Minato, Tokyo
Minato
港区 | |
---|---|
Minato City | |
Coordinates: 35°39′29″N 139°45′05″E / 35.65806°N 139.75139°E | |
Country | Japan |
Region | Kantō |
Prefecture | Tokyo |
Government | |
• Mayor | Masaaki Takei |
Area | |
• Total | 20.37 km2 (7.86 sq mi) |
Population (1 October 2020[1]) | |
• Total | 260,486 |
• Density | 13,000/km2 (33,000/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+09:00 (JST) |
City hall address | 1-5-25 Shibakōen, Minato, Tokyo 105-8511 |
Website | www |
Symbols | |
Flower | Hydrangea macrophylla Rosa |
Tree | Cornus florida |
Minato (港区, Minato-ku), [mnto] is a special ward in the Tokyo Metropolis in Japan. It is also called Minato City in English.
It was formed in 1947 as a merger of Akasaka, Azabu and Shiba wards following Tokyo City's transformation into Tokyo Metropolis. The modern Minato ward exhibits the contrasting Shitamachi and Yamanote geographical and cultural division. The Shinbashi neighborhood in the ward's northeastern corner is attached to the core of Shitamachi, the original commercial center of Edo-Tokyo. On the other hand, the Azabu and Akasaka areas are typically representative Yamanote districts.[2]
As of 1 July 2015[update], it had an official population of 243,094,[3] and a population density of 10,850 persons per km2. The total area is 20.37 km2.[4]
Minato hosts many embassies. It is also home to various domestic companies, including Honda, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, MinebeaMitsumi,[citation needed] Mitsubishi Motors Corporation, NEC, Nikon, SoftBank Group,[5] Sony,[6] Fujitsu[7] and Yokohama Rubber Company, as well as the Japanese headquarters of a number of multi-national firms, including Apple[8] and Goldman Sachs.[9]
Geography
Minato is located southwest of the Imperial Palace and has boundaries with the special wards of Chiyoda, Chūō, Kōtō (in Odaiba), Shinagawa, Shibuya, and Shinjuku.
History
The ward was founded on 15 March 1947, with the merger of Akasaka, Azabu, and Shiba Wards. The name Minato means "harbor".
Politics and government
Minato is governed by Mayor Masaaki Takei, an Independent supported by all major parties except the Japanese Communist Party. The city legislative assembly has 51 members and is dominated by the Liberal Democratic Party.
Elections
Districts and neighborhoods
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Notes:
* - formerly part of Shiba Area
a - 1-chōme
b - 1, 2, 3-chōme
c - 2, 3-chōme
d - 4, 5-chōme
Education
Colleges and universities
- Jikei University School of Medicine Nishi Shinbashi campus
- Kanazawa Institute of Technology Graduate school; Toranomon campus
- Keio University
- Kitasato University Shirokane campus
- Meiji Gakuin University Shirokane campus
- National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS)
- Shibaura Institute of Technology
- Temple University Japan Campus
- Tokyo Institute of Technology Tamachi Campus
- Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology Shinagawa campus
- University of Tokyo Institute of Medical Science
Primary and secondary schools
The local public high schools are operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education.
- Akasaka High School (東京都立赤坂高等学校) (since merged with another school)
- Mita High School (東京都立三田高等学校)
- Roppongi High School
- Shiba Commercial High School (東京都立芝商業高等学校)
The city's public elementary and junior high schools are operated by the Minato City Board of Education (港区教育委員会).
Combined elementary and junior high schools:[10]
Junior high schools:
- Akasaka Junior High School (赤坂中学校)
- Aoyama Junior High School (青山中学校)
- Konan Junior High School (港南中学校)
- Koryo Junior High School (高陵中学校)
- Mita Junior High School (三田中学校) opened in 2001 after the merger of Minato Junior High School and Shibahama Junior High School.
