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Shizuoka (city)

City in Shizuoka prefecture, Japan


City in Shizuoka prefecture, Japan

FieldValue
nameShizuoka
native_name
official_nameCity of Shizuoka
settlement_typePrefecture capital and Designated city
image_skyline{{multiple image
borderinfobox
total_width290
perrow1/2/2/2
image1Mount Fuji and Port of Shimizu from Nihondaira.jpg
alt1Mount Fuji and Port of Shimizu from Nihondaira
caption1Mount Fuji and Port of Shimizu from Nihondaira
image2Sunpu Castle Tatsumi Yagura 201015a.jpg
alt2Sunpu Castle
caption2Sunpu Castle
image3三保の松原, Miho no matsubara - panoramio.jpg
alt3Miho no Matsubara
caption3Miho no Matsubara
image4231006 Kunozan Tosho-gu Shizuoka Japan30s3.jpg
alt4Kunōzan Tōshō-gū
caption4Kunōzan Tōshō-gū
image5Denmacho intersection 03.jpg
alt5Denmachō intersection
caption5Denmachō intersection
image6Toro Site, enkei.jpg
alt6Toro (archaeological site)
caption6Toro Site
image7S-pulse dream plaza 201016a.jpg
alt7Port of Shimizu
caption7Port of Shimizu
image_flagFlag of Shizuoka, Shizuoka.svg
image_blank_emblemEmblem of Shizuoka, Shizuoka.svg
blank_emblem_typeEmblem
image_map
image_map1Location of Shizuoka city Shizuoka prefecture Japan.svg
map_caption1Location of Shizuoka in Shizuoka Prefecture
pushpin_mapJapan
pushpin_label_position
pushpin_map_caption
coordinates
coor_pinpoint
coordinates_footnotestags --
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameJapan
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Chūbu (Tōkai)
subdivision_type2Prefecture
subdivision_name2Shizuoka Prefecture
established_titleFirst official record
established_date663 AD
established_title2City Status
established_date2
seat_type
government_footnotestags --
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameTakashi Namba
total_type
unit_pref
area_magnitude
area_footnotestags --
area_total_km21,411.90
elevation_footnotestags --
population_footnotestags --
population_total677867
population_as_ofSeptember 1, 2023
population_density_km2auto
population_demonym
timezone1Japan Standard Time
utc_offset1+9
area_code_type
blank_name_sec1Symbols
blank_info_sec1
blank1_name_sec1• Tree
blank1_info_sec1Flowering dogwood
blank2_name_sec1• Flower
blank2_info_sec1Hollyhock
blank3_name_sec1• Bird
blank3_info_sec1Common kingfisher
blank_name_sec2Phone number
blank_info_sec2054-254-2111
blank1_name_sec2Address
blank1_info_sec25-1 Ōtemachi, Aoi-ku, Shizuoka-shi, Shizuoka-ken 420-8602
website

Shizuoka is the capital city of Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, and the prefecture's second-largest city in both population and area. It has been populated since prehistoric times. the city had an estimated population of 677,867 in 106,087 households, and a population density of 480 PD/km2.

Overview

The city's name is made up of two kanji, 静 shizu, meaning "still" or "calm"; and 岡 oka, meaning "hill(s)". In 1869, Shizuoka Domain was first created out of the older Sunpu Domain, and that name was retained when the city was incorporated in 1885. In 2003, Shizuoka absorbed neighboring Shimizu City (now Shimizu Ward) to create the new and expanded city of Shizuoka, briefly becoming the largest city by land area in Japan. In 2005, it became one of Japan's "designated cities".

Geography

Shizuoka City lies in central Shizuoka Prefecture, about halfway between Tokyo and Nagoya along the Tōkaidō Corridor, between Suruga Bay to the south and the Minami Alps in the north. Shizuoka had the largest area of any municipality in Japan after merging with Shimizu City in April 2003, until February 2005, when Takayama in Gifu Prefecture superseded it by merging with nine surrounding municipalities.

The total area of the city is 1411.90 km2. Shizuoka is the 5th largest city in Japan in terms of geographic area after Takayama, Hamamatsu, Nikkō, and Kitami. It is also the 2nd largest city in Shizuoka Prefecture in terms of both geographic area and population after Hamamatsu, but ranks higher as an Urban Employment Area, and leads as a metropolitan area and business region.

The fan-like shape of the Shizuoka Plain and Miho Peninsula were formed over the ages by the fast-flowing Abe River, carrying along collapsed sand and earth. These areas form the foundations of the city today. The isolated Mount Kunō separates the Suruga coastline from the Shimizu coastline.

