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Variety of shopping, gourmet food and evening entertainment for
visitors. Sightseeing spots also dot this international Bay Area.
JR Kobe Station area is close to Kobe Port, the second largest trading
port in Japan and is called the Bay Area. Nearby Kobe Harborland has nice stores
to enjoy shopping and gourmet food. Nightspots and recreational facilities, such
as amusement parks, attract people day and night.
On the seaside of Harborland is "Mosaic" town, a very unique place. A
big Ferris wheel and carousel, Mosaic Garden and restaurants, boutiques and
movie theaters form an almost mosaic-like effect in this commercial park
complex. An open air mall and square with a view of the sea make this park a
very popular area.
When 80 zelkova trees on Kobe Gasu-to-dori Street
are decorated with 80,000 lights, they are like a fantasy world. The
illumination has become a symbolic winter scene of Kobe Harborland. Modern
buildings line the waterfront and visitors can enjoy the open atmosphere of this
place.
Easy access via any kind of transportation. The largest shopping
quarter in Kobe, the international port city.
San-no-miya, the biggest shopping quarter of Kobe, is located on the
west bank of Ikuta-gawa River. It is not only popular as a place for shopping
and dining, but also a very important transportation hub for many train lines
which come into San-no-miya; JR Tokaido Honsen Line, Subway Yamate Line, Hanshin
Honsen Line, Hankyu-Kobe Honsen Line and Kobe Shin-kotsu Port Island Line.
Underground shopping street with easy transportation access, San-chika
Town has over 130 shops, varying from boutique fashion goods to restaurants. The
open floor gives a bright atmosphere to this shopping area.
Flower Road
is a 50-meter wide road that stretches southward from San-no-miya Station. There
are a Flower Clock, fountains and sculptures among the trees. Higashi-yuenchi
Amusement Park used to be the exclusive playground for foreigners and is the
birthplace of modern sports.
The 550 meter long arcade between Flower
Road and Moto-machi on the south-west of the station is called the San-no-miya
Center. Boutiques, stores selling imported goods, bakeries, cake shops, big
shopping buildings and restaurants make San-no-miya Center one of the big
shopping areas representative of Kobe.
San-no-miya-jinja Shrine, from
which the name "San-no-miya" has derived, is located in the south of the
Center.
A region well known and popular for its local sake. The
Shiryo-kan museums offer sake tasting to visitors.
Nada is in the south-eastern part of Hyogo. Nada Go-go is the generic
name of 5 areas that lie within 12 kilometers between Kobe and Nishinomiya;
Nishi-go, Mikage-go, Uozaki-go, Nishinomiya-go and Imazu-go. Uozaki-go is in the
south of Uozaki Station by Hankyu Honsen Line, and along the so-called
Sakagura-no-michi, or Sake Brewery Street, which stretches to the west, many
sake(rice wine) breweries stand side by side. There were three reasons for the
development of sake brewing in the 18th century that made the name of Nada known
throughout Japan. One was the discovery of miya-mizu, excellent quality water
for making sake; two, the production of rice of high quality, an ingredient of
sake; and three, a convenient location for transportation by sea.
Most of
the brewers have their own museums(shiryo-kan) to introduce the process of sake
brewing and information on production of sake. In the factory of the
Hama-fuku-tsuru Brewery, rice is polished to less than 60%, fermented at low
temperature, then brewed. Visitors can watch the process of sake brewing using
new equipment through the glass window and then try sake at the tasting
corner.
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