- Onarimon Junior High School (御成門中学校)
- Roppongi Junior High School (六本木中学校)
- Takamatsu Junior High School (高松中学校)
Elementary schools:
- Akabane Elementary School (赤羽小学校)
- Akasaka Elementary School (赤坂小学校)
- Aoyama Elementary School (青山小学校)
- Azabu Elementary School (麻布小学校)
- Higashimachi Elementary School (東町小学校)
- Hommura Elementary School (本村小学校)
- Kogai Elementary School (笄小学校)
- Konan Elementary School (港南小学校)
- Mita Elementary School (御田小学校)
- Nanzan Elementary School (南山小学校)
- Onarimon Elementary School (御成門小学校)
- Seinan Elementary School (青南小学校)
- Shiba Elementary School (芝小学校)
- Shibaura Elementary School (芝浦小学校)
- Shibahama Elementary School (芝浜小学校)
- Shirokane Elementary School (白金小学校)
- Takanawadai Elementary School (高輪台小学校) occupies a historic building that had been renovated.[11]
Former schools:[12]
- Asahi Junior High School (朝日中学校)
- Iikura Elementary School (飯倉小学校)
- Koyo Elementary School (港陽小学校)
- Sanko Elementary School (三光小学校)
- Shinno Elementary School (神応小学校)
There are also a variety of private schools, including:
- Keio Girls Senior High School
- Keiō Chutobu Junior High School (慶應義塾中等部)
- Shiba Junior and Senior High School
- Azabu Junior and Senior High School
- Friends School, a Quaker school established in 1887.
- Meiji Gakuin Senior High School in Shirokane[13]
- Russian Embassy School in Tokyo in Azabudai[14]
- Tokyo Joshi Gakuen Junior & Senior High School
Public libraries
The city operates the Minato Library, the Mita Library, the Azabu Library, the Akasaka Library, the Takanawa Library, and the Konan Library.[15] The metropolis operates the Tokyo Metropolitan Library Central Library in Minato. The library opened in 1973.[16]
Economy
Companies with headquarters in Minato include Air Nippon,[17] All Nippon Airways (ANA),[18][19] ANA & JP Express,[20] All Nippon Airways Trading,[21] Animax,[22] Asmik Ace Entertainment,[23] Bandai Namco Holdings, Brainlab,[24] Cosmo Oil Company,[25] COVER Corporation,[26] Daicel,[27] Dentsu,[28] Euglena (company), Fujifilm,[29] Fuji Xerox,[30] Fujitsu,[31] Haseko,[32] Hazama Ando,[33] Honda,[34] Japan Tobacco,[35] Kajima,[36] Kaneka Corporation,[37] Konami,[38] KYB Corporation,[39] Kyodo News,[40] Mitsubishi Motors,[41] Mitsui Chemicals,[42] Mitsui O.S.K. Lines,[43] Mitsui Oil Exploration Company,[44] NEC,[45] Nippon Sheet Glass,[46] NYK Line,[47] Obayashi Corporation,[48] Oki Electric Industry,[49] Pizza-La,[50] The Pokémon Company,[51] THK,[52] Toagosei,[53] Toraya Confectionery,[54] Sato Pharmaceutical,[55] Sega Sammy Holdings,[56] Sigma Seven,[57] Sony,[58] SUMCO,[59] Toraya Confectionery,[60] Toyo Suisan (owns the branch Maruchan),[61] TV Tokyo,[62] WOWOW,[63] and Yazaki.[64] In addition ANA subsidiary Air Japan has some offices in Minato.[65]
Foreign companies
The Japanese division of CB&I,[66] the Japanese division of Aramark and Aim Services,[67] Google Japan,[68] Yahoo! Japan,[69] and the main Japanese offices of Hanjin and Korean Air are located there.[70] Air France operates an office and ticketing counter in the New Aoyama Building in Minato.[71] The Japanese division of Deutsche Post, DHL. Air France's Minato office handles Aircalin-related inquiries.[72] Air China has operations in the Air China Building in Minato.[73] Asiana Airlines operates a sales office on the sixth floor of the ATT New Tower Building.[74] Hawaiian Airlines has its Japan offices in the Eagle Hamamatsuchō Building (イーグル浜松町ビル, Īguru Hamamatsuchō Biru) in Minato.[75] Iran Air has its Tokyo office in Akasaka.[76]
Former economic operations
Japanese companies that formerly had headquarters in Minato include Air Next,[77] Airtransse,[78] Asatsu,[79] Jaleco Holding,[80][81] Ricoh,[82][83] Toa Domestic Airlines (later Japan Air System and later Japan Air Lines),[84][85][86]
On 22 December 2008 operations of Seiko Epson's Tokyo sales office began at Seiko Epson's Hino Office in Hino, Tokyo. Previously operations were at the World Trade Centre in Minato.[87][88]
Diplomatic missions
Several countries operate their embassies in Minato.
