SpringsAtlas

Contributing Author

RF

Ria Flores

Interior Designer · CDO · Japan Onsen Traveller

Ria Flores is an interior designer with over 26 years of professional experience spanning kitchen design, condominiums, resorts, offices, and high-end residential projects. She currently serves as Chief Design Officer at a fast-growing construction and design firm, and works closely with premium brands across the Philippines and Southeast Asia.

An avid traveller, Ria has visited Japan many times across different seasons. Hokkaido in winter for yukimi onsen (snow-viewing baths), Kyushu for the volcanic intensity of Beppu and Yufuin, and Kansai for the ancient ryokan culture of Kinosaki. Whenever she visits a country with hot springs, she makes a point of seeking them out.

Her design background shapes how she sees onsen: the quality of a stone pool, the way steam moves through a covered walkway, the balance between natural material and human craft in a ryokan that has served guests for three centuries. That perspective informs everything she writes for SpringsAtlas.

Beyond travel and design, Ria is building her own clothing brand, Boro & Kin, a reflection of an aesthetic sensibility that extends from living spaces to personal style. She documents travels on YouTube and TikTok, and brings that global perspective to her writing here.

Disclosure: Ria Flores is the wife of Ryan Flores, the founder of SpringsAtlas. Her editorial work is independent; she is not compensated per article.

Articles by Ria Flores

Japan

Japan's Most Extreme Hot Springs: Hottest, Most Acidic, Highest

Japan's hot springs span a range that would alarm a chemist. Waters that reach 105 degrees Celsius. Springs with pH levels close to vinegar. A natural onsen at 2,430 metres above sea level. And at the other end, silky alkaline pools so gentle they leave your skin feeling like something was added rather than removed. Here is what the extremes actually look and feel like.

Japan

Tattoo-Friendly Onsen in Japan: A Practical Guide for Travellers

Japan's tattoo policy at onsen facilities is more nuanced than most travel blogs suggest. Some of the country's best springs openly welcome tattoos. Others have formal prohibitions. Many are somewhere in between, and a polite conversation or a quick check on SpringsAtlas can make the difference between a great soak and an awkward moment at the door. Here is what you actually need to know.

Japan

Free Hot Springs in Japan: 9 Onsens That Cost Nothing

Some of Japan's most memorable hot spring experiences are completely free. From a riverbed bath where the water bubbles up through sand, to a thousand-year-old community bathhouse in a mountain village, here are nine springs you can soak in without spending a single yen on entry.

Japan

What is Rotenburo? Japan's Outdoor Bathing Tradition Explained

Rotenburo means outdoor hot spring bathing, and it is one of Japan's most beloved traditions. Whether a rock pool beneath mountain pines or a terrace overlooking the river, rotenburo offers a connection to nature that indoor baths simply cannot match. I have been visiting them for years, and the pull never fades.

Hokkaido

The Complete Guide to Hot Springs in Hokkaido

I went to Hokkaido for the first time in November 2024 with both our families. I did not speak a word of Japanese, I have a tattoo, and somehow I still had the most memorable onsen experience of my life. Here is everything I learned, including what to do when the staff mime at you with a skin patch.

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