Basic data

  • Area of densely populated region
    • 103.99 km2
  • Urban planning area
    • 234.80 km2
  • Area zoned for urbanization
    • 104.0 km2

Nature

Mountains

  • Mount Aino
  • Mount Shiomi
  • Mount Warusawa
  • Mount Akaishi
  • Mount Hijiri
  • Mount Tekari
  • Mount Yanbushi
  • Mount Daimugen
  • Mankan Pass
  • Mount Mafuji
  • Mount Jūmai
  • Mount Ryūsō
  • Mount Shizuhata
  • Mount Yatsu
  • Mount Yahata
  • Mount Udo (Nihondaira)
  • Mount Kajiwara
  • Mount Satta (Satta Pass)
  • Mount Hamaishi
  • Mount Ōmaru
  • Mount Ōhira

Rivers

  • Ōi River (upstream)
  • Abe River
  • Warashina River
  • Mariko River
  • Tomoe River
  • Ōya River Drainage Ditch
  • Nagao River
  • Fuji River
  • Okitsu River
  • Ōzawa River
  • Ihara River
  • Yamakiri River
  • Nakagōchi River
  • Ōhashi River
  • Kogōchi River

Lakes

  • Lake Ikawa (Ikawa Dam)
  • Lake Hatanagi (Hatanagi-I Dam)
  • Asahata Marsh (Asahata Anti-flood Pond)
  • Kujira Pond
  • Udosaka Pond
  • Futatsu Pond (Oshika Pond)
  • Funakoshi Dike

Climate

On the south-central Pacific coast Shizuoka has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cfa), which is hot and humid in the summer, and rarely snows in the winter. It is close to the warm Kuroshio Current and is wet even by Japanese standards with only slightly less precipitation than Kanazawa on the opposite side of Honshū, but it is paradoxically the sunniest of Japan's major cities owing to the absence of summer fog and its sheltered location from the northwesterly winds off the Sea of Japan. Further north, the mountainous Ikawa area is part of the Japanese snow country, where there are ski areas.

| Jan record high C = 25.7 | Feb record high C = 26.2 | Mar record high C = 28.0 | Apr record high C = 33.3 | May record high C = 33.9 | Jun record high C = 38.3 | Jul record high C = 40.0 | Aug record high C = 41.4 | Sep record high C = 39.2 | Oct record high C = 33.9 | Nov record high C = 28.0 | Dec record high C = 24.5 | Jan record low C = -6.8 | Feb record low C = -5.8 | Mar record low C = -4.6 | Apr record low C = -1.4 | May record low C = 5.1 | Jun record low C = 12.5 | Jul record low C = 15.4 | Aug record low C = 16.9 | Sep record low C = 10.6 | Oct record low C = 3.9 | Nov record low C = -1.7 | Dec record low C = -5.1 | script-title = ja:気象庁 / 平年値(年・月ごとの値) | access-date = May 19, 2021 | archive-date = 21 May 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210521155046/https://www.data.jma.go.jp/obd/stats/etrn/index.php?prec_no=50&block_no=47656&year=&month=&day=&view= | url-status = live

Area

Coloured map
Wards of Shizuoka

Wards

;Aoi Ward :Administrative center, made up of the former Shizuoka north of the Tōkaidō Main Line excluding Osada district ;Suruga Ward :Former Shizuoka south of the Tōkaidō Main Line and Osada district ;Shimizu Ward :Former city of Shimizu and towns of Kanbara and Yui.

Administrative district "image colours"

On 22 December 2006, colours and logos were established for each of the wards.

Aoi WardSuruga WardShimizu Ward
Aoi Ward Green
Suruga Ward Red
Shimizu Ward Blue

Demographics

the city had an estimated population of 704,989 in 286,013 households and a population density of 507 PD/km2.

