Kita (北区, Kita-ku) était l'un des sept arrondissements de la ville de Hamamatsu au Japon. Il était situé au nord-ouest de la ville, au bord du lac Hamana.
Book your tour near
Kita-ku
Book Now
4.2
in partnership with
GetYourGuide.com
Location
1 explorer visited this place
0 m
Kita-ku was a ward in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, Japan, located in the north of the city. It is bordered by Tenryū-ku to the north, Higashi-ku and Naka-ku to the east, Hamakita-ku Minami-ku and Kosai to the south, and the cities of Toyohashi and Shinshiro to the west. It is largely a residential suburb of central Hamamatsu, and a considerable portion of the ward is forested.
Kita-ku was created on April 1, 2007 when Hamamatsu became a city designated by government ordinance. It consists of the former towns of Inasa, Hosoe and Mikkabi, which had already merged into Hamamatsu in 2005. In 2009, it had a population of 95,419 in an area of 277.63 km², with a population density of 344 persons per km².
Kita-ku is served by 14 stations on the Tenryū Hamanako Railroad Tenryū Hamanako Line railway.
1.8 km
Honda Miyakoda Soccer Stadium is a stadium located in Hamana-ku, Hamamatsu. It is owned by the Honda Motor Company a is the home ground of Honda F.C. in the Japan Football League. The stadium has a capacity for 2,506 spectators.
2.0 km
Fruitpark Station is a railway station in Hamana-ku, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, operated by the third sector Tenryū Hamanako Railroad.
2.3 km
Miyakoda Station is a railway station in Hamana-ku, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, operated by the third sector Tenryū Hamanako Railroad.
2.6 km
Manyō-no-Mori Park opened in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan in 1992. The park takes its name from the Man'yōshū anthology of poems, four of which relate to the area. Within, as well as some three hundred kinds of plant featured in the anthology according to different theories as to their identification, there is a museum space with materials on Man'yō life and culture, facilities for experiencing Nara period cuisine and plant dyeing, a camellia garden, and an hinoki forest.