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Narashino

Narashino

FieldValue
nameNarashino
native_name習志野市
native_name_langja
settlement_typeCity
image_skylineNarashino montage.jpg
image_caption
style"width:280px; margin:2px auto; border-collapse:collapse"
style"width:100%" colspan="2"downtown at night
style"width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Morisia Tsudanuma style="width:50%"Chiba Institute of Technology
style"width:50%"Yatsu Rose Garden style="width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Chiba International Swimming Center
style"width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Frontier Soccer Field style="width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Yatsu-higata
image_flagFlag of Narashino, Chiba.svg
image_sealEmblem of Narashino, Chiba.svg
image_mapNarashino in Chiba Prefecture Ja.svg
map_captionLocation of Narashino in Chiba Prefecture
pushpin_mapJapan
pushpin_label_position
pushpin_map_caption
coordinates
coor_pinpoint
coordinates_footnotestags --
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameJapan
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Kantō
subdivision_type2Prefecture
subdivision_name2Chiba
established_title
seat_type
government_footnotestags --
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameTaisuke Miyamoto (since May 2011)
leader_name1
total_type
unit_pref
area_magnitude
area_footnotestags --
area_total_km220.97
elevation_footnotestags --
population_footnotestags --
population_total175292
population_as_ofNovember 30, 2020
population_density_km2auto
population_demonym
timezone1Japan Standard Time
utc_offset1+9
area_code_type
blank_name_sec1City Symbols
blank1_name_sec1- Tree
blank1_info_sec1Acacia
blank2_name_sec1- Flower
blank2_info_sec1Hydrangea
blank_name_sec2Phone number
blank_info_sec2047-451-1151
blank1_name_sec2Address
blank1_info_sec22-1-1 Saginuma, Narashino-shi, Chiba-ken 275-8601
website

style="width:280px; margin:2px auto; border-collapse:collapse" style="width:100%" colspan="2"downtown at night style="width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Morisia Tsudanuma style="width:50%"Chiba Institute of Technology style="width:50%"Yatsu Rose Garden style="width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Chiba International Swimming Center style="width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Frontier Soccer Field style="width:50%; vertical-align:middle"Yatsu-higata

Narashino City Hall

Narashino is a city located in Chiba Prefecture, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 175,292 in 81,985 households and a population density of 8400 persons per km2. The total area of the city is 20.97 sqkm

Geography

Narashino is located in far northwestern Chiba Prefecture, bordered by Tokyo Bay to the southwest, and the prefectural capital of Chiba to the east. It is approximately 20 to 30 kilometers from central Tokyo.

The city is located on the Shimōsa Plateau and reclaimed land fill on Tokyo Bay, with a large difference in elevation from the inland area to the coastal area.

Surrounding municipalities

Chiba Prefecture

  • Chiba
  • Funabashi
  • Yachiyo

Climate

Narashino has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cfa) characterized by warm summers and cool winters with light to no snowfall. The average annual temperature in Narashino is 15.4 °C. The average annual rainfall is 1410 mm with September as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around 26.9 °C, and lowest in January, at around 4.9 °C.

Demographics

Per Japanese census data, the population of Narashino increased rapidly between 1950 and 1990 and has grown at a slower pace since.

| 1950 | 28,667 | 1960 | 42,167 | 1970 | 99,995 | 1980 | 125,155 | 1990 | 151,471 | 2000 | 154,036 | 2010 | 164,530 | 2020 | 176,167

History

The area around Narashino has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Archaeologists have found shell middens and numerous other remains from Jōmon period, as well as burial tumuli from the Kofun period. However, for most of its history, the area was a sparsely populated wetland and swamp along the northern shore of Edo Bay.

After the Meiji Restoration, Tsudanuma was founded within Chiba District on April 1, 1889 on the merger of five small hamlets with a total population of 4500 people. The area only began to develop with the coming of the railway, and Tsudanuma was raised to town status on March 3, 1903, with a population of 6000.