Shizuoka City seen from the South
DemographicPopulationAs ofMaleFemaleHouseholdsForeignTotal
343,339August 2019
361,651
286,013
9,389May 2019
704,989August 2019

Historic population

Per Japanese census data, the population of Shizuoka has been declining slowly since 1990.

| 1940 | 395,189 | 1950 | 467,782 | 1960 | 576,482 | 1970 | 681,797 | 1980 | 727,260 | 1990 | 739,300 | 2000 | 729,980 | 2010 | 716,328 | 2020 | 693,389

Bordering municipalities

;ShizuokaShizuoka Prefecture

  • Fuji
  • Fujieda
  • Fujinomiya
  • Kawanehon (Haibara District)
  • Shimada
  • Yaizu ;YamanashiYamanashi Prefecture
  • Hayakawa (Minamikoma District)
  • Minami-Alps
  • Minobu (Minamikoma District)
  • Nanbu (Minamikoma District) ;NaganoNagano Prefecture
  • Iida
  • Ina
  • Ōshika (Shimoina District)

History

Reconstructed building at the Toro archeological site
Suruga Kokubunji

Ancient history

The area that is now the city of Shizuoka has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Numerous kofun have been found within the city limits, and the Toro archaeological site indicates that a major Yayoi period (circa 400 BC–300 AD) settlement existed in what is now part of the central city area.

Suruga was established as a province of Japan in the early Nara period. At some point between the year 701 and 710, the provincial capital was relocated from what is now Numazu, to a more central location on the banks of the Abe River at a location named Sunpu (a contraction of "Suruga no Kokufu") or alternatively "Fuchū".

Pre-modern Shizuoka

During the Muromachi period, Sunpu was the capital of the Imagawa clan. The Imagawa were defeated at the Battle of Okehazama, and Sunpu was subsequently ruled by Takeda Shingen, followed by Tokugawa Ieyasu. However, Toyotomi Hideyoshi relocated Ieyasu, and installed Nakamura Kazutada to rule Sunpu. After the Toyotomi were defeated in the Battle of Sekigahara, Ieyasu recovered Sunpu, reassigning it to his own retainer, Naitō Nobunari in 1601. This marked the start of Sunpu Domain.

In April 1606, Ieyasu officially retired from the post of shōgun, and retired to Sunpu, where he established a secondary court, from which he could influence Shōgun Tokugawa Hidetada from behind the scenes. Subsequently, aside for brief periods, Sunpu was tenryō (territory under direct administration by the Shogunate), ruled by the Sunpu jōdai, an appointed official based in Sunpu.

From the Meiji period to World War II

In 1869, after the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate, the former shogunal line, headed by Tokugawa Iesato was sent to Sunpu and assigned the short-lived Sunpu Domain. The same year, Sunpu was renamed "Shizuoka". Shizuoka Domain became Shizuoka Prefecture with the abolition of the han system in 1871, which was expanded in 1876 through merger with the former Hamamatsu Prefecture and western portions of Ashigaru Prefecture in 1876. Shizuoka Station on the Tōkaidō Main Line was opened on 1 February 1889. The same day, a fire burned down most of downtown Shizuoka.

The modern city was founded on 1 April 1889. At the time, the population was 37,681, and Shizuoka was one of the first 31 cities established in Japan.

An electric tram service began in 1911. In 1914, due to heavy rains caused by a typhoon, the Abe River flooded, inundating the downtown area. In the national census of 1920, the population of Shizuoka was 74,093. The area of the city continued to expand through the 1920s and 1930s through merger with outlying towns and villages. In 1935, the city was struck by a 6.4 magnitude earthquake, resulting in much damage. Although soon rebuilt, a large fire in 1940 again destroyed much of the center of the city.

During World War II, Shizuoka lacked targets of major military significance, and was initially only lightly bombed during several American air raids. However, in a major firebombing raid of 19 June 1945, the city suffered an extreme amount of damage with high civilian casualties.

Post-war Shizuoka

The area of the city continued to expand through the 1950s and 1960s through merger with outlying towns and villages. On 1 October 1964, the Tōkaidō Shinkansen began services to Shizuoka, and on 25 April 1969 the city was connected to the Tōmei Expressway. On 7 July 1974, the Abe River flooded, and landslides occurred during heavy rains, killing 23 people. On 16 August 1980, a major gas leak in an underground shopping center near Shizuoka Station resulted in an explosion, killing 15 people and seriously injuring 233 others. The Shizuoka City Hall moved to new premises in 1986. On 1 April 1992, Shizuoka was designated a core city by the central government, giving it increased autonomy.

The 1 April 2003 merger with Shimizu City (current Shimizu Ward) greatly expanded the area and population of Shizuoka, which then became a designated city on 1 April 2005, and was divided into three wards.

Despite being somewhat geographically isolated from the rest of the city, the town of Kanbara (from Ihara District) was merged into Shizuoka on 31 March 2006, becoming part of Shimizu-ku. On 1 November 2008, the town of Yui (also from Ihara District) was also merged into Shimizu-ku, resulting in the dissolution of Ihara District.

