Koban 交番
A permanent fixture on the streets of Japan, Koban or police boxes, are there to help bring order to their designated neighborhood as well as help lost tourists.
Japan's Police Boxes
One readily recognizable feature of Japan's streetscape are its police boxes or koban (交番), sometimes known as poliboxes. Koban are often located near Japan's train stations on main shopping streets as well as close to important government buildings.
There are now approximately 6,509 koban (police boxes) throughout Japan (2004 figures). Koban began as small shelters for Tokyo's fledgling police service in the 1880's back in the modernizing Meiji Period of Japan's history.
Nowadays Japan's koban are often known for their quirky styles of architecture: there are koban with owls on their roof, the roof as a spire and koban painted in Mediterranean colors.
Sometimes koban are designed to mirror architectural styles found in a town as in the koban.
History of Koban
One of the newly modernized Japan's government advisors, a German named William Hoehn, oversaw a massive increase in the number of local police stations from 1,560 in 1880 to 12,832 in 1890 - an important part of the early Meiji oligarchy's firmer hold over the newly reforged nation.
The contemporary Japanese police service originated in 1874 when the new Meiji government established a centralized European-style police force to reinforce its authority over the country.
During the Edo Period (1603-1867) a samurai police force handled outbreaks of civil disorder and crime in the large cities of Edo (Tokyo), Osaka, Kyoto and other castle towns.
Koban are supposedly manned around the clock, though it is not uncommon to see the smaller koban left vacant.
Koban Counter Street Crime
Koban has been touted as the answer to rising street crime in several countries, and police forces from the UK and USA have had a look at the koban system.
The koban system has been adopted to a certain extent in some other countries namely Brazil, Fiji, Mongolia and Singapore.
Koban are often located near stations, banks and busy entertainment areas and are supposed to act as a community policing center: a deterrent to criminal activity as well as providing a rapid response post in the case of actual wrongdoing.
More often koban are used by the public to ask directions, find street addresses (the police have excellent local maps) and to report lost property.
Koban usually have a red light or a pair of red lights above the doors and the five pointed gold police star or badge. The five pointed star is also seen on cap and shoulder badges on Japanese police uniforms.
Koban are certainly not staffed by the elite of Japan's police force, more often elderly or young officers (female officers are not usually seen in koban outside Tokyo and don't do the night shift).
Each koban is usually staffed by a group of 4 police - 3 officers under the command of a sergeant working on 3 shifts of 8 hours under the control of the city or ward police station.
In rural Japan, koban are replaced by 駐在所 chuzaisho (residential police boxes), where a single officer and his family live.
The architectural style of Japan's koban is predominantly gray steel or concrete boxes, but Tokyo especially does have some interesting designs.