Nakama, Fukuoka

Nakama
中間市
City

Location of Nakama in Fukuoka Prefecture
Nakama

Location in Japan

Coordinates: 33°49′15″N 130°42′30″E / 33.82083°N 130.70833°E / 33.82083; 130.70833Coordinates: 33°49′15″N 130°42′30″E / 33.82083°N 130.70833°E / 33.82083; 130.70833
Country Japan
Region Kyushu
Prefecture Fukuoka Prefecture
Government
  Mayor Tadayoshi Ōshima
Area
  Total 15.98 km2 (6.17 sq mi)
Population (2005)
  Total 48,094
  Density 3,010/km2 (7,800/sq mi)
Symbols
  Tree kusu, kusuganemochi
  Flower pansy, cosmos
Time zone Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)
City hall address 1-1-1 Nakama, Nakama-shi, Fukuoka-ken
809-8501
Website www.city.nakama.fukuoka.jp

Nakama (中間市 Nakama-shi) is a city located in Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. As of 2005, the city has an estimated population of 48,094 and a population density of 3,010 persons per km². The total area is 15.98 km². It is perhaps best known as the birthplace of actor Ken Takakura.[1]

Location

It is located along the Onga River, with Mizumaki Town to the north, Kitakyushu City's Yahata-nishi Ward to the east, Nogata City to the south, and Kurate Town to the west.

Education

The city currently has 6 elementary schools, 4 junior high-schools, and 2 high schools.

Facilities

The city is located on the Kyushu Railway Company (JR Kyushu) Fukuhoku Yutaka Line with Nakama (opened on August 30, 1891) and Chikuzen-Habu (opened April 26, 1935) stations. There is also a tram (Chikuhō Electric Railroad Line) with stations at Toritani, Higashi-Nakama, Chikuho-Nakama, and Dotenouchi.

The city is known locally for its 'Shoppers Mall' - a facility with shops, restaurants, a movie theatre (United Cinemas International), and game centres.

Habu Park is the largest park in Nakama, with many cherry blossom trees.

The Roofless Museum (Yane No Nai Hakubutsukan), near the JR Nakama Station, is a small green park area with sculptures by artists from around the world.

Festivals

Chikuzen Nakama Cherry Blossom Festival (end of March - beginning of April) at Habu Park.

Chikuzen Nakama Yatchare Festival, previously held near Onga River, but now at Harmony Hall, Nakama’s biggest festival of the year on the third weekend of October.

Chikuzen Nakamagawa Festival - held in the Obon season every year on August 15. Includes a fireworks festival and food/game stalls as well.

Kisshoji Temple Wisteria Festival (located in Yahatanishi, near Nakama High School, and held April 27-29.

History

The city was involved in the coal mining industry of the Chikuho region from the Edo to Showa eras. During the war, there was a POW camp in the city area, with inmates involved in mining. The city itself was incorporated on November 1, 1958.

There were plans for amalgamation, with the city becoming a ward of Kitakyushu. A recent poll (December 2004) stated that 70% of the citizens of Nakama were in favor of the city being absorbed into Kitakyushu. However, on Christmas Eve 2004 Nakama city councilors rejected the merger plan, despite it having initially been proposed by Nakama. The councilors claim that they are rejecting the merger for the good of the city. The suspected main reason was that only 3 of the 21 councilors would be retained afterwards.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.