Ashiya, Hyōgo
| Ashiya 芦屋市 |
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| — City — | |||
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| Location of Ashiya in Hyōgo | |||
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| Coordinates: 34°44′N 135°18′E / 34.733°N 135.3°ECoordinates: 34°44′N 135°18′E / 34.733°N 135.3°E | |||
| Country | Japan | ||
| Region | Kansai | ||
| Prefecture | Hyōgo | ||
| Government | |||
| • Mayor | Ken Yamanaka | ||
| Area | |||
| • Total | 18.47 km2 (7.13 sq mi) | ||
| Population (August 2011) | |||
| • Total | 93,868 | ||
| • Density | 5,082/km2 (13,160/sq mi) | ||
| Time zone | Japan Standard Time (UTC+9) | ||
| City symbols | |||
| - Tree | Japanese Black Pine | ||
| - Flower | Kobano-mitsuba-tsutsuji | ||
| Phone number | 0797-31-2121 | ||
| Address | 7-6 Seidōchō, Ashiya-shi, Hyōgo-ken 659-8501 |
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| Website | City of Ashiya | ||
Ashiya (芦屋市 Ashiya-shi) is a city founded on November 10, 1940 located in Hyōgo, Japan, between the cities of Osaka and Kobe.
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[edit] Demographics
As of 2009, the city has an estimated population of 93,094 and the density of 5,030 persons per km². The total area is 18.47 km². The average household income in Ashiya is the highest of any city in Japan based on annual income tax reports.
[edit] History
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Ashiya was established in 1871 as a township in Hyōgo prefecture. In the early 1900s, it was designated as an urban planning area. This led to the building of large single-family homes with tennis courts, swimming pools, and tea houses, etc. along the hills overlooking Osaka Bay.
In 1945, the City of Ashiya prohibited the operation of pachinko parlors, gambling and entertainment facilities as well as small factories. Those laws still stand and there is no other municipal government with similar regulations in Japan.
In 1991, Ashiya residents elected Harue Kitamura (北村 春江 Kitamura Harue, born July 11, 1928) as the first woman to hold the office of mayor of a city in Japan. Kitamura was mayor when Ashiya suffered major damage during the Kobe Earthquake on January 17, 1995.
Since 2008, buying, selling or building on property less than 4,269 square meters in area has been prohibited in the Rokurokusō-chō (六麓荘町) area by city architectural agreement.
[edit] Culture and people
| This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2010) |
Due to the large number of celebrities living within the city limits, Ashiya is known as the Beverly Hills of Japan.[citation needed] Persons of note associated with Ashiya include Jirō Shirasu ("the man who reproached MacArthur"), Ryōji Noyori (Nobel prize winner), Takashi Asahina (conductor), Chitaru Asahina (conductor), Jun'ichirō Tanizaki (writer), Haruki Murakami (writer), Atsuko Suga (writer/scholar of Italian literature), Yuriko Koike (House of Representatives member), Yōko Ogawa (writer), Hiroko Koshino (fashion designer) and Tsumasaburō Bandō (kabuki actor).
The city was the setting for Jun'ichiro Tanizaki's novel Sasameyuki (細雪) (The Makioka Sisters, Eng. trans. Edward G. Seidensticker).
A house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright sits on a hill overlooking Hankyu Ashiyagawa Station and Osaka Bay. It was completed in 1924 as a residence for the Yamamura family, founders of the famous sake company "Sakuramasamune" (櫻正宗). It is now known as the Yodokō Guest House and is open for tours. Ashiya also features the house of Hiroko Koshino designed by Pritzker Architecture Prize winner Tadao Ando.
[edit] Transport
Central Ashiya is served by JR West Ashiya Station. Hanshin Electric Railway Ashiya Station and Uchide Station serve the southern part of the city, while Hankyu Railway Ashiyagawa Station is located in the quieter northern area.
[edit] External links
- (Japanese) Official website
- (Japanese) Ashiya-People.com Local media website
- (Japanese) Tanizaki Junichiro Memorial Museum of Literature
- Kohitsuji no Mure church, Ashiya
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