Adachi, Tokyo

Adachi
足立
—  Special ward  —
足立区 · Adachi City
A street in front of Kita-Senju Station in Adachi

Flag
Location of Adachi in Tokyo
Adachi
 
Coordinates:
Country Japan
Region Kantō
Prefecture Tokyo
Government
 • Mayor Yayoi Kondo (since June 2007)
Area
 • Total 53.20 km2 (20.5 sq mi)
Population (April 1, 2011)
 • Total 645,365
 • Density 12,130.92/km2 (31,418.9/sq mi)
Time zone Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)
City symbols
- Tree Cherry Blossom
- Flower Tulip
Website www.city.adachi.tokyo.jp

Adachi (足立区 Adachi-ku?) is one of the special wards of Tokyo, Japan. It is located north of the heart of Tokyo. The ward consists of two separate areas: a small strip of land between the Sumida River and Arakawa River and a larger area north of the Arakawa River. The ward is bordered by the cities of Kawaguchi, Sōka and Yashio in Saitama and Katsushika, Sumida, Arakawa, and Kita in Tokyo.

The ward is called Adachi City in English.

Adachi has sister-city relationships with Belmont, Australia. Within Japan, Adachi has similar ties with the city of Uonuma (formerly the town of Koide) in Niigata Prefecture, Yamanouchi in Nagano Prefecture, and the city of Kanuma in Tochigi Prefecture.

As of April 1, 2011, the ward has an estimated population of 645,365, with 305,264 households, and a population density of 12,130.92 persons per km². The total area is 53.20 km².

The Adachi Land Transportation Office is located here, and automobiles registered at this office bear Adachi number plates.

Contents

History

Under the Ritsuryō system, the present-day ward was the southern extremity of Adachi District, Musashi Province. In 826, during the Heian period, the Nishiarai Daishi temple was founded. During the Muromachi period and into the Sengoku period, the Chiba clan held control of the region. The Great Senju Bridge was built in 1594. In the Edo period, parts were under the direct control of the Tokugawa shogunate, and parts were under the administration of Kan'ei-ji, a temple in present-day Ueno, Tokyo. Adachi was also home to Senju-shuku was a post station on both the Nikkō Kaidō and the Mito Kaidō. The shogunate maintained the Kozukappara execution grounds in Senju. In 1932, Adachi became a ward of Tokyo City. The special ward was founded on March 15, 1947.

Sights

Nishiarai Daishi

Nishiarai Daishi, located in Nishiarai, is a temple of the Buzan branch of Shingon Buddhism. Its formal name is Gochisan Henjōin Sōji-ji (Sōji-ji Temple). This is one of the Three Great Temples in the Kantō region along with Kawasaki Daishi and Sano Yakuyoke Daishi, and a large number of people annually visit the temple at New Year.

Parks

Toneri Park is a metropolitan park located in Toneri. It is divided into east and west sections by Ogubashi Street. The west site has sports facilities such as an athletic stadium, tennis courts and baseball grounds. The east site offers places for appreciation of nature, such as a big pond, water park and bird sanctuary. A part of the east site is now under construction. The park can be accessed by arriving at Toneri Kōen Station on the Nippori-Toneri Liner or by bus.

Higashi Ayase Park is a metropolitan park that straddles the border between Ayase and Higashi Ayase. It contains Tokyo Budokan. Within the park, there is a Japanese garden which has a wide variety of plants. It also has sports facilities such as baseball and gateball grounds.

Urban Agricultural Park (Toshi Nōgyō Kōen), located in Shikahama, is run by Adachi Ward. Officially, it is a part of Kōhoku Park. It is located near the meeting of the Shiba and Arakawa Rivers, and its south end faces a green space on the Arakawa river area. It is one of the agricultural parks all over Japan, which enable the citizen to enjoy a natural environment, to learn and understand planting, gardening and agriculture, and to relax. There are fields, orchards, greenhouses and other facilities that aim to show farming techniques that have been adopted in the suburbs of Tokyo. There are also facilities for families such as lawns and play equipment.

