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Shirabiso Highland, Japan — Zero Streetlights at 1,918 Meters in the Southern Alps

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Overview

Shirabiso Highland (しらびそ高原) clings to the western flank of the Southern Alps in Iida City, Nagano Prefecture, at an elevation of 1,918 m. There are zero streetlights in the area — not one — making it one of the darkest observing sites in Japan and something of a sacred destination among serious amateur astronomers.

The skyline is dominated by the peaks of Mt. Hijiri, Mt. Hikari, and the Central Alps ridge, producing that rare fusion of dramatic mountain scenery and extreme darkness.

Observing Conditions

The darkness here is remarkable. Even before your eyes adjust after switching off your car headlights, the sheer number of stars visible is startling. On ideal nights the sky reaches Bortle Class 1, and phenomena like the zodiacal light and gegenschein — rarely seen anywhere — have been reported here. The Milky Way looks three-dimensional, and dark nebulae are traceable by eye along its length.

Facilities

"Highland Shirabiso" is a lodge on the plateau offering accommodation and a restaurant. After dinner, you simply walk outside into world-class darkness. A wide parking area and viewing platform face the Southern Alps, providing an unobstructed southern sky — and a killer foreground for astrophotography.

Access and Warnings

About 90 minutes by car from the Iida IC on the Chuo Expressway via winding mountain roads. Plan to arrive before dark on your first visit — the route has narrow stretches that are genuinely challenging to navigate at night without prior knowledge.

Temperatures can drop near 0 °C even in summer. A heavy down jacket and gloves are non-negotiable. Mobile phone reception is patchy along much of the route, so download offline maps before you leave.

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