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Related: About this forumJapan's Clever Anti-Snow Roadways
https://www.core77.com/posts/135763/Japans-Clever-Anti-Snow-RoadwaysShosetsu FTW
By Rain Noe - March 6 in Urbanism

Niigata, Japan gets a lot of snow. Way back in the 1960s, they figured out a way to keep the roads clear of snow without requiring plows. Groundwater warmed by geothermal heat is pumped through a network of pipes below the road surface, and sprayed onto the asphalt using sprinklers:
The system is called shosetsu. Because the warmed water flows along the grade of the roads, it doesn't freeze and turn into iceat least in Niigata, where the temperatures don't often dip below the freezing point. (Icy Hokkaido, where the system is not in use, would be a different story.)
Niigata reportedly has some 571 kilometers (355 miles) of roadways equipped with shosetsu.
It's better on cars than salt.
But can the sprinklers cool people off in summer? Not if they're geothermal.
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Japan's Clever Anti-Snow Roadways (Original Post)
usonian
Mar 2025
OP
DaBronx
(758 posts)1. This is very interesting
Thanks for posting
Old Crank
(6,765 posts)2. Great thinkng
And having a resource you can count on to do this.
Wonder Why
(6,637 posts)3. Do they recycle that water?