The Narashino area of Tsudanuma was used for cavalry maneuvers by the Imperial Guard and the early Imperial Japanese Army, and was visited by the Meiji Emperor early in the Meiji period (1868 – 1912). A prisoner of war camp was built in 1904 to house POWs from the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 and World War I. The Imperial Japanese Army Narashino School was the main training school for cavalry, and later for tank warfare.

On August 1, 1954, Tsudanuma merged with a portion of the neighboring city of Chiba (the former town of Makuhari) to form the new city of Narashino.

Neighborhoods

  • Akanehama
  • Akitsu
  • Fujisaki
  • Hanasaki
  • Higashi-Narashino
  • Izumicho
  • Kanadenomori
  • Kasumi
  • Mimomi
  • Moto-Okubo
  • Okubo
  • Saginuma
  • Saginumadai
  • Shibazono
  • Shin-ei
  • Sodegaura
  • Tsudanuma
  • Yashiki
  • Yatsu
  • Yatsumachi

Government

Narashino has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city council of 30 members. Narashino contributes two members to the Chiba Prefectural Assembly. In terms of national politics, the city is part of Chiba 2nd district of the lower house of the Diet of Japan.

Economy

Narashino is a regional commercial center and a bedroom community for nearby Chiba and Tokyo, with 32,7% of the residents commuting to Tokyo per the 2010 census, and 11.7% to Funabashi and 10.5% to Chiba. The coastal area, mostly on reclaimed land is part of the Keiyō Industrial Zone and is home to much heavy industry, especially related to chemical processing.

Transportation

Railways

:

: -

Main Line

: - - -

Chiba Line

: Keisei Tsudanuma

Matsudo Line

: Keisei Tsudanuma -

Highways

Education

  • Chiba Institute of Technology
  • Narashino has 16 public elementary schools and eight public middle schools operated by the city government, and four public high schools operated by the Chiba Prefectural Board of Education.

Local attractions

  • Akitsu Baseball Stadium
  • Chiba International General Swimming Center
  • Frontier Soccer Field (naming rights from April 1, 2015 to March 31, 2018), formerly known as Akitsu Soccer Stadium.
  • Ōnomatsu stable

Notable places

  • Yatsu-higata (谷津干潟), a Ramsar Site and protected wetlands for migratory birds. The spring and summer months see an increase of jellyfish and small crabs to the wetlands.
  • Yatsu Rose Garden (谷津バラ園), a rose garden which displays over 6,000 individual blossoms in May and October. The garden was founded with Yatsu Yūen (谷津遊園), an amusement park which was managed by Keisei Electric Railway and closed in 1982. When the park was closed, the city bought the garden, and has managed it since that time.

Sister cities

  • USA Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States

Noted people from Narashino

  • Daiki Arioka, Hey! Say! JUMP
  • Kazuya Fukuura, professional baseball player for the Chiba Lotte Marines (1994–present)
  • Kota Hattori, professional soccer player
  • Hideaki Kitajima,– professional soccer player for Kashiwa Reysol (1997-2002, 2006-2012)
  • Makoto Sunakawa, professional soccer player
  • Daichi Suzuki, swimmer, Olympic gold medalist in 100m backstroke at 1988 Summer Olympics
  • Masaaki Takada, professional soccer player
  • Hōō Umagorō, sumo wrestler

References

References

  1. (2012). "Narashino". Shogakukan.
  2. (2012). "習志野(市)". Shogakukan.
  3. "Narashino city official statistics".
  4. (2012). "習志野". Shogakukan.
  5. [https://en.climate-data.org/asia/japan/chiba/narashino-764724/ Narashino climate data]
  6. [https://www.citypopulation.de/php/japan-chiba.php Narashino population statistics]
  7. (2012). "習志野". Shogakukan.
  8. "Interactive City Directory". [[Sister Cities International]].
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