Government

Shizuoka Prefectural Government Office
Shizuoka City Hall

Shizuoka has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city legislature of 48 members. The city contributes 13 members to the Shizuoka Prefectural Assembly. In terms of national politics, the city is divided between Shizuoka 1st district and Shizuoka 4th district in the lower house of the Japanese Diet.

Mayors

Former Shizuoka city from 1889 to 2003

TermNameStartFinish123456
Tetsutaro Hoshino
(星野鉄太郎)13 May 188917 April 1902
Hiroyasu Nagashima
(長嶋弘裕)14 May 190213 May 1914
Keisuke Komori
(小森慶助)28 May 191427 May 1918
Kinpei Banno
(伴野欣平)18 June 19182 July 1926
Genzaburo Kojima
(小島源三郎)8 September 19267 September 1929
Michinosuke Miyazaki
(宮崎通之助)3 March 193125 January 1933
TermNameStartFinish789101112
Sadahito Suga
(菅貞仁)14 March 193312 August 1935
Motojiro Ozaki
(尾崎元次郎)12 October 193530 June 1938
Seiji Inamori
(稲森誠次)29 August 19385 August 1942
Motojiro Ozaki
(second term)7 October 194221 August 1944
Michinosuke Miyazaki
(second term)11 September 194411 November 1946
Shigeru Masuda
(増田茂)5 April 19479 April 1955
TermNameStartFinish131415161718
Jyunsaku Yamada
(山田順策)2 May 19551 May 1959
Hikoo Matsunaga
(松永彦雄)2 May 19591 May 1963
Jyunpei Ogino
(荻野準平)2 May 19631 May 1983
Daigo Kawai
(河合代悟)2 May 19831 May 1987
Shingo Amano
(天野進吾)2 May 198731 July 1994
Zenkichi Kojima
(小嶋善吉)28 August 199431 March 2003

Former Shimizu city from 1924 to 2003

TermNameStartFinish12345678910111213
Yozo Oshima
(大島要蔵)7 July 19249 September 1925
Katsushiro Yamada
(山田勝四郎)13 January 19268 March 1929
Tokisaburo Shiobara
(塩原時三郎)12 October 192922 February 1932
Enao Oishi
(大石恵直)18 March 193214 June 1937
Katsushiro Yamada
(second term)11 July 193715 November 1946
Masaharu Yamamoto
(山本正治)6 April 19477 April 1955
Heiichiro Suzuki
(鈴木平一郎)30 April 195530 April 1959
Toru Ina
(稲名徹)1 May 195922 July 1960
Kamezo Ina
(稲名亀造)15 September 196012 September 1964
Zensaku Ikegami
(池上善作)13 September 19646 July 1965
Torajiro Sato
(佐藤虎次郎)20 August 196519 August 1977
Yoshio Ina
(稲名嘉男)20 August 197719 August 1985
Hiromasa Miyagishima
(宮城島弘正)20 August 198531 March 2003

Since 2003 merger

TermNameStartFinish1–23–67
Zenkichi Kojima14 April 200312 April 2011
Nobuhiro Tanabe13 April 201112 April 2023
Takashi Namba13 April 2023current

Administration

Ward offices

  • Shizuoka City Office/Aoi Ward Office: 5-1 Ōtemachi, Aoi-ku, Shizuoka-shi 420-8602
    • Aoi Ward Ikawa Branch Office: 656-2 Ikawa, Aoi-ku, Shizuoka-shi 428-0504
  • Suruga Ward Office: 10-40 Minamiyahata-chō, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka-shi 422-8550
    • Suruga Ward Osada Branch Office: 13-1 Kami-Kawahara Suruga-ku, Shizuoka-shi 421-0132
  • Shimizu City Office/Shimizu Ward Office: 6-9 Asahi-chō, Shimizu-ku, Shizuoka-shi 424-8701
    • Shimizu Ward Kanbara Branch Office: 1-21-1 Kanbara Shinden, Shimizu-ku, Shizuoka-shi 421-3211

Sister cities

Shizuoka has twin and friendship relationships with several cities.

