
・Gifu Castle Museum: Closed from April 1, 2026 through late October 2027
・Gifu Castle Keep: Closed from May 19, 2026 through late October 2027 (reopening planned for November 2027)
・Summit trail closures are in effect during the construction period. Access from the Meiso no Komichi and Hanataka hiking courses to the keep area may be restricted during certain periods
Summit ruins (Presumed First Gate Ruins, stone walls, well remains) remain open to visitors. If you plan to use the hiking trails, be sure to check the City of Gifu official website for the latest information.
**If the scenes of Inabayama Castle in the 2026 NHK Taiga Drama “Toyotomi Kyodai!” caught your attention — this is the place.**The castle depicted in the drama as Inabayama Castle is the very same fortress that Oda Nobunaga later renamed “Gifu Castle.” Perched atop Mount Kinka, it still preserves stone walls, gate foundations, and other remains that you can explore on foot today.
This guide covers the highlights of Gifu Castle for two types of visitors: those who want a focused 1–2 hour walk centered on the hilltop ruins, and those who prefer a half-day route that also takes in the residence ruins at Gifu Park below. Please note that in 2026, the castle museum will be closed from April 1 and the main tower from May 19 until late October 2027 due to seismic reinforcement works. However, the hilltop ruins — including the Ichi-no-mon Gate Site, stone walls, and well remains — remain open for exploration throughout the construction period.
As a general guide, allow about 1–2 hours for a summit-focused visit, or 3–4 hours if you include the lower slope area around Gifu Park. The walk from the ropeway mountaintop station to the castle keep takes about 8 minutes, so arriving close to closing time can feel rushed.
The upper mountain section involves continuous stone steps and slopes, and in wet weather the rock surfaces and stones become slippery. Wear comfortable walking shoes and allow plenty of time. On the flip side, winter — when the undergrowth dies back and the outlines of the stone walls become much easier to read — is actually an ideal season for observing the ruins. During the 2026 construction period, trail closures are in effect near the summit, so hikers should check conditions in advance.
What you’ll find in this article
- Clear directions from JR Gifu Station and Meitetsu Gifu Station to Gifu Park and the ropeway mountaintop station
- 2026 closure details and which ruins remain open to visitors during the closure
- The connection between “what you can see today” and “what excavations revealed” at the Presumed First Gate Ruins, stone walls, well remains, and Nobunaga’s residence ruins
- How to adjust your route for rain, the construction period, or winter conditions
- Two model routes: a 1–2 hour summit-only course and a 3–4 hour course starting from the lower slopes
Access
From JR Gifu Station, take a Gifu Bus from platforms 12 or 13; from Meitetsu Gifu Station, use platform 4. Alight at the “Gifu Park / Gifu Castle” stop — it’s about a 1-minute walk from there. The City Loop Left Route and Seiryu Loop buses also provide access. ※ Platform numbers and bus routes are subject to change. Always check the on-site signage on the day of your visit.
The most direct route is to head from the bus stop to the ropeway valley station, ride the ropeway up, and then walk toward the keep from the mountaintop station. The ropeway ride takes about 4 minutes, and the walk from the mountaintop station to the keep is about 8 minutes. For a more leisurely approach, visit the Nobunaga Residence Excavation Information Center, residence ruins, Mitarashi Pond, and Three-Story Pagoda on the lower slopes first, then take the ropeway up. On rainy days, when the stone steps on the upper mountain become slippery, shifting to a lower-slope-focused itinerary is a practical alternative.
Castle Stamps (Goshuin-style)
Gifu Castle’s castle stamps (御城印, gojōin — collectible calligraphic seals unique to each Japanese castle, similar to the temple and shrine stamp tradition) are sold at the Gifu Kinkazan Ropeway valley station gift shop. Standard editions are available year-round. Limited and special editions change with the season, so checking the ropeway’s official announcements before your visit is recommended.




- Three Eras That Unlock How to “Read” Gifu Castle
- Choose Your Route
- Lower Slopes + Summit Route⏱ 3–4 hours (half day)
- Summit-Focused Route⏱ 1–2 hours
- Nobunaga Residence Excavation Information Center
- Oda Nobunaga’s Residence Ruins
- Lord Nobunaga’s Residence Garden
- Mitarashi Pond
- Three-Story Pagoda
- Kabukimon Gate (Entrance to Nobunaga’s Residence Ruins)
- Nobunaga’s Garden
- Tenka Fubu Seal
- “Young Oda Nobunaga” by Kitamura Seibo
- Gifu Castle — Gate of the Realm (Tenka Daiichi no Mon)
- Gifu Castle — Presumed First Gate Ruins (Den Ichi no Mon Ato)
- Gifu Castle — Second Bailey Gate (Ninomaru Mon)
- Gifu Castle — Well Remains (Kinmeisui)
- Gifu Castle Keep (Tenshukaku)
- Gifu Castle Museum
- Stone Walls & Well Ruins
- Excavation Summary
- FAQ
- Related Pages
Three Eras That Unlock How to “Read” Gifu Castle
Before diving into each spot, keeping these three historical periods in mind will dramatically change how you see the ruins.
- The summit was fortified using stone wall techniques similar to those at Ogakujo Castle
- The foundation of the Presumed First Gate was laid during this period
- The origin of the lowland residence also dates to the Saito clan era
- After entering Gifu, Nobunaga upgraded the gate to a tiled-roof structure
- The residence was extensively renovated with gold-foil tiles and a grand garden
- Stone walls and pathways were reconfigured, transforming Gifu into a seat of national power
- A fire broke out during the Battle of Gifu Castle
- Much of the summit was destroyed by the blaze (confirmed by excavation)
- The legend of drowning at Mitarashi Pond also originates from this period
Choose Your Route
Lower Slopes + Summit Route⏱ 3–4 hours (half day)
Summit-Focused Route⏱ 1–2 hours
Nobunaga Residence Excavation Information Center
The essential “primer” before walking the ruins
Strolling through Gifu Park, the stone steps and flat terraces can look like nothing more than ordinary park terrain. This information center changes all of that in an instant.
Inside, the first thing that catches your eye is a large illustration of Nobunaga’s Gifu Castle by artist Gentaro Kagawa — a sweeping bird’s-eye view of the entire castle complex from summit to base, distilling the structures revealed by excavation into a single image. Seeing this before you walk the site, versus not seeing it, makes an enormous difference in what you notice on the ground.
The exhibit panels cover findings from excavation surveys: warring-states-era stone walls confirmed on the north and west faces of the keep platform; large river stones and unglazed earthenware dishes unearthed beside mountaintop pathways (suggesting Nobunaga may have created “spaces for hospitality” even on the summit); and gold-foil roof tiles, boulder rows, and garden remains from the lowland residence. It’s not a flashy exhibition. But spend twenty minutes here before standing on the stone steps of the residence site, and the same ground will look like an entirely different place.
- Excavation “prep work” transforms what you see: Understanding what was found before walking the residence ruins and garden gives meaning to every stone and level change you encounter on the ground.
- Video content for rapid immersion: Overviews of the Japan Heritage designation and excavation findings help “Gifu as Nobunaga’s base” settle naturally in your mind, even in a short visit.
- A shelter on rainy days or scorching summer afternoons: When outdoor walking is tough, start here to absorb the information, then switch to a short outdoor walk — your satisfaction level stays high.