- Afghanistan
- Argentina
- Armenia
- Australia
- Austria
- Bahrain
- Bolivia
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Botswana
- Brazil
- Brunei
- Cambodia
- Canada
- Chile
- China
- DR Congo
- Costa Rica
- Cuba
- Cyprus
- Dominican Republic
- Ecuador
- El Salvador
- Eritrea
- Ethiopia
- Fiji
- Finland
- France
- Georgia
- Germany
- Ghana
- Greece
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- Honduras
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Iran
- Italy
- Jamaica
- Kazakhstan
- Kosovo
- Kuwait
- Kyrgyzstan
- Laos
- Lebanon
- Lesotho
- Liberia
- Lithuania
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Maldives
- Malta
- Marshall Islands
- Micronesia
- Morocco
- Namibia
- Netherlands
- Nicaragua
- Nigeria
- Norway
- Pakistan
- Palau
- Panama
- Philippines
- Qatar
- Romania
- Russia
- San Marino
- Saudi Arabia
- Serbia
- Singapore
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- South Korea
- Spain
- Sri Lanka
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Syria
- Republic of China (Taiwan)
- Tonga
- Ukraine
- United States
- Uruguay
- Uzbekistan
- Venezuela
- Yemen
- Zimbabwe
Places
- Akasaka is a large residential and commercial area in northern Minato which includes the Akasaka Palace and surrounding gardens, TBS radio and television studios, Ark Hills complex, Tokyo Midtown, and the embassy of the United States.
- Aoyama is home to Aoyama Cemetery, one of Tokyo's largest graveyards, and the Chichibunomiya Rugby Stadium.
- Atago Shrine is the highest point in all 23 wards of Tokyo.
- Azabu is one of Tokyo's more upscale residential areas, home to many embassies.
- Fushimi Sanpō Inari Jinja is a Shinto shrine in Shiba 3-chōme.
- Hamamatsuchō is the location of Hamamatsucho Station is the terminal for the Tokyo Monorail to Haneda Airport.
- Mita is home to Keio University and several small Buddhist temples.
- The National Art Center, Tokyo is a museum that opened in 2007.
- Odaiba is one of Tokyo's most popular entertainment areas, featuring the Fuji TV studios, Palette Town shopping complex, Dream Bridge, Tokyo Big Sight, and more. Located on an artificial island in Tokyo Bay, it is connected to central Tokyo by the Yurikamome transit line over the Rainbow Bridge.
- Roppongi is Tokyo's best-known nightlife district, especially popular among foreigners; home to National Art Center, also home to the Roppongi Hills complex, which houses the studios of TV Asahi, the J-Wave radio station, the Tokyo Grand Hyatt Hotel, and a shopping complex.
- Shiba Park houses the Zojoji temple. Tokyo Tower is located one block away.
- Shinbashi Station, in Shinbashi, is the northern terminal of Japan's first railway line. Also home to the Shiosite office and entertainment complex, which houses Nippon Television studios.
- Shirokanedai is home to Meiji Gakuin University.
- Takanawa is home to the Sōtō Temple of Sengaku-ji. Shinagawa Station, one of Tokyo's largest train stations, is located in Takanawa, although it is associated with Shinagawa to the south. It is an area of many 1980s hotels including the Grand Prince Hotel Takanawa, Grand Prince Hotel New Takanawa, and Pacific Meridien Hotel, Shinagawa Prince Hotel.
