Tama, Tokyo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tama City's location in Tokyo, Japan. |
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Location | |
Country | Japan |
Region | Kanto |
Prefecture | Tokyo |
Physical characteristics | |
Area | 21.08 km² |
Population (as of November 2006) | |
Total | 144,348 |
Density | 6,912.81/km² |
Location | |
Symbols | |
Tree | Ginkgo |
Flower | ヤマザクラ (a wild Sakura) |
Bird | Oriental Turtle Dove |
Tama City City Hall | |
Address | 〒206-8666 6-12-1, Sekido Tama city Tokyo |
Phone number | +81 (42) 375-8111 |
Official website: Tama City |
Tama (多摩市; -shi) is a city located in Tokyo, Japan.
Tama is home to Tama Hills, a recreational facility of the U.S. Air Force, intended for use by United States service members and their families, as well as Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force service members and their families.
It is also home to the well known Sanrio theme park, Sanrio Puroland ("Hello Kitty-land").
Its southern flanks form part of the Tama New Town project, Japan's largest residential development, constructed in the 1970's.
The city is situated within a much larger area in south-western Tokyo, known traditionally as Tama hills, spanning Tokyo and Kanagawa prefectures. Therefore there are many place names scattered throughout the area with references to the name "Tama" which are not within the city limits. For example, Tama is the name of a ward several kilometres away under the jurisdiction of Kawasaki City in Kanagawa prefecture.
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[edit] History
Tama was founded on April 1, 1889 as “Tama Village” in what was then the Minamitama District from the merger of 10 pre-Meiji villages. On April 1, 1964, Tama Village became Tama Town. Seven years later, on November 1, 1971, Tama Town became Tama City, dissolving Minamitama District. Tama was the last village in the former Minamitama District.
[edit] Institutions
- Keisen Women's University
- Tama University
[edit] Transport
From Shinjuku (central Tokyo) Tama can easily be reached by the Keio line or the Odakyu Tama line.
From the Tama-Center Station to the north leads the 16 kilometer long double tracked Tama Toshi Monorail Line with Kamikitadai as its final station.
[edit] Tama in Fiction
Tama is the location for the animated feature films Whisper of the Heart and Pom Poko by Japan's Studio Ghibli, the latter of which depicts a fictionalized account of the city's construction.
It has been speculated that The Cat Returns, also by Studio Ghibli, is similarly set in Tama.
[edit] External links
- Tama official website in Japanese
- Wikitravel: Tokyo/Tama
- Hospitals in Japanese
Tokyo Metropolis | ||
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Wards: Adachi | Arakawa | Bunkyō | Chiyoda | Chūō | Edogawa | Itabashi | Katsushika | Kita | Kōtō | Meguro | Minato | Nakano | Nerima | Ōta | Setagaya | Shibuya | Shinagawa | Shinjuku | Suginami | Sumida | Toshima | Taitō | ||
Cities: Akiruno | Akishima | Chōfu | Fuchū | Fussa | Hachiōji | Hamura | Higashikurume | Higashimurayama | Higashiyamato | Hino | Inagi | Kiyose | Kodaira | Koganei | Kokubunji | Komae | Kunitachi | Machida | Mitaka | Musashimurayama | Musashino | Nishi-Tōkyō | Ōme | Tachikawa | Tama | ||
Districts and Subprefectures: Nishitama District | Hachijō Subprefecture | Miyake Subprefecture | Ogasawara Subprefecture | Ōshima Subprefecture |