Japan is a multi-generational opportunity for building a self-sovereign community. Here's how we are capitalizing on it.
Japan has 9 million empty homes and a currency at multi-decade lows. Rural property prices have decoupled from intrinsic value — world-class timber construction, traditional joinery, antique fixtures — all going for less than a used car. We buy what the domestic market has abandoned and the global market hasn't noticed yet.
A Tokyo condo sells for ~¥93 million. We're buying homes with gardens for ¥300,000–¥5,000,000 an hour away from Tokyo. The simple, nature-filled, vibrant life of Komoro will make you feel fresher and clearer than ever.
The vacancy rate here is 19.5% just 10min walk from the train station. This lets us buy closely clustered properties bringing life to our area and easy walkable commutes. We share meals, support, coworking spaces, and resources in our neighborhood.
After decades of deflation, Japan is entering an inflationary regime. Families and corporations are beginning rotating into hard assets. Early movers who acquired during the deflationary bottom — like us — are positioned for structural appreciation as inflation persists.
We're based in Komoro, Nagano Prefecture — 90 minutes from Tokyo by shinkansen, 20 minutes from Karuizawa.
Three houses and one event venue, all within walking distance. Every property is near Komoro Station and the Shinkansen, under 90 minutes from Tokyo. We paid between $2,200 and $30,000 per property — less than one month's rent in most Western cities buys permanent ownership here.
Browse our spaces and upcoming events on the app.
Every red dot is the central venue. Every white dot is a community-owned property within minutes on foot. The whole portfolio fits inside one neighborhood.
| Property | Distance | Walk |
|---|---|---|
| ZuCity Artist & Builder Residency | 0.1 km | 1 min walk |
| ZuCity Balcony Bedroom #1 | 0.1 km | 1 min walk |
| ZuCity Balcony Bedroom #2 | 0.1 km | 1 min walk |
| ZuCity Lounge - Nakamandem | 0.1 km | 1 min walk |
| ZuCity Secluded Backyard Flat | 0.1 km | 1 min walk |
| ZuCity Office Bedroom and Mountain View | 0.2 km | 2 min walk |
| ZuCity Master Bedroom | 0.3 km | 4 min walk |
| ZuCity Traditional Tatami Bedroom | 0.3 km | 4 min walk |
From 0 to 4 properties in 1 year: how ZuCity is building a vertically-integrated community-owned neighborhood in rural Japan by replacing vibes with equity.
We've seen the flaws in coliving from past experience. So we tried it different. We designed a positive feedback loop following JR East's model used to build train stations. They acruire land, develop it including adding stations, increase surrounding property values, use funding from rental income and property value to fund more property and stations. ZuCity buys properties, renovate them, bring high-value residents to cocreate the neighborhood, which increses residents and tourists, which gives us funding to buy more properties. Each property makes the next one more valuable by giving us more creative freedom in our neighborhood for larger scale experiments.
Find a location with infrastructure and potential that needs a spark. DIY renovate what we can and call local tradesmen for the rest. Reimagine the space into something we want to see in our neighborhood and decorate. Our cost basis is negligible.
Renovate into coliving spaces, workshops, venues, and gardens. Bring artists, entrepreneurs, and builders who create culture and economic activity. Host popup cities and events that put Komoro on the map.
More residents means more local spending, more events, more tourism, more government cooperation, higher property values. Capital that would evaporate in rent or event costs instead accumulates in community-owned real estate that appreciates.
Use increased value and revenue to acquire the next property. Each cycle, the community gets bigger, the infrastructure gets better, and the flywheel spins faster. The neighborhood improves for everyone — us, our neighbors, the city.
Want to understand the community behind the properties? Read about ZuCity.
ZuCity's first Zuzalu popup city in rural Japan generated ¥480,000 in revenue while converting 26% directly into community assets like vehicles and furniture.
Japan's population is shrinking. Business owners are retiring with no heirs. Entire businesses — restaurants, workshops, farms — are closing not because they failed, but because nobody is there to run them. We're acquiring cash-flow positive businesses to sponsor visas for community members who want to live here and run them. Preservation through participation.
Japan launched the Digital Nomad Visa in 2024 and expanded the Startup Visa in 2025. The government is actively subsidizing environments for remote workers and entrepreneurs. ZuCity aligns with the national Chihou Sousei strategy — rural revitalization through immigration. We're not fighting the system. We're what it's asking for.