International

;Sister cities

CityCountryStatesince
StocktonUSAUnited StatesCaliforniaOctober 16, 1959
OmahaUSAUnited StatesNebraskaApril 1, 1965
ShelbyvilleUSAUnited StatesIndianaNovember 3, 1989
CannesFRAFranceProvence-Alpes-Côte d'Azururl=http://www.clair.or.jp/cgi-bin/simai/e/03.cgi?p=22&n=Shizuoka%20Prefecturetitle=International Exchangework=List of Affiliation Partners within Prefecturespublisher=Council of Local Authorities for International Relations (CLAIR)access-date=21 November 2015url-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160113132810/http://www.clair.or.jp/cgi-bin/simai/e/03.cgi?p=22&n=Shizuoka%20Prefecturearchive-date=13 January 2016df=dmy-all}}

;Friendship cities

CityCountryStatesince
HuếVIEVietnamThừa Thiên Huế provinceApril 12, 2005

National

;Sister cities

CityPrefectureregionsince
MuroranHokkaidoIburiHokkaidō regionDecember 24,1976
JōetsuNiigataNiigataChūbu regionOctober 12, 1995

;Friendship cities

CityPrefectureregionsince
SakuNaganoNaganoChūbu regionOctober 12, 1989

Economy

Metropolitan Employment Area
Bandai Hobby Center
Miyukicho

Shizuoka has 35,579 businesses as of 2012.

Employment by industry: Agriculture 0.1%, Manufacturing: 26.9%, Service 73.0%

Greater Shizuoka, Shizuoka Metropolitan Employment Area, has a GDP of US$45.8 billion as of 2010.

Shizuoka's GDP per capita (PPP) 2014 was US$41,472.

Fuji Dream Airlines is headquartered in Aoi-ku, Shizuoka.

Agriculture

;Green tea: Varieties such as Motoyama and Yabukita are grown in all corners of the city, and the varieties grown especially in the Warashina area in Aoi Ward and the Ryōgōchi area of Shimizu Ward are known for their high quality ;Strawberries: "Stonewall strawberries" are strawberries that grow in holes on inclined stone walls, grown especially along an 8 km stretch of Kunō Kaidō (route 150), also known as "Strawberry Road", along the coast of Suruga Bay. ;Wasabi :especially in areas such as Utōgi in Aoi Ward ;Mandarin orange and other citrus fruits:especially Satsuma, a seedless and easy-peeling citrus mutant, known as mikan or formally unshū mikan ;Lotus roots: especially in the Asahata area of Aoi Ward ;Roses: especially in the Ihara and Okitsu areas in Shimizu Ward ;Peaches:especially in the Osada area::: :Potatoes :Especially the Sebago potato. Originally exported to Crookwell

Fishery

Shimizu Port boasts the largest haul of tuna in all Japan. Kanbara Harbour enjoys a prosperous haul of sakura ebi, and Mochimune Harbour enjoys a prosperous haul of shirasu sardines.

Products

Abekawa Mochi is a type of rice cake (or mochi) made with kinako soy flour that is a specialty of Shizuoka.

Shizuoka has a long history of being involved in the craft industries going back over 400 years ago, using trees, including hinoki cypress. The model industry goes back to the late 1920s when wood was used to produce model toys, using sashimono woodworking joinery techniques, purely for educational purposes. Craftsmen later moved on to lighter woods including balsa, but following the war, with the importation of US built scale models, many companies either turned to plastic models to compete or went under.

The town has since become internationally notable for its plastic scale model kits and is resident to long-established companies such as Aoshima, Fujimi, Hasegawa, and Tamiya. Another model brand, Bandai, produces its Gundam models exclusively at its Bandai Hobby Center plant in the city. The city hosts the long-running Shizuoka Hobby Show annually in May at Twin Messe Shizuoka.

Media

The Shizuoka Shimbun is the area's primary newspaper.

The book trilogy “Paper Gods” by Amanda Sun takes place in this city.

Broadcast media

Television

  • NHK Shizuoka (Analogue Channel 9; Digital Channel 1)
  • NHK Shizuoka Educational Channel (Analogue Channel 2; Digital Channel 2)
  • Shizuoka Broadcasting System (SBS) (Analogue Channel 11; Digital Channel 6)
  • TV Shizuoka (Analogue Channel 35; Digital Channel 8)
  • Shizuoka Daiichi Television (Analogue Channel 31; Digital Channel 4)
  • Shizuoka Asahi Television (Analogue Channel 33; Digital Channel 5)

Cable television

Shizuoka Cable Television (Dream Wave Shizuoka)

Radio

  • NHK1 882 kHz
  • NHK2 639 kHz
  • NHK-FM 88.8 MHz
  • SBS 1404 kHz / 93.9 MHz
  • K-MIX 79.2 MHz
  • FM-Hi!76.9 MHz
  • Marine Pal (FM Shimizu) 76.3 MHz
  • Guzen Media Japan—A podcast and vidcast based in Shizuoka, Japan

