- This is Fuchu-shi.
- There is a mystery forest here.
- Is that a park?
- Barbed wire.
- Is there the entrance?
- What is in this?
- Look. The horizontal bar which was rusted.
- Street lamp?
- The buildings look.
- Who lives in that?
- The ruins?
- The signs say Keep out.
- State land?
- That was the Imperial Japanese Army's base in old days.
- It became the U.S. Air Force Base from 1945.
- I don't see the airplane.
- It is the Communication base station.
- Look at that big antenna.
- Is it rusted?
- They communicated with U.S. Air Force Base in Southeast Asia.
- Does it still work?
- It does not work anymore.
- U.S. Air Force?
- Where did they go to?
- They moved to Yokota base.
- This place was returned to Japan after the moved.
- It is in 1986.
- Is there nobody now?
- The U.S. Air Force manage only one place.
- That steel tower.
- What is that?
- That is a Microwave communication tower.
- Microwave?
- Who cooks?
- A flat joke.
- My talk is over.
- Next is me. I can talk about Kichijoji.
Related spot
- Hikarigaoka Park
Here became the US Armed Forces territory in 1945. They called here Grant Heights. - Yokota Air Base
Why is this name Yokota base camp? USA didn't know the name of this place in The Pacific War. - Washington Heights
GHQ demanded that Japan built the house of 20000 U.S. soldiers family. Japan built 827 houses in Yoyogi. - Akasaka Press Center
There is a heliport of U.S. Armed Forces in Aoyama park. There is Press Center beside it.