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  1. Kobe (神戸, Kōbe) is the capital of Hyogo Prefecture and one of Japan's ten largest cities. Located between the sea and the Rokko mountain range, Kobe is also considered one of Japan's most attractive cities. Kobe has been an important port city for many centuries. Its port was among the first to be opened to foreign trade in the 19th ...

  2. Kobe 's Nada (灘) district is Japan's top sake producing region. It has long been famous for its sake due to the availability of high quality rice, suitable water, favorable weather conditions and its proximity to Kobe Port and Osaka. Many sake breweries operate in the Nada district, which stretches approximately three kilometers east to west.

  3. The Akashi Kaikyo Bridge (明石海峡大橋, Akashi Kaikyō Ōhashi) is, with a length of almost four kilometers, the world's longest suspension bridge. Opened in 1998, it spans the Akashi Strait (Akashi Kaikyo) between Kobe and Awaji Island and is part of the Kobe-Awaji-Naruto Expressway, one of three expressways that connect Honshu with Shikoku.

  4. Meriken Park (メリケンパーク) is a nice waterfront park in Kobe 's port area. Built on an outcropping of reclaimed land, the park is covered in grassy lawn and open courtyards dotted with a collection of modern art installations and fountains. It is home to some of the city's more iconic contemporary architecture such as the red Kobe ...

  5. From central Kobe. From Sannomiya Station, take the Hankyu Kobe Line to Rokko Station (7 minutes, 200 yen), from where it is a ten minute bus ride on bus number 16 to the base station of the Rokko Cablecar. Note that the same bus can also be boarded at JR Rokkomichi Station (15 minutes) or Hanshin Mikage Station (25 minutes) and costs 210 yen ...

  6. One transfer. 60 min. ¥ 640. frequent connections. Limited express trains on the Hankyu Kyoto/Kobe Lines take roughly one hour, but cost only 640 yen one way between Kyoto-Kawaramachi Station in central Kyoto and Kobe-Sannomiya Station in central Kobe. One transfer of trains is required at Juso Station.

  7. Kitano-cho (北野町, Kitanochō) is a city district at the foot of the Rokko mountain range where many foreign merchants and diplomats settled after the Port of Kobe was opened to foreign trade in the second half of the 19th century. More than a dozen of the former mansions, known as Ijinkan, remain in the area and are open to the public as ...

  8. Kyoto (京都, Kyōto) served as Japan's capital and the emperor's residence from 794 until 1868. It is one of the country's ten largest cities with 1.5 million inhabitants and a modern face. Over the centuries, Kyoto was destroyed by many wars and fires, but due to its exceptional historic value, the city was dropped from the list of target cities for the atomic bomb and escaped destruction during World War II .

  9. Nov 16, 2023 · Nagoya. Nabana no Sato Winter Illumination. October 22, 2023 to June 2, 2024 (closed on selected days) Sunset to 21:00 (until 22:00 on selected days) Admission: 2500 yen. Access: 30 minutes by bus and train from central Nagoya. With millions of LED lights illuminating the flower park, Nabana no Sato is one of the largest illumination events in ...

  10. Domestic Ferries. Consisting of several thousand islands, Japan is naturally home to an extensive network of ferry routes. Japan's four main islands (Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu and Shikoku) are connected with each other by bridges and tunnels, but many smaller islands can only be reached by ship. Yet even between the main islands, ferries can be ...