| Established | Unknown (relocated to the Gifu Park Visitor Rest Facility in April 2023) |
|---|---|
| Operator | City of Gifu |
| Admission | Free |
| Staff Hours | 9:00–16:00 (closed Tuesdays — if a national holiday, closed the following day — and Dec. 29–Jan. 3) |
| Location | Inside the Gifu Park Visitor Rest Facility |
| Cultural Property | None (the facility itself) |
- Large bird’s-eye illustration of Gifu Castle by artist Gentaro Kagawa
- Excavation survey panels: upper mountain and lowland sections
- Japan Heritage “Nobunaga’s Hospitality” video content
- Photos and measured drawings of gold-foil tiles and garden remains from the residence
- Historical note: As part of the Gifu Park redevelopment, the center was relocated to its current home inside the Visitor Rest Facility.
- Insider tip: Staff hours are 9:00–16:00; closed Tuesdays (or the next day if Tuesday is a holiday) and New Year’s. Timing your visit to coincide with staffed hours is key.
- Nobunaga connection: Excavation findings have brought the actual form of Nobunaga’s Gifu residence into sharper focus. This center is the fastest route to understanding the historical reality behind the ruins.
Oda Nobunaga’s Residence Ruins
Gold-foil tiles, boulder rows, a garden — “Before Azuchi, there was Gifu”
At the foot of Mount Kinka, along the valley known as Senjojiki, Nobunaga’s residence ruins spread out before you. The site was originally shaped during the Saito clan period, then reportedly transformed through large-scale construction after Nobunaga entered Gifu. Excavations have revealed an entrance marked by a row of standing boulders, buildings that used gold-foil roof tiles, and a garden designed against the backdrop of natural bedrock — evidence that this was not merely a living space but a carefully staged environment for receiving guests and projecting authority.
The visual sensibility that Nobunaga honed in Gifu would go on to inform his later masterwork at Azuchi Castle. Even without any buildings standing, the undulation of the ground and the arrangement of the stones make the spatial intentions of the era surprisingly readable. This is the place where you feel that Azuchi was born from what came before it — right here.
- The boulder row as “staging”: Simply arranging natural stones in a line conjures an aura of power — Nobunaga’s way of making an impression is right there to be read.
- Imagining the scale of the residence from the terrain: Experiencing the topography rather than a floor plan makes the spatial design of the era suddenly vivid.
- Seasonal highlights: Autumn foliage highlights the contours of the ruins and gives photos a sense of “warring-states depth.”

| Year Built | Saito period: unknown / Major renovation by Nobunaga: from 1567 onward |
|---|---|
| Builder | Saito clan (initial construction) / Oda Nobunaga (large-scale renovation) |
| Structure | Boulder-lined entrance, building foundations, garden traces (based on excavation findings) |
| Renovation | Viewing environment developed based on excavation surveys (year unknown) |
| Current Status | Open for on-site viewing as ruins |
| Loss / Damage | Buildings no longer standing (ruins only) |
| Cultural Property | National Historic Site |
| Notes | Within Gifu Park (Senjojiki / Tsukitani area) |
| What You See Today | What Excavations Revealed |
|---|---|
| Boulder row (entrance area) | Possibly arranged deliberately as a display of authority |
| Ground undulations and level changes | Multiple terraces built with three types of stone arrangements confirmed |
| (Difficult to see on-site) | Gold-foil roof tiles unearthed — evidence of lavish Nobunaga-era buildings |
- Historical note: Gold-foil roof tiles from the Nobunaga-era residence have been confirmed, showing that the idea of “grandeur as politics” was already in motion in Gifu.
- Insider tip: The real attraction is “the absence of buildings.” A warring-states space that speaks only through stone and topography fires the imagination more intensely than any reconstruction.
- Nobunaga connection: The protagonist is, of course, Oda Nobunaga. His work on the residence in Gifu was the artistic warm-up for the aesthetic that would culminate at Azuchi.
Lord Nobunaga’s Residence Garden
Using bedrock as a backdrop — “Not commanding nature, but making nature the stage set”
Excavation findings from around Nobunaga’s residence suggest that there may have been a garden-like space incorporating large rock formations and the natural terrain. On-site, rather than looking for a neatly preserved garden, it is easier to approach the space by reading the composition through the topography, stone arrangements, and level changes. There is speculation that the design was intended with visitors in mind, but what you see today is primarily ruins — not a restoration of the original landscape.
- The idea of using bedrock as “borrowed scenery”: Not commanding nature, but making nature the stage set — a very Nobunaga kind of aesthetic.
- The movement created by stone and level changes: The height differences you discover only by walking prompt you to imagine the “viewing route” that was intended at the time.
- Photography tip: Shooting with more distance helps convey the spatial intent. Getting too close makes it hard to grasp the full picture.