Education

Shizuoka Prefectural University

Colleges and universities

  • Shizuoka University :National university, founded 1949. Main campus in Suruga Ward. Abbreviated to 静大 (Shizudai).
  • University of Shizuoka (Shizuoka Prefectural University) :Public university whose main campus is in Suruga Ward, close to Kusanagi Station.
  • Tokai University :Shimizu campus of the Tokyo-based private university
  • Tokoha Gakuen University :Private university founded in 1946
  • Shizuoka Eiwa Gakuin University :Co-educational private university in Suruga Ward, founded by missionaries from the Methodist Church of Canada with the support of the Shizuoka prefectural government. First institution in Shizuoka Prefecture to offer secondary education for girls, it became a four-year coeducational university in 2002.
  • University of Shizuoka Junior College :Junior college in Suruga Ward, affiliated with University of Shizuoka.
  • Tokai University Junior College :Junior college in Aoi Ward, affiliated with Tokai University.
  • Tokoha Gakuen Junior College :Junior college in Aoi Ward, affiliated with Tokoha Gakuen University.

Primary and secondary education

Shizuoka has 91 elementary schools, 57 middle schools and 27 high schools. In addition there are 29 vocations schools and 12 public libraries.

Transportation

[[Shizuoka Airport
Shin-Shizuoka Cenova

Airways

Airports

The nearest airport is Shizuoka Airport, situated between Makinohara and Shimada.

Railways

Shizuoka lies on the Tōkaidō Main Line, the JR Central main railway line from Tokyo to Osaka, and is well-served by the Tōkaidō Shinkansen, limited express and regional trains. The central station of Shizuoka is in the city centre. Shizuoka also has an LRT line, the Shizuoka Railway, administered by the Shizuoka Railway Co., Ltd. at Shizuoka Station. The under construction Chūō Shinkansen will pass through the mountainous area in the northern tip of the city. However, the line is not planned to have a station in Shizuoka.

High-Speed Rail

;[[File:JR logo (central).svg|20px]] Central Japan Railway Company (JR Tōkai)

  • Tōkaidō Shinkansen: - **** -

Conventional lines

;[[File:JR logo (central).svg|20px]] Central Japan Railway Company (JR Tōkai)

  • Tōkaidō Main Line: - **** - ;[[File:Shizuoka Railway logo.jpg|15px]] Shizuoka Railway (Shizutetsu)
  • Shizuoka Railway Shizuoka-Shimizu Line: **** – – – – – – – – – – – – – – ;[[File:Daitetsu logomark.svg|15px]] Ōigawa Railway (Daitetsu)
  • Ōigawa Railway Ikawa Line: - – -

Buses

Bus terminal

  • Shin-Shizuoka Cenova

Roads

Expressway

  • [[File:JP Expressway E1.svg|24px|link=|alt=E1]] Tōmei Expressway
  • [[File:JP Expressway E1A.svg|24px|link=|alt=E1A]] Shin-Tōmei Expressway
  • [[File:JP Expressway E52.svg|24px|link=|alt=E52]] Chūbu-Ōdan Expressway

Japan National Route

Seaways

Sea port

The Port of Shimizu-ku, in Shimizu City (now Shimizu Ward), is a long established mid-size sea port, catering to container ships, dry bulk ships and cruise ships.

It is well located, being in between the two major port areas of Japan, i.e. the Tokyo Bay ports of Tokyo, Kawasaki and Yokohama (Keihin ports) and the Osaka Bay ports of Osaka and Kobe (Hanshin ports). The Port of Shimizu has a water depth of about 12 m; its attractiveness has been enhanced over the past years by the construction of new road and rail links which contribute to expanding its commercial hinterland.

In tonnage, imports (about 6.5 e6t) are close to twice export volumes, but in trade value exports are twice as valuable as imports.

The Port of Shimizu container traffic is about balanced, with over 250,000 TEU in each direction, with auto parts and chemicals amongst the main cargo types. Major international container lines provide weekly services on major trade routes, including North America, Europe and Asia, with about 110 calls per months on 28 trade routes.

The port of Shimizu also includes a terminal to receive LNG tankers and store imported Liquefied natural gas; it is operated by Shimizu LNG, a subsidiary of Shizuoka Gas (Japan is the world's largest importer of LNG).

