Detailed Review
Many of those who live and work in Tokyo take to the hills to shake off the mantle of stress that comes with the pressures of city life. The area of Tochigi-Ken, a two to three hour drive north west of Tokyo, is a particular favourite. It is wonderful walking country; picturesque hills and valleys filled with arboreal fragrances. Within this idyllic scene is Nasu which has developed into a sophisticated playground of cultural and sporting attractions. The Niki Club is a privately-owned resort comprising individual air-conditioned cottages whose architecture and design are ultra modern blending chic simplicity, Japanese elegance and western standards of luxury. The restaurant happily provides for those with western tastes and appetites as well as those with a passion for authentic Japanese food. The wine list, too, is truly international.
Independent Reviews
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"Stark architectural beauty set on hectares of peaceful forest two hours north of Tokyo"
The Niki Club
By Caroline Major
Getting naked with strangers has never been so relaxed - when youre getting ready to take a dip in an onsen that is. The Niki Club hot spring baths are outdoors in the forest and its very easy to feel spirited away. The surrounding Japanese cedar trees sing with birdsong and provide a comforting modesty blanket around the steaming pools of mineral rich waters. While nature does the work you recline, melting away
exhaustion and arthritis and stimulating your precious circulation.
More than anything, though, these onsen are designed to reconnect you with nature, and it’s that which will ultimately restore wellbeing. As you lie there, steaming, theres nothing to do but look at trees or the stars or the moon or watch raindrops dricing little storms of steam as they patter into the pools.
That is the objective of the Niki Club; to reconnect urban dwellers with nature. To encourage you to take midnight walks on the forest. To play on the wooden and rope swings suspended in the trees. To have a picnic and a bike ride, to play tennis or fish in the streams crisscrossing the property; to step in the puddles on the uneven stone pavings; to race to your private salon in the rain. In the snow. In the sunshine. To come back and do it every season. When the leaves fall and when theyre green. When the ground steams and smells pungently of mud and the fungi thrive; when the moss is green and the hydrangeas bloom. When the fireflies come out at dusk and when ice covers the ground. This Japanese Auberge just an hour from Tokyo is the antithesis of the city and just the thing for a regular weekend break or a week-long getaway in the countryside.
The drive into the Niki Club is full of suprises. How could such a populous country still have such thick woods? And are those REALLY overhead fans in the cow sheds? Its lush, green and the air is filled with the pervasive shuuuuush of running water. The area itself is renowned for its hot springs and the country is traversed with the rivers and creeks which feed from them. Ah yes, a few days at the Niki Club will leave your head clear, the body recuperated and your stresses behind.
The rooms:
Rooms come in several types in two wings. The original six rooms in the Main building are the most traditionally Japanese. They front onto a wet rock garden and have a bench edaya outside for drinking tea and smoking. Inside, a living room with sofa looks out through a window wall to the rock garden and behind is the tatami-matted bedroom where a maid will prepare a futon in the evening.
In front of these rooms are the suites, cosy enclaves surrounded by gardens, both lush and green and those of rocks. The wooden floors are a warming contrast to the stark concrete exteriors with their flat roofs landscaped with Japanese style rock gardens typical of the Tochigi prefecture; of slightly rusty, grey and cream coloured stones. The sliding glass doors from each room of every villa continues the nature connection theme and in summer provide welcome breeze and the opportunity to really listen to the sound of silence. Which of course is anything but
a night filled with the sounds of water, birds and frogs is one man’s pleasure and another’s pain. If you relax, it will hypnotise you.
Touches include the in-room wear, which the room guide will tell you is not appropriate for the restaurants but perfectly acceptable out in the garden and the spa. Its comfortable and cute. Choose from knit or cotton pyjamas in addition to a waffle bathrobe. Incense and complimentary soft-drinks and beer in the mini-bar are also nice as is the Japanese standard always on hot water with a set of quality cups and a teapot with complimenting caddy of green tea.
The newest 24 of the 32 rooms have been recently commissioned from the very busy Sir Terence Conran and feature many of his signatures. Most are split-level and many include a rooftop terrace off the upstairs bedroom. Perfect for being up amongst the trees. These rooms are more contemporary than the older but all share a minimalist design ethic. The Conran rooms are finished with splashes of colour and include a private outdoor iron rich mineral onsen. All rooms have bathrooms with shower stools and tubs. Most are cedar and smell divine when you fill them with steaming water.
Dont make the mistake of choosing these rooms based on their newness or their designer. Even though the older rooms have seen the stories of 20 years, their design endures and the positioning of those four along the river with access to the Japanese country gardens are outstanding if a little cosy. The proximity to nature through both direct access and expansive panels of glass is unbeatable.
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