| Year Built | Estimated from 1567 onward / Restoration development: unknown |
|---|---|
| Builder | Oda Nobunaga (as part of the residence complex development) |
| Structure | Garden concept incorporating bedrock, stone arrangements, and natural terrain (based on excavation findings) |
| Current Status | Garden ruins visible on-site |
| Loss / Damage | Original garden no longer surviving (ruins only) |
| Cultural Property | National Historic Site (within the designated area of Gifu Castle ruins) |
| Notes | Treated as garden-related ruins within the “Oda Nobunaga Residence Ruins” area |
- Historical note: The garden may have functioned not merely as a space for aesthetic appreciation, but as a political space designed for receiving guests.
- Nobunaga connection: A place to imagine the “core” of the residential culture that Oda Nobunaga built in Gifu.
Mitarashi Pond
Where “sacred memory” predating the castle and a 1600 fall-of-the-castle legend converge at the water’s edge
In the northeast corner of Gifu Park, in a quiet nook where the shadows of the trees fall across the water’s surface, lies Mitarashi Pond. The name comes from a time when Inaba Shrine stood on nearby Maruyama hill and worshippers would wash their hands (temizu, a Shinto purification ritual performed with water before entering a shrine) here before entering the shrine grounds. In other words, the place name carries a memory of this as a sacred space of prayer, predating the castle itself.
Layered over the pond is a legend from the final chapter of Japan’s warring states era. On-site signage describes a tradition that when Gifu Castle fell in 1600 — during the battle preceding Sekigahara, when Nobunaga’s grandson Oda Hidenobu was defeated as castle lord — people within the castle threw themselves into this pond. Reading the distinction between historically verified facts and legends passed down through the generations adds a different kind of depth to the pond’s quiet scenery. The “upswing” of Nobunaga building Gifu’s power and the “downswing” of the Oda clan’s fate converge at this single spot at the base of the same mountain.
- The waterside scenery set against the rock face: The dramatic rocky cliffs of Mount Kinka paired with the still water surface leave a strong impression — you can physically sense the natural terrain of the castle town.
- The waterfall point: The sound of water dropping from the rock face into the pond cuts you off from the bustle of the park — a restorative stretch of the walk.
- Seasonal highlights: In autumn, the foliage reflects in the water’s surface and photos take on real depth.
🗺 Address: 〒500-8002 385-4 Mitarashi, Gifu City, Gifu Prefecture Nearest: 3-minute walk from the ropeway valley station

| Year Built | Unknown (origin of the pond is unknown) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Unknown |
| Structure | Pond within Gifu Park / Name derives from the “temizu” (ritual hand-washing) practice associated with Inaba Shrine / Rocky banks with a waterfall |
| Renovation | 1987 (Showa 62): pond bottom excavation — no castle-related artifacts found / 2021 (Reiwa 3): pond renovation and barrier-free path improvements |
| Cultural Property | Unknown (no confirmed designation for the pond itself) |
| Notes | The story of people throwing themselves into the pond at the fall of Gifu Castle is a legend (introduced in on-site signage) |
- Historical note: The name “Mitarashi” derives from the practice of washing one’s hands here before ascending to Inaba Shrine, which once stood on Maruyama hill.
- Insider tip: An excavation of the pond bottom was carried out in 1987, but no castle-related artifacts were found.
- Nobunaga connection: Tradition holds that when Nobunaga’s grandson Oda Hidenobu was defeated as Gifu Castle lord in 1600, people inside the castle threw themselves into this pond — a place where the rise and fall of the Oda clan is felt at the water’s edge.
Three-Story Pagoda
Built in 1917, designed by Ito Chuta — modern-era “beauty” layered onto a national historic site
Walking through Gifu Park, your eye is suddenly caught by a flash of vermilion — the Three-Story Pagoda. It was built in 1917 as a commemorative project for the enthronement of Emperor Taisho, funded through public donations solicited by the City of Gifu. Its designer was Ito Chuta, a renowned architect who also worked on Meiji Jingu Shrine and Tsukiji Honganji Temple in Tokyo. The restrained, classically inspired design highlights the elegant proportions of the wooden structure, and the vermilion stands out vividly among the seasonal greenery and autumn foliage of the mountain slopes.
Among Gifu Park’s many Nobunaga-related spots, this pagoda stands apart as something built by the citizens of modern Gifu. The pagoda grounds, and indeed the entire Mount Kinka area, fall within the nationally designated historic site of “Gifu Castle Ruins.” It is a landmark where modern Gifu has layered “celebration” and “beauty” onto a place that still carries the air of Nobunaga’s castle town.
- The contrast of vermilion against green: The red stands out brilliantly among the foothill trees of Mount Kinka — a landmark that photographs well in both sun and cloud.
- Ito Chuta’s “classically restrained design”: The appeal lies in its spare elegance — a modern design that carries the dignity of traditional architecture.
- Autumn is especially recommended: During the foliage season, the vermilion of the pagoda appears even deeper, and photo satisfaction jumps noticeably.

