Taiheiyō Belt
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The Taiheiyō Belt (太平洋ベルト, Taiheiyō beruto, literally "Pacific Belt"), also known as the Tōkaidō corridor, is the megalopolis in Japan extending from Ibaraki Prefecture in the northeast to Fukuoka Prefecture in the southwest, running for almost 1,200 km (750 mi). Its population is about 74.7 million.
The urbanization zone runs mainly along the Pacific coast (hence the name) of Japan from Kantō region to Osaka, and the Inland Sea (on both sides) to Fukuoka, and is concentrated along the Tōkaidō-Sanyō rail corridor. A view of Japan at night clearly shows a rather dense and continuous strip of light (demarcating urban zones) that delineates the region.[1] The high population is particularly due to the large plains – the Kantō Plain, Kinai Plain, and Nōbi Plain – which facilitate building in mountainous Japan.
Although it contains the majority of Japan's population, references to it in Japanese are mainly economic or regional in nature. The term was first used in 1960 in an Economic Commission Subcommittee Report formed to double the national income.[citation needed] At that time, it was identified as the core of the nation's industrial complex. Other than the Miyagi area, nearly all manufacturing industry in the nation lies in this zone, accounting for 81% of the nation's economic output in 2007 (about US$4–5 trillion).
The region is specifically defined by the Ministry of International Trade and Industry as the following prefectures: Ibaraki, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Shizuoka, Aichi, Gifu, Mie, Osaka, Hyōgo, Wakayama, Okayama, Hiroshima, Yamaguchi, Fukuoka and Oita.[citation needed]
The Sea of Japan has a much less well-developed string of cities, called Ura-nippon (裏日本) (literally "inner side of Japan"[2]), stretching 1000 km from Akita to Yamaguchi. It is often referenced in relation to the Taiheiyo belt. The Shinkansen line south (and west) of Tokyo runs the course through the belt cities.
Major cities
Listed from north to south:
city[3] | region | including | population (2010) |
GDP (million US$) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Greater Mito | Kantō | Hitachinaka | 678,969 | 30,258 |
Greater Tsukuba | Kantō | Tsuchiura | 847,292 | 37,132 |
Greater Tokyo | Kantō | Saitama, Chiba, Yokohama, Kawasaki, Sagamihara | 34,834,167 | 1,797,899 |
Greater Numazu | Chūbu | Mishima | 509,249 | 22,888 |
Greater Shizuoka | Chūbu | Yaizu, Fujieda | 1,001,597 | 45,840 |
Greater Hamamatsu | Chūbu | Iwata, Fukuroi | 1,133,879 | 54,258 |
Greater Toyohashi | Chūbu | Toyokawa | 676,333 | 31,001 |
Greater Nagoya | Chūbu | Ichinomiya, Kasugai, Kuwana, Kani | 5,490,453 | 256,290 |
Greater Yokkaichi | Kansai | Suzuka | 621,689 | 29,072 |
Greater Kyoto | Kansai | Uji, Otsu, Kusatsu | 2,679,094 | 115,258 |
Greater Osaka | Kansai | Sakai, Higashiosaka, Nishinomiya, Nara | 12,273,041 | 516,775 |
Greater Kobe | Kansai | Akashi, Kakogawa, Takasago | 2,431,076 | 96,004 |
Greater Himeji | Kansai | Tatsuno | 784,365 | 33,587 |
Greater Wakayama | Kansai | Iwade | 584,852 | 24,592 |
Greater Tokushima | Shikoku | Anan | 680,467 | 28,384 |
Greater Okayama | Chūgoku | Kurashiki, Sōja | 1,532,146 | 63,101 |
Greater Takamatsu | Shikoku | Marugame | 830,040 | 34,722 |
Greater Fukuyama | Chūgoku | Onomichi | 764,838 | 31,518 |
Greater Hiroshima | Chūgoku | Hatsukaichi, Fuchu-cho | 1,141,848 | 61,345 |
Greater Matsuyama | Shikoku | Iyo | 642,841 | 24,509 |
Greater Kitakyushu | Kyushu | Yukuhashi, Nogata | 1,370,169 | 55,693 |
Greater Fukuoka | Kyushu | Kasuga, Chikushino, Itoshima | 2,495,552 | 101,644 |
Greater Ōita | Kyushu | Beppu | 743,323 | 28,881 |
May also include:[citation needed]
city | region | including | population | GDP (million US$) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Greater Kumamoto | Kyushu | Uki, Kōshi | 1,102,398 | 39,763 |
See also
References
- ^ Satellite images of stable night time lights in Japan
- ^ "Omote-ura – Public and Private Faces". Nakasendoway.com. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
Omote Nihon and Ura Nihon are terms sometimes used to refer to the advanced Pacific Ocean side of Japan (the public side which outsiders see) and the Japan Sea side which is less populated and underdeveloped (the private side of Japan which supposedly no one wants exposed to outside scrutiny).
- ^ "Urban Employment Area". Center for Spatial Information Science, The University of Tokyo. Retrieved August 13, 2016.