There is a rest house near the entrance on the Arakawa riverbank side. The rest house is at the point where the Arakawa and Shibakawa cycling roads meet, and many of those who like cycling rest there. There is no admission fee. It is closed early in the morning and late at night, as well as all day on some days such as the year-end and new-year holidays. The park is far from the train station, but there is a bus running from Nishiarai Station to the park. The park is about a five-minute walk south of the bus stop Shikahama 5 on Kawaguchi Station line (Shikahama-Ryōke) and Akabane Station line (to Nishiarai Station by way of Arakawa Bridge). There is parking for cars and sightseeing buses under the Shuto Expressway Kawaguchi Route, and Shikahamabashi Exit and Higashi Ryōke Exit are nearby. The parking lot is also close to Kan-nana Road.

Adachi Park of Living Things, located within Motofuchie Park in Hokima, is run by Adachi Ward.

Halls and cultural facilities

Tokyo Budokan, located within Higashi Ayase Metropolitan Park, is a sports facility run by Tokyo Sport Benefits Corporation. The Tokyo Budokan has an avant-garde building designed by a famous architect Kijō Rokkaku. It includes places for martial arts and Kyūdō, and training rooms. The word budokan means "martial arts hall," and the same word is part of the name of the more-famous Nippon Budokan. The Tokyo Budokan's address is 3-20-1 Ayase, Adachi, Tokyo.

Galaxy+City (Gyarakushitii) is a generic term for series of cultural facilities in Kurihara. It used be run by Adachi Lifelong Educational Promotion Corporation, but the management was taken over by Youth Centre of Adachi Board of Education on 1 April 2005. It contains two main facilities: Nishiarai Culture Hall (theatre) and Adachi Children’s Science Museum. There are also event halls, cafes and others.

Theatre 1010 was named as it is because the number 1010 (Senjū) and the name of the theatre’s location (Senju) are homonyms in Japanese.

Adachi Historical Museum, located within Higashifuchie Park in Ōyata, is run by Adachi Ward.

Local food specialties

Bunka fry

Bunka fry is a deep-fried dish, mainly made of flour and gum syrup. It is cooked in much the same way as schnitzel. It is skewered by a chopstick or a stick, and served dripping with sauce. It tastes like a ham cutlet without ham. Venders of bunka fry have individual secret recipes for the sauce.

It was originally cooked without gum syrup. Ms. Hasegawa then improved it and sold it at a night-stall. It started to be sold from around 1955, and became popular among children in downtown Tokyo. The price rose from 5 to 150 yen. In the summer, festivals were held every day in August all over Tokyo, during which bunka fries were sold on the street. Its birthplace is Adachi ward, and it was sold by vendors in Nishiarai Daishi until recently. However, the vendors closed down as the inventor of the bunka fry, Ms. Hasegawa, retired.

Education

The city's public elementary and junior high schools are operated by the Adachi City Board of Education.[1] The city's public high schools are operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education.

In 2011, high levels of radiation were discovered at Higashifuchie elementary school.[1]

Transportation

Rail

The primary railway station in the city is Kita-Senju Station.

JR East
Jōban Line - Kita-Senju - Ayase
Tobu Railway
Isesaki Line - Horikiri - Ushida - Kita-Senju - Kosuge - Gotanno - Umejima - Nishiarai - Takenotsuka -
Daishi Line Nishiarai - Daishimae
Keisei Electric Railway
Keisei Main Line - Senju-Ōhashi - Keisei Sekiya -
Tokyo Metro
Hibiya Line - Kita-Senju
Chiyoda Line - Kita-Senju - Ayase - Kita-Ayase
Metropolitan Intercity Railway Company
Tsukuba Express - Kita-Senju - Aoi - Rokuchō -
Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation
Nippori-Toneri Liner - Adachi-Odai - Ōgi-ōhashi - Kōya - Kōhoku - Nishiaraidaishi-nishi - Yazaike - Toneri-kōen - Toneri - Minumadai-shinsuikōen

Highways

Shuto Expressway

Famous people

See also

References

External links