| Year Built | 1917 (Taisho 6) |
|---|---|
| Builder | City of Gifu (commemorative project for the imperial enthronement, funded by citizen donations) |
| Structure | Wooden, three-bay three-story pagoda, tiled roof / Total height: 22.168 m / Tower construction with suspended central pillar |
| Designer | Ito Chuta (also designed Meiji Jingu Shrine and Tsukiji Honganji Temple) |
| Cultural Property | Nationally Registered Tangible Cultural Property (building) |
| Notes | The entire Mount Kinka area (including the pagoda grounds) falls within the nationally designated historic site “Gifu Castle Ruins” |
- Historical note: This is a rare example of a “three-story pagoda built by the city” as a commemorative project, rather than as a temple structure.
- Insider tip: Total height is 22.168 m. Set on a mountain slope, it feels considerably larger than its measurements suggest when viewed from below.
- Nobunaga connection: While not from Nobunaga’s era, it stands within the nationally designated historic site “Gifu Castle Ruins” and can be enjoyed as part of the scenery of Nobunaga’s stronghold.
Kabukimon Gate (Entrance to Nobunaga’s Residence Ruins)
Switching into “historic site mode” at the entrance
Walking through Gifu Park, you come upon the gate marking the entrance to the residence ruins area. This kabukimon (crossbeam gate — a simple Japanese gate style consisting of two pillars connected by a horizontal beam) has less the grandeur of a great castle gate and more the organic quality of timber merging with nature — a quiet, wooden announcement that “beyond this point, human life was once dense and active.”
The gate itself is not a warring-states-era ruin; it was installed in the modern era to evoke the atmosphere of the past. Even so, simply passing through it and climbing the stone steps naturally shifts something in you. A perfect place to pause at as an entrance before walking the residence ruins.
- The moment of “switching modes” as you pass through: A shift from the easy atmosphere of park strolling into “historic site mode” — the switch is immediate.
- The composition of stone steps and gate: Shooting from the front, the stone steps stretching beyond the gate create a satisfying sense of depth.
- Not the same as the mountaintop gate: The mountaintop “Gate of the Realm” (Tenka Daiichi no Mon) also uses the term “kabukimon” — take care not to confuse the two.

| Year Built | Unknown (modern installation) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Unknown |
| Structure | Entrance gate before the stone steps leading to Nobunaga’s residence ruins / Installed to “evoke the atmosphere of the era when the residence stood” |
| Cultural Property | None (no confirmed designation for the gate itself) |
| Notes | A separate kabukimon called “Gate of the Realm” (Tenka Daiichi no Mon) exists on the mountaintop side (different location) |
- Historical note: Not a warring-states-era ruin; described as having been installed to “evoke the atmosphere” of the era when the residence stood.
- Insider tip: The gate is sometimes illuminated for evening events, suggesting that modern Gifu carries forward the “power to display and impress” that defined Nobunaga’s era.
- Nobunaga connection: Beyond the gate lies the area of the residence that Nobunaga built in Gifu. Excavation surveys have confirmed garden ruins and other features.
Nobunaga’s Garden
After seeing the “reality” of the ruins, see the “interpretation”
Nobunaga’s Garden is not a historical reconstruction but a modern garden inspired by the warring states era. Official city guides describe it as a landscape using enormous stones from along the Nagara River (approximately 1,000 tonnes in total), composed around three waterfalls and a pond representing “strength,” “stillness,” and “elegance.” Visiting here after the residence ruins makes it easy to appreciate the contrast between the image of Nobunaga that emerges from excavation and the image of Nobunaga that modern landscape design has created.
Coming from the ruins to this garden gives you a clear sense of how present-day Gifu interprets Nobunaga — and that in itself is worth the detour.
- Three waterfalls — “strength, stillness, elegance”: The same water sounds differently in each section, letting you feel Nobunaga’s many dimensions through the garden.
- The “warring-states pressure” of massive stone: Plants are not the protagonists here — stone is. The force that comes at you from the ground is distinctive.
- Early summer is especially beautiful: Fresh greenery, water surface reflections, and the sound of cascading water combine to create a “cool retreat” in the garden.

| Year Built | 2001 |
|---|---|
| Builder | Unknown |
| Structure | “Strength,” “stillness,” “elegance” — three waterfalls and a pond / Stone garden using large boulders (approx. 1,000 tonnes total) |
| Cultural Property | None |
| Notes | Within Gifu Park (near the ropeway boarding area) |
- Historical note: Not a historical reconstruction; a modern garden expressing “the image of Nobunaga’s era” through landscape design.
- Insider tip: Walking from the ruins (residence site) to the modern garden in sequence gives you a three-dimensional sense of Gifu’s relationship with Nobunaga.
Tenka Fubu Seal
Treading on Nobunaga’s rallying cry underfoot
The “Tenka Fubu Seal” is best understood as a design element within Gifu Park that visually expresses “Tenka Fubu” — the political slogan meaning “rule the realm by military force” that Nobunaga famously adopted after making Gifu his base. This is not an exhibition of the actual historical seal artifact; it is a scenic feature designed into the pavement and signage around Nobunaga’s Garden as part of the Gifu Park redevelopment, intended to keep Nobunaga’s connection to Gifu in mind while strolling.
- Treading on “Tenka Fubu” underfoot: Not a castle you look up at, but a rallying cry you step on. A physical experience that stays with you.
- A photo opportunity: Snapping this mid-Nobunaga-tour works as a travel marker that pays off later when reviewing your photos.

