Suminoe-ku, Osaka

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Location of Suminoe-ku in Osaka City

Suminoe-ku (住之江区) is one of 24 wards of Osaka, Japan, stretching along the south-west border of the city. It borders the wards of Minato-ku, Taisho-ku and Nishinari-ku to the north, and Sumiyoshi-ku to the east. It is the largest land area of all wards in Osaka, and includes about half of the Osaka Bay harbor area.

Suminoe-ku is connected to the region by three municipal subway lines (the Yotsubashi Line, the Chuo Line, and the Nankō Port Town Line), as well as two rail lines (Nankai Main Line and Hankai Line) and three expressways. The ward is also home to the Osaka international ferry terminal with services to Shikoku and Kyushu, as well as international destinations Shanghai, China, and Busan, South Korea.[1][2]

Attractions[]

Within the ward are multiple large parks, museums, international business facilities, and arts facilities.

Kitakagaya Creative Village[]

A largely pre-war neighborhood, with a large concentration of galleries, artist workshops, studios, urban farms, and other creative facilities among factories and old wood-frame homes[3]

– a community arts and crafts complex, built inside a collection of old interconnected buildings[4]

– a large dockside arts and performance complex

– interactive arts museum by Yasumasa Morimura, a well-known contemporary Japanese artist

– ecological art gallery with urban garden and residency program[5]

Landmarks[]

Former Kansai Electric Nanko Power Station – former gas power plant, now decommissioned

Intex Osaka – one of the largest conference and exhibition centers in Japan

Osaka Prefectural Government Sakishima Building – formerly known as Osaka World Trade Center, at 256 m (840 ft) is the third tallest building in Japan, with shops, restaurants, and observation deck[6]

Other Galleries and Museums[]

Osaka Maritime Museum – an award-winning maritime museum, designed by architect Paul Andreu but which closed in 2013 just a decade after its opening

Parks and Recreation facilities[]

– 19-hectare wetland park serving as a stopover point for migratory birds coming from as far as Siberia and New Zealand, with public observation towers[7]

Sumiyoshi Park – opened in 1873, a storied park that is the oldest in Osaka City

A bicycle rides along a tree-lined path at Sumiyoshi Park
Sumiyoshi Park

Shopping and Entertainment[]

– large international trade complex and shopping mall

Zepp Osaka – major music hall

Education[]

International schools:

Notable people[]

References[]

  1. ^ 大阪観光局 (29 January 2018). "TO OSAKA BY FERRY". OSAKA-INFO. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  2. ^ "Port & Harbor Bureau, City of Osaka/Port & Harbor Bureau/Port Facilities/International Ferry Terminal". www.city.osaka.lg.jp. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  3. ^ "KCV(北加賀屋クリエイティブ・ビレッジ)構想とは? | おおさか創造千島財団". www.chishimatochi.info (in Japanese). Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  4. ^ "Chidori-bunka, a new community space by dot architects". World Architecture Community. Retrieved 13 April 2019.
  5. ^ "The Branch | Osaka, Japan – ecological art & media lab // pocket farm // global community space". Retrieved 13 April 2019.
  6. ^ 大阪観光局 (29 January 2018). "Osaka Prefecture government [sic] Sakishima Building Observatory (Cosmo Tower)". OSAKA-INFO. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  7. ^ "o.n.b.s_index". www.osaka-nankou-bird-sanctuary.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  8. ^ "Access." Kongo Gakuen Elementary, Middle & High School. Retrieved on 14 October 2015. "〒559-0034大阪府大阪市住之江区南港北2丁目6–10"
  9. ^ "ウリハッキョ一覧" (Archive). Chongryon. Retrieved on 14 October 2015.

External links[]

Media related to Suminoe-ku, Osaka at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 34°36′34″N 135°28′58″E / 34.60944°N 135.48278°E / 34.60944; 135.48278

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