Showing posts with label akashi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label akashi. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2025

Akashi Kaikyo Suspension Bridge

 


When it was completed in 1998, the Akashi Kaikyo Suspension Bridge was the longest suspension bridge in the world, a title it held until 2022 when a bridge in Turkey, the Canakkale Bridge took the title.


Though only the second longest suspension bridge in the world, it is nonetheless an impressive sight.


It crosses from Akashi, near Kobe on the main island of Honshu, over to Awaji Island, from where another bridge crosses over to Shikoku. The bridge is clearly seen from the train line connecting Kobe with Okayama, as well as obviously the expressway that it carries across the channel.


Underneath the bridge on the Kobe side is a museum about the bridge and its construction, and is well worth a visit.


The bridge is 3.9 kilometers in total length, and with a central span of 1,991 meters, the dimension usually used in measuring longest bridges.


The two towers supporting the bridges are 282 meters high. It is possible to book a tour that takes you up to the very top of one of these towers, an experience I heartily recommend and which I posted on earlier.


The bridge is more than 65 meters above the water at its central point.


The museum has great exhibits showing how the bridge was built, methods used, and how it is maintained.


Member of a tour to climb one of the tours get a guided tour of the museum as well.


A cross section of one of the enormous cables that carry the bridge.


There is an observation deck below the bridge that is accessed vis a walkway under the bridge that has sections of glass floor.


There is a cafe and shop with great views up and down the coast.


Called the Maiko Marine Promenade, it is accessed via elevators next to the museum building and costs just 300 yen and involves a 300 meter walk. At the point of the observation deck you are 47 meters above the water.


Around the base of the bridge on the Kobe side is Maiko Park with a couple of historic buildings including the Sun Yat Sen memorial Hall, a 1915 building showing materials about the Chinese revolutionary.


Dream Lens is a circular stone sculpture that is a very popular spot for taking photos of the bridge. Top photo.


The previous post in this series was on the nearby Akashi Castle. In case you missed it I highly recommend the post on the view from the top of the bridge.


Sunday, March 23, 2025

Akashi Castle

 


Akashi castle is an Edo Period castle built to protect the approaches to Osaka from the west.


Most of the Tozama Lords, the daimyo that had fought against the Tokugawa and were therefore still considered a possible threat, lived in the west, and so the Tokugawa placed allies in strategic positions around the country.


At the entrance to what is now a huge park in front of the castle is a statue of Ikujiro Nakabe, a local politician from the Meiji era who had nothing to do with the castle. The statue was erected in 1928 but was subsequently melted down for weapons during WWII and then remade later. As well as being involved in national politics he also founded fishing companies and whaling companies that operated in the Antarctic.


The castle was constructed between 1615 and 1617 and took about a year to build. Thanks to the One Domain One Castle decree of 1615 many castles were dismantled and come of the materials and structures were recycled in the construction of Akashi Castle


It was quite a large castle with a total of twenty yagura, towers, and 27 gates.


Within the park are several gardens that are now named the Musashi Gardens after the famed samurai swordsman Miyamoto Musashi. He was involved in the design of the castle and the surrounding area, and several gardens in nearby temples are attributed to him, but these gardens in the park were named after him after a very successful TV drama series on Musashi.


A base for a Tenshu, keep, was  constructed but no keep was built.


The main structures were 4 3-storey towers on each corner of the inner bailey.


The castle was built by Ogasawara Tadazane, but the Ogasawara were transferred to the Kokura Domain in 1632.


A succession of Fudai Daimyo, vassals of the Tokugawara before Sekigahara, or relatives of the Tokugawa, were given the Akashi Domain after the Ogasawara.


The castle was mostly demolished in 1874, but the two corner turrets on the south remained and are now Important Cultural Properties.


A large park and sports facilities now occupy most of the site. The stadium is built over what was probably a garden by Miyamoto Musashi.


Many events and festivals take place in the park.


It is a popular spot both for Cherry Blossom and Autumn Leaves viewing.


It is free to enter and a ten alk from JR Akashi Station.


Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Best Vantage Point in Japan

 


Japan is home to a multitude of observation decks atop high-rise buildings and towers, with Tokyo Skytree being the tallest and most famous. Most of the high-rise buildings are in the biggest cities, but the many towers are often found on the coast with views along the seashore.


At 289 meters in height5, the observation deck on top of the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge is taller than most of the others, and the views are astounding.


The Akashi Kaikyo Bridge opened in 1998 and connects the main island of Honshu with Awaji Island. It has the longest central span of any suspension bridge in the world at almost 2 kilometers. The total length is almost 4 kilometers.


To visit the observation deck you must book well in advance as there are a very small number of places on the tour and though relatively little-known is quickly booked up. After being kitted out in a hardhat and hi-viz vest you first have a lecture on safety protocols and how the tour will be conducted. Then you get a guided tour of the bridge museum which showcases the amazing technology that went into building it. Then you are taken out under the bridge on a walkway to the public observation deck below the bridge, 50 meters above the sea below.


Then you walk out about 1 kilometer under the bridge to the base of the tower on the Akashi, Hionshu side of the bridge where a small elevator takes you up to the top of the tower.


The observation deck is open to the elements, and there is no glass or fence obscuring your views. This makes it somehow more exciting.


The views are 360 degrees, as well as down on the bridge roadway and the ships passing underneath. Akashi is the closest view, and then west along the Okayama coast, then east to Kobe and Osaka beyond that.


I should really amend the title, as I have seen some amazing views from the tops of mountains on islands in the Inland Sea, but the views from the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge are the best I've seen from a man-made vantage point.