| Year Built | Unknown |
|---|---|
| Structure | Pavement design based on “Tenka Fubu” (monument-style element) |
| Cultural Property | None |
| Notes | Currently designed into the pavement and signage area around Nobunaga’s Garden, following the Gifu Park redevelopment |
- Historical note: “Tenka Fubu” is Nobunaga’s political slogan — tightly linked to Gifu as the place from which it was proclaimed.
- Insider tip: Finding it along the route to the castle adds a treasure-hunt quality that makes the walk more enjoyable.
“Young Oda Nobunaga” by Kitamura Seibo
With Gifu Castle as the backdrop, a “charging toward the realm” photo practically composes itself
Standing before the main gate of Gifu Park is a bronze statue capturing the instant of a young Nobunaga on horseback, bow drawn, caught mid-gallop. The sculptor is Kitamura Seibo, also known for the Peace Statue in Nagasaki — one of Japan’s most recognized public sculptures. The statue was donated to the City of Gifu in 1988 as part of the centennial celebrations of Gifu’s city charter, then relocated to its present position in front of the main gate in 2009.
It is not a historic site in itself, but standing here, with the ridgeline of Mount Kinka and Gifu Castle visible beyond, you can capture in both photos and physical experience the atmosphere of Nobunaga fixing his gaze on “the realm” from this very ground. An easy and iconic photo stop to include at the start of any visit.
- The dynamic form of the equestrian statue: The torso drawing the bow and the surging body of the horse flow together as one, visually capturing Nobunaga’s “forward speed.”
- Photographing with Gifu Castle as the backdrop: Adjusting your position slightly lets you frame the statue “charging toward the realm” with Mount Kinka and Gifu Castle behind it.
- Spring and autumn are especially recommended: Cherry blossoms and foliage provide color that sets off the statue’s silhouette beautifully.

| Year Created | 1988 (Showa 63) |
|---|---|
| Creator | Kitamura Seibo (sculptor of the Nagasaki Peace Statue) |
| History | Donated to Gifu City for the city’s 100th anniversary. Relocated to the Gifu Park main gate in 2009. |
| Cultural Property | Unknown (no confirmed designation for the statue itself) |
| Notes | Similar equestrian statues attributed to the same sculptor and title exist at various locations. Whether they share the same original casting varies by source. |
- Historical note: Not a warring-states-era creation; it was born from the 1988 centennial anniversary of Gifu’s city charter — a piece of “modern Nobunaga legacy.”
- Insider tip: Relocated to the front of Gifu Park’s main gate in 2009, bringing it to its current arrangement where Gifu Castle is visible in the background.
- Nobunaga connection: Sculptor Kitamura Seibo is recognized as one of Japan’s leading artists, widely known as the creator of the Nagasaki Peace Statue.
Gifu Castle — Gate of the Realm (Tenka Daiichi no Mon)
The entrance marker for the summit trail. Not a warring-states ruin.
On the path from the ropeway mountaintop station toward the keep, you pass through the “Gate of the Realm” (Tenka Daiichi no Mon). This is not a reconstruction of an actual warring-states-era gate; it is a symbolic kabukimon erected to evoke the imagery of Gifu Castle and Oda Nobunaga. With that in mind, it serves as a natural entrance marker for the mountaintop walking trail.
- A gate that puts you in a “entering the castle” mindset: It’s a natural pause point that shifts your focus from rushing toward the keep to a more thoughtful historical walk.
- Simple timber construction: Unfussy and in harmony with the mountain scenery. Shooting straight on captures a satisfying sense of depth along the path.
- Fresh greenery and autumn foliage are especially photogenic: The wooden gate blends beautifully into the landscape, and the trail beyond it becomes a lovely composition.

| Year Built | Unknown (not a warring-states structure; modern installation) |
|---|---|
| Builder | City of Gifu (commemorative/symbolic kabukimon) |
| Structure | Kabukimon (crossbeam gate) / Symbolizes the “entrance” near the old main approach and Third Bailey area / Named in reference to “tenka” (the realm) |
| Cultural Property | Unknown (no confirmed designation for the gate itself) |
| Notes | First gate encountered on the path from the ropeway mountaintop station to the keep. Different from the kabukimon at the lower-slope residence ruins entrance. |
- Historical note: Local guides describe it as a commemorative kabukimon installed by the City of Gifu to honor Nobunaga’s grand ambitions — not the site of an actual warring-states-era gate.
- Insider tip: Positioned near the old main approach and Third Bailey, it serves as the first gate on the path from the mountaintop station to the keep.
- Nobunaga connection: The name draws on the word “tenka” (the realm), a term Nobunaga famously embraced, symbolizing Gifu Castle as the launching point of his bid for national unification.
Gifu Castle — Presumed First Gate Ruins (Den Ichi no Mon Ato)
Saito Dosan’s engineering, Nobunaga’s upgrades, the fire of Sekigahara — three eras compressed into one spot
Step off the ropeway at the mountaintop station and start walking toward the keep — almost immediately, you encounter the “Presumed First Gate Ruins.” What you see today are boulder stone walls, a raised section of bedrock that was deliberately left in place, and a pathway that bends to the left. This was the entrance to the inner citadel (the upper castle), designed to prevent straight-line passage and control both the movement and sightlines of anyone entering — a classic mountain castle checkpoint, as described in City of Gifu excavation materials.
What makes this spot especially compelling is its layered history. The January 2026 survey findings confirmed the northern edge of a vertical moat on the north side of the First Gate, and combined with the southern edge identified the previous year, a vertical moat approximately 8.5 meters wide has been definitively established. This adds to the understanding of peripheral defenses and underscores the gate’s critical importance as the entrance to the upper castle. Tool marks on the bedrock suggest possible post-hole traces where gate pillars once stood; burnt wall plaster and roof tiles point to a Nobunaga-era upgrade to a tiled-roof gate, followed by destruction in the 1600 battle. Before rushing to the keep, pause here. Stone and bedrock alone tell you more about the castle’s intentions than you might expect.
- A bent pathway carved through the bedrock: By preventing straight-line passage, the design stripped intruders of both speed and sightlines — mountain castle defensive thinking you can feel with your body.
- The commanding presence of the boulder stone walls: Large boulders lined up beside the gate projected authority. The sheer size of the stones conveys exactly how power was displayed in that era.
- Winter is ideal for ruin observation: Undergrowth falls away, making the rock surfaces and stonework easy to see. In summer, the shade is dense and the walk is pleasantly cool.

