- San Francisco
- Sanriku
- Sapporo
- Seattle
- Sendai
- Sesoko-jima
- Shanghai
- Shiga
- Silicon Valley
- Singapore
- Tainan
- Takashima
- Takehara
- Tallin
- Tendo
- Tohno
- Tokushima
- Tokyo
- Torigoe-jo
- Toyama
- Ueda
- Utrecht
- Wieliczka
- Xitang
- Yaizu
- Yamagata
- Yamato
- Yufuin
- Aspect:
- active
- additional
- animal
- approaching
- archeological
- architectural
- artistic
- automobile
- bicycler
- border
- botanic
- bricolage
- bridge
- chronological
- color
- combinational
- disastrous
- economical
- empirical
- excessive
- functional
- geographical
- infrastractural
- jimen-or-not
- legal
- lobotomical
- material
- mineral
- mobile
- morphological
- mysterious
- overall
- pattern
- railway
- religious
- rough
- scale
- ship
- signal
- slope
- snow
- sound
- steps
- technical
- textural
- tracer
- underground
- urban structural
- vestigial
- water
- working
Border between former city wall and old city.
Border between former city wall and old city.
Invisible borders between private lands... Satoyama Village
A girl threw a stone onto the ice, and said "that is jimen itself!"
Invisible borders between private lands... Satoyama Village
Border between former city wall and old city.
Western buildings are tightly united with jimen while Japanese buildings are put on jimen.