The Port of Shimizu is also connected to other Japan ports. In particular, it is served by a Roll-on/roll-off service serving the port of Ōita, on the north-east coast of the southern island of Kyushu. This service, which sails three times a week and has a transit time of 20 hours, has enabled a modal shift of freight trucks from road to sea, thereby contributing to decreasing congestion and pollution on roads.

Tourism

[[Kunōzan Tōshō-gū

Local attractions

Museums

  • Shizuoka Prefectural Museum of Art
  • Shizuoka City Tokaido Hiroshige Museum of Art
  • Museum of Natural and Environmental History, Shizuoka

Major attractions

  • Nihondaira
  • Miho no Matsubara

Historic spots

In Aoi Ward

;Shizuoka Sengen Shrine :A collection of Shinto shrines that was patronised by powerful warrior clans since ancient times, most notably the Tokugawa clan. ;Sunpu Park/Sunpu Castle ruins :The castle of the Imagawa and Tokugawa clans, originally built in 1599, was destroyed in 1869. Today, only the moats remain. The rest was turned into a park, and is now a popular place for hanami.

In Suruga Ward

;Toro :Late Yayoi archaeological site notable as the first archaeological site excavated in Japan in which remains of a 1st-century AD Yayoi-era wet-rice Paddy fields were found. ;Kunōzan Tōshō-gū :Shinto shrine that was the original burial place of Shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu, and the oldest of the Tōshō-gū shrines in Japan. The main festival of the shrine is held annually on 17 April, although its spring festival from 17–18 February is a larger event. ;Mariko-juku :Twentieth of the fifty-three stations of the old Tōkaidō road, an old travel route during the Edo period.

In Shimizu Ward

;Miho Peninsula :Famous for the scenic Miho no Matsubara, renowned as a seashore with beautiful green pine trees and white sands spanning over seven kilometers, designated as one of New Three Views of Japan. Also known as the scene of the legend of Hagoromo, which is based on the traditional swan maiden motif.

Culture

Festivals

;Daidogei World Cup: The Daidogei World Cup is an annual international street performers' festival, held over various locations around the city in November over four days. It was first held in 1992.

;Shizuoka Festival: The festival, which begun in 1957 but whose origins date back to traditions hundreds of years old, takes place in April, during the high point of the year for cherry blossoms. A flower-viewing procession echoes the shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu's custom of taking daimyōs (feudal lords) to Sengen Shrine to view the cherry blossoms in the 17th century.

;Abekawa Fireworks: A gigantic fireworks display held upstream on Shizuoka's Abekawa River in late July. It was first held 1953, to remember those who died during World War II and to pray for a national revival. Today, around 15,000 fireworks are .

Cuisine

;Oden :a Japanese dish consisting of several ingredients such as boiled eggs, daikon radish, konnyaku, and processed fish cakes stewed in a light, soy-flavoured dashi broth. Oden in Shizuoka uses a dark coloured broth flavoured with beef stock and dark soy sauce. All ingredients are skewered. Dried, ground fish (sardine, mackerel, or katsuobushi) and aonori powder (edible seaweed) are sprinkled on top before eating. : ;Gyoza : ;Soba noodles : ;Seafood : ;Zōni soup :rice cakes in a broth cooked with vegetables, popular at New Year ;Tororo-jiru :A grated yam soup. Chojiya, a tororo-jiru restaurant founded in 1598 in Mariko-juku area of Shizuoka, west of the Abe River, was made famous by Hiroshige when he depicted it in his series of ukiyo-e prints of the 53 stops along the Tōkaidō.

Shizuoka Performing Arts Center

The Shizuoka Performing Arts Center (SPAC) was founded in 1995 by the Shizuoka Prefecture. The building was designed by architect Arata Isozaki and was opened in 1999 for the second Theatre Olympics.

The arts center is the first publicly funded cultural organization in Japan to have its own troupe of actors and other staff to manage its own venues and facilities for artistic purposes. Tadashi Suzuki was the first Artistic Director, appointed in 1997 and staying in the position until March 2007, after which Miyagi Satoshi took up the appointment. as well as creating its own theatre productions (some of which tour abroad), having students to learn at the center, and other theatrical activities.

The World Theatre Festival Shizuoka was formerly called the Shizuoka Spring Festival (2000-2010), being changed to "World Theater Festival Shizuoka under Mt. Fuji" in 2012 by the artistic director of the centre, Miyagi Satoshi. His intention was "to connect Shizuoka to the world through theater", to have performances from every corner of the world, for "people to see that the world isn't a set and finished quantity and there is still plenty of room for change. I wanted to communicate that theater is a window to the world". The festival includes stage plays, puppetry, film, dance and other performance arts.