| Year Built | First half of the 16th century (identified as Saito Dosan period through City of Gifu excavation surveys) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Saito Dosan (based on City of Gifu survey findings) |
| Structure | Stone walls and boulders arranged around raised bedrock; a bent pathway controlled movement / Boulder arrangement conveyed authority |
| Renovation | Possibly upgraded to a tiled-roof gate after Nobunaga’s entry in 1567, based on excavated artifacts / Structure confirmed in FY2020 excavation |
| Current Status | Partially surviving as ruins (stone walls, boulders, etc.) |
| Loss / Damage | Likely burned and collapsed during the pre-Sekigahara battle fire in 1600, based on survey findings |
| Cultural Property | National Historic Site |
| Notes | On-site signage identifies this as “Ichi no Mon” (First Gate) based on Edo-period maps and records |
| What You See Today | What Excavations Revealed |
|---|---|
| Straight tool marks on bedrock (multiple) | Possible traces of gate pillar post-holes |
| Bent pathway with undulating terrain | Confirmed as a defensive design to strip intruders of speed and sightlines |
| Boulder stone walls | Techniques related to those used at Ogakujo Castle (Yamagata City); attributed to the Saito Dosan period |
| (Difficult to see on-site) | Burnt wall plaster and roof tiles unearthed — evidence of Nobunaga-era tiled-roof upgrade and 1600 fire damage |
- Historical note: Excavation findings indicate the gate was likely built by Saito Dosan using techniques related to those at Ogakujo Castle (Yamagata City).
- Insider tip: Multiple straight tool marks in the bedrock have been confirmed, possibly traces of where gate pillars once stood.
- Nobunaga connection: After Nobunaga entered Gifu in 1567, the gate was likely upgraded to a tiled-roof structure — a sign that Nobunaga’s “upgrading of the castle’s status” is physically inscribed here.
Gifu Castle — Second Bailey Gate (Ninomaru Mon)
A concrete structure built as a tourist facility. Not a warring-states ruin — keep that in mind as you pass through.
On the summit of Mount Kinka, there is a point where the flow of visitors heading toward the keep naturally falls into single file — that is the Second Bailey Gate. According to City of Gifu materials, this is a concrete structure installed as a tourist facility in the modern era, apparently following the 1973 NHK taiga drama broadcast. It was not built to reconstruct the position or form of a warring-states-era gate.
It is best understood not as a historical ruin, but as a landmark and atmospheric feature along the walking trail. That said, it does give you the feeling of “passing through a gate into an enclosure” — the castle’s layered structure of defensive tiers.
- The feeling of “entering a castle enclosure”: It gives you a moment to collect yourself before pressing on to the keep, instilling a sense of “moving deeper into the castle.”
- Understanding the second bailey’s position: As the enclosure directly supporting the main bailey below the keep platform, this is a useful waypoint for visualizing the three-dimensional layout of the castle.

| Year Built | Unknown (City of Gifu materials note it was installed as a tourist facility, apparently following the 1973 NHK taiga drama broadcast) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Unknown (installed as part of the upper-mountain tourist facilities) |
| Structure | Concrete gate (upper mountain section) / Installed as a passageway into the second bailey |
| Cultural Property | Unknown (no confirmed designation for the gate itself) |
| Notes | Materials note that this facility gate was erected without undergoing historical research or verification |
- Historical note: City of Gifu materials describe it as a concrete structure built as a modern tourist facility, not a historical reconstruction.
- Insider tip: The same materials note that gates, walls, and other castle structures installed here were erected without the benefit of historical research or verification.
Gifu Castle — Well Remains (Kinmeisui)
“A well that doesn’t spring” reveals the harsh reality of mountain castle life — the polar opposite of the keep’s grandeur
Walking the summit of Gifu Castle, you come across something that stands in stark contrast to the keep’s grandeur — a raw, practical reality. That is “Kinmeisui” (Golden Clear Water), traditionally described as a military well. Mount Kinka is essentially a solid mass of rock, with almost no natural spring water to speak of, making drinking water the greatest vulnerability of any siege defense. Someone took the effort to dig down through rock to create a device for capturing rainwater and the faint seepage from cracks in the stone.
It sits slightly off the main path to the keep, but it is worth the detour for what it reveals about the castle’s practical side. The fact that water comes up before stone walls and gates in any discussion of this castle says a great deal about the harsh reality of life in a mountain fortress.
- “A well that doesn’t spring” — warring-states reality: The very concept of collecting rainwater and rock seepage, rather than tapping groundwater, speaks volumes about the harsh conditions of mountain castle life.
- A “logistics” perspective in the shadow of the keep: This shifts your gaze from the castle’s scenic grandeur to its functional, practical side — and suddenly Nobunaga’s operational thinking comes vividly to mind.
- After rain, its purpose becomes intuitive: The well’s role as a water storage facility becomes self-evident in wet weather. The site takes on a different character — watch your footing.

