All 9,300 Japanese train station, animated by the year it opened (1872–2026)

9 hours ago (jivx.com)

Super cool but I did get this error while scrolling the timeline on safari/iOS

Application error: a client-side exception has occurred while loading jivx.com (see the browser console for more information).

  • Yep, seems to refer to "SecurityError: Attempt to use history.replaceState() more than 100 times per 10 seconds"

    • I hate the History API especially pushState. Even with this limit of 100 times per 10 seconds it still pollutes my browsing history too much. I need to vibe code an extension that makes pushState/replaceState noops on all webpages.

      3 replies →

Cool idea!

Not sure if this was created with LLM help, but I suspect so? Not because the page is buggy (it is, though, crashed on my iPhone), but because they make data visualization so accessible. This type of presentation used to take days of work; now, if you find a unique piece of data, it's only a few hours of work to create a beautiful animated visualization.

I do think this would be more compelling with some additional context or data integration. Zoom, the ability to click and see the full details about each station, which company (my guess is that it's all JR?).

Ok final note: the intersection of Japan and trains is basically HN crack, and I love it.

  • I created pages with Claude before and it's very very obvious when you see one. From the font choice to the color palette, and the style of the boxes. In fact if anyone has an effective prompt that says "please don't make this look like the average Claude page" please post it!

    • I've had some luck giving either an example website to ape or listing out a particular era, monkey see monkey do seems to help a bunch.

      I've done each of the 3 for side projects below to pretty good effects.

      > This website will be run by IE6 and Windows Mobile 6, so use no dependencies, semantic HTML, a 3-pane layout, and only use JS (es3!) where absolutely necessary (and where necessary, put the script at the end of the body).

      When I'm not specifically targeting support for retrocomputers I do something like this, then iterate until it looks right.

      > Go look at Dokuwiki, django defaults, and common web 2.0 color schemes, use those for UI inspiration. Keep a 3-pane desktop-first layout, but enable mobile responsiveness with media queries. Use semantic html5 and prefer older boring solutions like surgical jquery or htmx-style islands of interactivity where needed, otherwise do not bring in dependencies without my say so.

      And finally, if I'm doing a web app that I'm vibing out with the web stack because I want it one-shotted and not trying to do a good rust core with strong ports/adapters API surface for web or native client callers, I do something like this:

      > This is a local web app, the frontend, backend, and desktop are all on the same machine. Use naive and simple development patterns that you document the style as you go, pick a boring web framework and use it idiomatically, but remember that some tricks that are intended to keep network round trips down are not as necessary because network penalties are not as bad as real traffic.

      Granted, the above I don't like as much, but it does produce more 'modern' looking sites by default.

    • Anthropic's own frontend-design skill attempts to do that. You can install it in Claude Code, or you can tweak it to be closer to your own style:

      https://github.com/anthropics/claude-code/blob/main/plugins/...

      But what I find works best is to point Claude at a design system documentation website (your own company's or another public source) and tell it to use that design style. It usually does OK, and the results are usually much more in line with that style and not as Claude-y.

      1 reply →

    • Just give it actual ideas of what you want instead of "make me a web page". Garbage in garbage out.

  • The Claude style (colors/fonts) give it right away. The website did also crash for me too with the famous nextjs death screen.

  • > Not because the page is buggy (it is, though, crashed on my iPhone),

    Maybe you meant Safari is buggy and crashed? I can easily get Safari to crash by zooming in and out a bit. Reports to Apple go ignored...

    • I get the sentiment. I don't love that different browsers have different behavior even on standards compliant code. But I've also done enough web development to know that if your page crashes safari in the main user flow (in this case, just hitting 'play'), the dev owns the bug.

    • Safari didn't crash. The web app did, for abusing the browser history API.

      > SecurityError: Attempt to use history.replaceState() more than 100 times per 10 seconds

  • it's so easy to tell it's claude. nonsense oblique text. beige bg. noise texture. 'crafted' eyebrows.

Fun bit of trivia: Japanese train stations each have their own custom stamp, and if you have a piece of paper or a notebook they'll stamp it for you at the ticket booth (this is a fairly common thing to do there). If you get an A5 notebook, it's a neat way to document a trip -- one stamp for your departure station, one for your arrival.

  • Sadly not all of them, much to my ill discovery! They are fun souvenirs and I encourage everyone to collect them if they want a free momento (ideally bring your own stamp pad).

Never seen this one before:

"[Error] SecurityError: Attempt to use history.replaceState() more than 100 times per 10 seconds"

  • I had a near-instant crash too, but different kind. Firefox iOS. The vibes are leaking

    • On iOS, all browsers use WKWebView behind the scenes as required by Apple. So crash behavior is similar to Safari.

Tell-tale signs of AI-built UX:

- Extremely low contrast typography

- Serif typefaces with body in sans serif

- Black + red/maroon color combo

- tiny, tiny typefaces

Now we need a part two that shows how the rural parts of the same network are slowly being closed due to depopulation. As of 2025, Japan has lost 1366 km of track (about 5% of the total) since the 1990s.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_closed_railway_lines_i...

  • To be fair, most countries have due to privatisation and people getting wealthier and buying cars. In my country a ton of lines have closed down too and ourv population only grows.