In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was announced on 3 April that the festival, scheduled to begin from 25 April to 6 May, would be cancelled. Instead, Miyagi staged an online version of the festival.

Sport

With the Shimizu merger, Shimizu S-Pulse became the major football club in the city. Recently, however, a new rival club, Fujieda MYFC (from nearby Fujieda), has been rising in the regional league ranks as a contender for a place in the Japan Football League. The city hosted the official Asian Basketball Championship for Women in 1995 and 1999.

ClubSportLeagueVenueEstablished
Chanson V-MagicBasketballW.LeagueKonohana Arena1961
SeikōSoftballJapan Softball League(JSL)Kusanagi Stadium1980
Shimizu S-PulseFootballJ.LeagueIAI Stadium Nihondaira1991
Veltex ShizuokaBasketballB.LeagueShizuoka City Central Gymnasium2018
Shizuoka JadeTable tennisT.LeagueShizuoka City Central Gymnasium2022
Kufu HAYATE Ventures ShizuokaBaseballNPB (Western League)Shizuoka City Shimizu Ihara Stadium2024

File:静岡県草薙総合運動場野球場.jpg|Kusanagi Stadium File:Churu Stadium Shimizu Ground.jpg|Shizuoka City Shimizu Ihara Stadium File:Nihondaira stadium20090412.jpg|IAI Stadium Nihondaira File:Arena of konohana arena-1.JPG|Konohana Arena

Notable people

  • Princess Akishino – princess in the Japanese Imperial Family
  • Yoshitaka Amano – illustrator and animator, designed the characters for the early Final Fantasy video game series
  • Shoji Endo (George Masa) - Japananese American baseball player and photographer
  • Kenta Hasegawa – professional football manager and former player, currently managing Nagoya Grampus
  • Kazuyoshi Hoshino – racecar driver
  • Daisuke Ichikawa – professional football player
  • Shohei Ikeda – professional football player
  • Toru Irie – professional football player
  • Teruyoshi Ito – professional football player
  • Yahiro Kazama – professional football player
  • Naoya Kikuchi – professional football player
  • Hiroki Kobayashi – professional football player
  • Tomoaki Kuno – professional football player
  • Hidetaka Miyazaki – video game director, creator of the Dark Souls series
  • Fumitake Miura – professional football player
  • Kazuyoshi Miura – professional football player
  • Yasutoshi Miura – professional football player
  • Koki Mizuno – professional football player
  • Hisashi Mizutori – Olympic gold medal gymnast
  • Kazuyori Mochizuki – professional football player
  • Shigeyoshi Mochizuki – professional football player
  • Riyo Mori – Miss Universe Japan 2007, Miss Universe 2007
  • Yusuke Mori – professional football player
  • Ushiomaru Motoyasu – sumo wrestler
  • Jun Muramatsu – professional football player
  • Fuma Murata - Member and sub-leader of J-pop group &Team
  • Go Oiwa – professional football manager and former player, currently manager of Japan national under-23 football team
  • Katsumi Oenoki – professional football player
  • Takeshi Oki – professional football player
  • Ryota Oshima – professional football player
  • Keisuke Ota – professional football player
  • Toshihide Saito – professional football player
  • Momoko Sakura – cartoonist, creator of Chibi Maruko-chan
  • Yuya Sano – professional football player
  • Masanori Sekiya – racecar driver
  • Hideaki Sena – novelist and pharmacologist
  • Keisuke Serizawa – textile designer
  • Masatoshi Shima – inventor of the microprocessor
  • Kotobuki Shiriagari – Manga artist
  • Tadashi Suzuki – Stage director
  • Yūichi Suzumoto – novelist
  • Toranosuke Takagi – racecar driver
  • Nobuhiro Tanabe – politician
  • Yoshito Usui – creator of Crayon Shin-chan comics
  • Takahiro Yamazaki – professional baseball player
  • Kaito Yamamoto – professional football player
  • Takahiro Yamanishi – professional football player
  • Kotaro Yamazaki – professional football player
  • Takuya Yokoyama – professional football player
  • Kiyoe Yoshioka – singer, vocalist of Ikimono-gakari

City song

Watashi no Machi, Shizuoka

  • Written: 13 April 2005
  • Lyrics: Citizen competition entry
  • Music, additions: Kei Ogura
  • Arranged: Shin Kawabe
  • Eri Itō sang on the CD release

References

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