| Year Built | Unknown (said to have been dug during the warring states period for siege use) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Unknown |
| Structure | A well designed to collect rainwater and moisture seeping through rock (effectively a water storage facility) / Located on the west side of the second bailey |
| Cultural Property | National Historic Site (within the designated area of Gifu Castle ruins) |
| Notes | Signage notes four wells total on the upper mountain: multiple on the west side and one on the east side of the second bailey; Kinmeisui is one of these |
- Historical note: The City of Gifu explains that because Mount Kinka is a rocky mass, spring water was essentially unavailable, making securing drinking water for a siege “extremely difficult.”
- Insider tip: Signage indicates multiple wells on the west side of the second bailey and one on the east side. Kinmeisui is introduced as one of these.
- Nobunaga connection: When Nobunaga elevated Gifu Castle to his base for national conquest, the castle needed genuine staying power for a siege — not just impressive looks. Kinmeisui represents the ingenuity behind that effort.
Gifu Castle Keep (Tenshukaku)
A 1956 reconstruction. The Nobi Plain below answers “why Nobunaga chose this mountain”
The current Gifu Castle Keep is a reconstruction rebuilt in 1956. It is not the warring-states-era building itself, but the observation deck offers a panoramic view of the Nagara River and the vast Nobi Plain that makes it instantly clear why this location was strategically vital. Why Nobunaga chose this mountain — you understand without being told.
⚠️ The keep is scheduled to close from May 19, 2026 through late October 2027. If visiting in the first half of 2026, note that it takes about 8 minutes to walk from the ropeway mountaintop station to the keep — aim to arrive at the mountaintop station at least 15 minutes before the last admission time. Interior highlights include a replica of the Rakuichi-Rakuza free-market decree placard (a famous deregulation edict — think of it as Nobunaga’s version of a free-trade zone, centuries before the concept existed in the West). An exhibit on Portuguese missionary Luis Frois’s 1569 visit to Gifu Castle presents his eight-day stay documented day by day.
- 360-degree panorama from the keep: The Nagara River and Nobi Plain in full view. The reason Nobunaga “made the terrain his ally” becomes legible from the view itself.
- The mountain castle’s approach (gate ruins, stone walls, and well): Ruins are scattered along the path from the mountaintop station to the keep, making it clear that Gifu Castle was protected by “systems,” not just scenery.
- “Gifu Castle Panorama Night View”: A limited-period evening event where you can experience the sky shifting from dusk to darkness over the realm. (Check official sources for event dates.)

| Year Built | Traditionally: Kennin era (1201–1204) / Nobunaga’s period: from 1567 / Current keep: rebuilt 1956 (Showa 31) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Traditionally: Nikaido Yukimasa (various theories) / Warring-states: Saito clan → Oda Nobunaga |
| Renovation | 1910 (Meiji 43): replica keep → 1943 (Showa 18): destroyed by fire → 1956 (Showa 31): current reconstructed keep |
| Cultural Property | National Historic Site “Gifu Castle Ruins” (within designated area) |
| Last Entry | May 18, 2026 |
| Closure Period | May 19, 2026 – late October 2027 (seismic retrofitting) / Reopening: November 2027 (planned) |
- Two suits of armor reconstructed in 2017 (green-and-gold warring-states armor / Southern Barbarian armor with velvet mantle)
- Rakuichi-Rakuza free-market decree placard (reproduction)
- Luis Frois’s 1569 Gifu Castle visit record (eight-day stay documented day by day)
- Origin of the place name “Gifu” (from Mount Qi + Qufu — a reference from Chinese classical history combining the birthplace of the Zhou dynasty’s rise with the birthplace of Confucius)
- NHK taiga drama “Nobunaga: KING OF ZIPANGU” (1992) — uchikake robe worn by Momoko Kikuchi as Lady No
- 360-degree panorama (Nagara River and Nobi Plain)
- Historical note: The current keep is a 1956 reconstruction — the warring-states-era keep itself no longer stands.
- Insider tip: It’s an 8-minute walk from the mountaintop station to the keep. Arriving close to closing time risks not making it — build in a buffer.
Gifu Castle Museum
If the keep delivers “awe,” the museum delivers “understanding.” A window into the castle’s inner workings.
Along the path to the keep, there is another face of the castle waiting to be discovered — the Gifu Castle Museum. Built in 1975 as a recreation of the old armory and granary in a corner-turret castle style, if the keep is the “castle as spectacle,” this building lets you imagine the castle’s behind-the-scenes reality.
At the entrance, a life-size figure of Nobunaga in a red mantle greets you, accompanied by the words “Return to Mino as many times as you like” — reportedly what Nobunaga said to the Portuguese missionary Frois at their parting. Inside, exhibits related to the 2020 NHK taiga drama “Kirin ga Kuru” include costumes worn by Masahiro Motoki (as Saito Dosan), Hiroki Hasegawa (as Akechi Mitsuhide), and Shota Sometani (as Nobunaga). Note: March 31, 2026 is the last day of admission, so plan your visit accordingly. It takes both the keep and the museum together to feel like you’ve truly seen Gifu Castle.
- Corner-turret castle-style exterior: White walls and tiled roof set against the mountain scenery — a different kind of castle charm from the keep itself.
- Exhibits that deepen your understanding: If the keep delivers “awe,” the museum delivers “understanding.” It takes your reading of the castle one level deeper.
- Tickets are purchased at the keep: Not sold at the museum itself — worth remembering to avoid confusion.