    • > To be fair, most countries have due to privatisation

      Japan's system is almost entirely private and is best in the world by nearly every metric. We (the people) do not owe support to depopulated areas. If you choose to live in the boonies the government is not required to build or maintain roads, tracks, sewers, power to your place. Funds are not infinite.

      Japan's private system works because the government mostly got out of the way and let them build and run complementary businesses. Most other countries either make them public, and then they eventually are underfunded and are prevented from expanding/responding, OR, if they do let them be private they find some other way to cripple them like by disallowing other interests.

      https://worksinprogress.co/issue/why-japan-has-such-good-rai...

      1 reply →

    • Closing lines in the 90s would be unusual; the big spurt of line closures was generally _far_ earlier in most places, generally 50s or 60s.

    • >people getting wealthier and buying cars

      Haha, my experience is people buying cars feel poorer, not wealthier. Car payments, maintenance, insurance, taxes, fuel... and as soon as you finish paying it off, it's basically EOL. Time to start paying for the next one.

      4 replies →

  • >closed due to depopulation

    Meanwhile, there's more people in the city of Tokyo than nearly the whole continent of Australia :) Japan's population is concentrating into a handful of big cities. I mean, who wants to live in a small town when there are endless options for shopping, restaurants, etc in the big city? It's not like in the US where big cities are dangerous. There's not much of a positive tradeoff for choosing small town life in Japan. Maybe you think you want to be a big land baron as all Americans seem to desire, but then you find out that undeveloped land in Japan is heavily taxed with property taxes. If you are not doing something very productive with Japan's limited land, Japan wants you to move your arse off it and let someone with a plan work it. Anyway, as rural areas empty out, the local rail lines close. JR is however building lots of bullet trains to connect the big cities. There is a new bullet train line opening soon between Shin-Hakodate and Sapporo for instance. It will probably be extended from Sapporo up to Asahikawa after that.

    • I love Tokyo (I spent eight months in Kawasaki in 2010), but I can see the appeal of living in a smaller place in Japan (though I’d personally be hesitant to live in a small, isolated town with little or no public transportation). Crowded trains and long lines can get tiring after a while.

      I spent last summer in Toyohashi in Aichi Prefecture; I was a visiting researcher at Toyohashi University of Technology. While Toyohashi is not a small town by any means, it is far smaller than Tokyo. I found it nice for day-to-day living. Not crowded at all, and I found the bus service to be good; not world class, but comprehensive and ran frequently enough to be useful. It had plenty of grocery stores and department stores for everyday living. If I needed something unavailable in Toyohashi, Nagoya wasn’t too far away, and if I needed to be in Tokyo, I could get there in 90 minutes on a Hikari train on the Tokaido Shinkansen. I’d do it again; in fact, I’m going back to Toyohashi in a few weeks for another monthly stay.

    • Having just traveled through a range of cities and towns in Japan, I don't think the lack of options for shopping and restaurants are the reason that small (150,000+ population) towns are depopulating.

      There's plenty of ways to spend money in them. That's not the problem. Neither is there a huge lack of conveniences. Any one of them is way more livable than almost anywhere in North America.

      Poor economic prospects for the area is likely a part of the problem. The big cities pay significantly more for ~the same work.

  • Yeah, I've noticed this as well. They not only slowly close old stations, but they almost stopped building new ones since about 2007.

    I don't understand why people downvote your comment. It isn't like you're forcing them to have babies and do something about the world by stating the fact about Japan's decline

    • The "decline" you mention is privatization of JR and their efforts to make it more profitable. Privatization started in 1987, but it wasn't fully privatized until 2006.

      If it has anything to do with babies, you have your cause and effect reversed. Autos are a cause of declining birth rates...

      https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/731812

      So a reduction in trains causes a reduction in birth rates, not the other way around.

Very cool. I am a sucker for good design and this site was beautiful to look at.

I noticed that most of the track was laid down in the 1920s and 1930s. Any ideas why?

  • > I noticed that most of the track was laid down in the 1920s and 1930s. Any ideas why?

    They were originally built for military logistics to move troops, guns, and supplies around the country.

    • You have to appreciate how people would think long term back then. We lost that quality -- our corporate leaders can't think past 1 quarter.

It would be interesting to see a negative bar with station closures as well. And some way to zoom the map would be nice.

As a point of interest, I'll mention Tōgeshita station. A station in the middle of nowhere. Sometimes, a station would exist purely because that's where trains needed to pass one another. Tōgeshita was one of those.

Whenever I passed the station, it was strange, almost a creepy feeling. I think it could have been a great plot for a Japanese horror movie, something in a "Blair Witch Project" style... the old one car train slows to a stop. The door opens, no one dares get off there. Except you, with your portable camera, a cavalier exit from the train. The conductor casts you a side eye with a dead pan 'arigato goziamasu.' The creaky diesel train car slowly pulls away and you're left there stranded for the next few hours until the return train comes around. I wonder what I'll find in the forest just beyond those trees....

That whole website is just beautiful. I'd love to see more work by the designer.

  • Good/bad news: you will definitely see more work by them -- this style of website is clearly the output of a coding agent, maybe Claude Code.

  • It's beautiful I agree, but that "designer" is just claude opus.

    Lots of examples on x and on reddit of similarly styled apps made with the help of opus.

Would be cool to somehow see how the volumes of passengers grows as well.

I also want to see if we have this information for Switzerland.