- There is an urban aquarium called Aqua Park Shinagawa on the premises of the Shinagawa Prince Hotel, and the number of visitors exceeds 1.5 million annually.
- Toranomon houses the National Printing Bureau,[89] TV Tokyo studios and the Toranomon Station underground complex.
Transportation
Rail
- Keikyu Main Line (Shinagawa Station)
- Toei Subway:
- Toei Asakusa Line (Shimbashi Station, Daimon Station, Mita Station, Sengakuji Station, Takanawadai Station)
- Toei Oedo Line (Shiodome Station, Daimon Station, Akabanebashi Station, Azabu-juban Station, Roppongi Station, Aoyama-itchome Station)
- Toei Mita Line (Uchisaiwaicho Station, Onarimon Station, Shiba-koen Station, Mita Station, Shirokane-Takanawa Station, Shirokanedai Station)
- Tokyo Metro:
- Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line (Akasaka Station, Nogizaka Station, Omotesando Station)
- Tokyo Metro Ginza Line (Shimbashi Station, Toranomon Station, Tameike-sanno Station, Akasaka-mitsuke Station, Aoyama-itchome Station, Gaienmae Station, Omotesando Station)
- Tokyo Metro Hanzomon Line (Aoyama-itchome Station, Omotesando Station)
- Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line (Kamiyacho Station, Roppongi Station, Hiroo Station)
- Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line (Akasaka-mitsuke Station)
- Tokyo Metro Namboku Line (Tameike-sanno Station, Roppongi-itchome Station, Azabu-juban Station, Shirokane-Takanawa Station, Shirokanedai Station)
- East Japan Railway Company (JR East)
- Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central)
- Tokyo Monorail (Hamamatsucho Station)
- Yurikamome (Shimbashi Station, Shiodome Station, Takeshiba Station, Hinode Station, Shibaura-futō Station, Odaiba-kaihinkōen Station, Daiba Station)
Road
- Shuto Expressway:
- No. 1 Haneda Route (Edobashi JCT – Iriya)
- No. 2 Meguro Route (Ichinohashi JCT – Togoshi)
- No.11 Daiba Route (Shibaura JCT – Ariake JCT)
- B Bayshore Route (Namiki – Kawasaki-ukishima JCT)
- C1 Inner Loop (Edobashi – Takaracho – Kyobashi – Ginza – Shiodome – Hamazakibashi – Shiba Park – Tanimachi – Kasumigaseki – Daikanmachi – Edobashi)
- National roads:
- Route 1 (Sakurada-dori)
- Route 15 (Dai-Ichi Keihin)
- Route 246 (Aoyama-dori)
- Other major roads:
- Atago-dori
- Kaigan-dori
- Kyu-kaigan-dori
- Gaien-higashi-dori
- Gaien-nishi-dori
- Hibiya-dori
- Roppongi-dori
Ferry
Tokyo's main ferry terminal is located adjacent to Takeshiba Station on the Yurikamome, due east of JR Hamamatsucho Station.
Notable people from Minato
- Hirohito, the 124th Emperor of Japan
- Takeichi Nishi, an Imperial Japanese Army officer, equestrian show jumper, and Olympic Gold Medalist at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics
- Kanoko Okamoto (1889–1939), poet, born in Akasaka Ward (present-day Minato)[90]
- Sho Sakurai, actor and singer, affiliated with Arashi
- Haruomi Hosono, experimental electronic pop musician, noted for the commissioned Muji background music
- Jado, Japanese professional wrestler (New Japan Pro-Wrestling)
- Fishmans, a pop and dub band composed primarily of Shinji Sato, Yuzuru Kashiwabara, Kin-ichi Motegi, Hakase-Sun and Kensuke Ojima
- Nujabes, real name Jun Seba, a record producer, audio engineer, DJ, composer, arranger and pioneer of the Hip hop subgenre chillhop or lo-fi
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External links
- Minato City Official Website (in Japanese)