| Year Built | April 1975 (Showa 50) |
|---|---|
| Structure | Recreation of the old armory and granary in “corner-turret castle style” |
| Admission | Shared with Gifu Castle Keep. Not sold at the museum (purchase at the keep). |
| Last Entry | March 31, 2026 |
| Closure Period | April 1, 2026 – late October 2027 (seismic retrofitting) |
| Cultural Property | None (the building itself) |
- Life-size Nobunaga figure (red mantle) / “Return to Mino as many times as you like”
- Taiga drama “Kirin ga Kuru” (2020) costumes: Masahiro Motoki (Saito Dosan — black-laced ridge helmet), Hiroki Hasegawa (Akechi Mitsuhide), Shota Sometani (Nobunaga)
- Portrait paintings of Nobunaga and Dosan by Tsuyoshi Nagano (illustrator of the “Nobunaga’s Ambition” game series)
- Historical note: City of Gifu materials describe it as a building modeled on the old armory and granary, reconstructed in corner-turret castle style in April 1975.
- Insider tip: Museum tickets are purchased at the keep, not at the museum itself — a common source of confusion.
Stone Walls & Well Ruins
A valley turned into a passageway through civil engineering — and the logistical backbone of the castle
On the upper section of Gifu Castle, there is a spot where you want to set aside the keep’s photogenic appeal and simply walk. That spot is the “Stone Walls & Well Ruins.” Originally a deep valley formed by natural topography, both sides were faced with stone walls to convert it into a proper passageway — a functional route within the castle. The point of interest is less “stone for stone’s sake” and more the act of reading the terrain, cutting into it, and stacking stone to turn it into a usable path.
City of Gifu surveys have identified stone walls here with relatively large stones and carefully packed filler stones between them — characteristics shared with the stone walls at Nobunaga’s lowland residence. This makes the area a useful section for thinking about Nobunaga-era renovations when examining the mountaintop stone walls. The well ruins further along serve as another reminder that water was the mountain castle’s most critical practical concern.
- The “valley passageway” created by retaining stone walls: Rather than leaving the natural terrain as-is, both sides were faced with stone and turned into a route — the practical intelligence of mountain castle operations.
- The well ruins as the core of logistics: Water-securing ruins right beside the magnificent keep. Here you feel that a castle’s strength was decided by its basic infrastructure.
- Winter is best for observation: Undergrowth clears and the stonework becomes easy to see — ideal for close ruin observation.

| Year Built | Unknown (warring-states period; some sections likely post-Nobunaga entry) |
|---|---|
| Builder | Unknown (part of the warring-states-era development of Gifu Castle) |
| Structure | Valley terrain faced on both sides with stone walls to create a passageway / Considered one of the better-preserved stone wall sections / Well ruins for rainwater storage |
| Current Status | Surviving as ruins (open for viewing) |
| Loss / Damage | Unknown (many sections said to have collapsed due to intentional dismantling and weathering) |
| Cultural Property | National Historic Site |
| Notes | On-site signage explains the sequence: “natural valley terrain → retaining stone walls → conversion to pathway” and the “water storage well” |
| What You See Today | What Excavations Revealed |
|---|---|
| Retaining stone walls | Stone shape and stacking method in some examples classified as “post-Nobunaga entry” |
| Depression beyond the stone walls (well ruins) | Described as a water storage facility for collecting rainwater and rock seepage — not a spring |
- Historical note: Stone shape and stacking characteristics have led some examples to be classified as “post-Nobunaga entry” — supporting evidence for Nobunaga-era renovations.
- Insider tip: This location is known as a spot where “stone walls survive well,” and the view of the stone walls and keep framed from the well ruins is quietly popular.
- Nobunaga connection: In the era when Nobunaga established Gifu as his base, the castle had to be both a venue for display and a practical installation capable of surviving a prolonged siege.
Excavation Summary
A consolidated reference table of the excavation findings scattered across the individual spot descriptions, designed to provide an overview of the castle’s evolution.
| Excavation Site | Key Findings | Period Attribution |
|---|---|---|
| Presumed First Gate Ruins | Bent pathway structure, boulder stone walls, bedrock tool marks, burnt wall plaster and roof tiles | Saito period → Nobunaga-era upgrade → fire damage in 1600 |
| Keep Platform (north & west faces) | Warring-states-era stone walls confirmed | Nobunaga period |
| Mountaintop pathway margins | Large quantities of river stones and unglazed earthenware dishes (suggesting hospitality spaces) | Nobunaga period |
| Residence Ruins (lower slopes) | Gold-foil roof tiles, boulder rows, multiple terraces built with three stone types, garden-like spaces | Nobunaga period (from 1567 onward) |
| Stone Walls & Well Ruins (summit pathway) | Valley terrain faced with stone to create passageway. Examples classified as “post-Nobunaga entry” | Nobunaga period |
| Mitarashi Pond bottom | 1987 survey. No castle-related artifacts found | — |
Sources: City of Gifu excavation survey findings (Gifu Castle ruins — upper mountain and lower slope sections) / On-site signage / Nobunaga Residence Excavation Information Center exhibits
FAQ
※ This article is based on information available as of March 2026. Opening hours, admission fees, closure dates, and construction schedules are subject to change. Please check the City of Gifu official website and the latest information from each facility before your visit.
※ Descriptions of excavation findings are based on City of Gifu excavation survey results, on-site signage, and exhibits at the Nobunaga Residence Excavation Information Center. As surveys are ongoing, future findings may lead to updates.


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