From Kobe University International Residence to Japan post office (Port Island, Kobe)
How to go post office from Kobe University International Residence.
Port Island, Kobe, Japan
Port Island - the First Artificial Island in the World @ Kobe
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MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport
MegaStructures (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures
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MegaStructures is a documentary television series. Each episode is an educational look of varying depth into the construction, operation, and staffing of various structures or construction projects, but not ordinary construction products.
Generally containing interviews with designers and project managers, it presents the problems of construction and the methodology or techniques used to overcome obstacles.
MegaStructures focuses on constructions that are extreme; in the sense that they are the biggest, tallest, longest, or deepest in the world.
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
MegaStructures - Kansai International Airport (National Geographic Documentary)
【K】Japan Travel-Kobe[일본 여행-고베]108미터 전망대, 고베 포트 타워/Port Tower/Observatory
■ KBS 걸어서 세계속으로 PD들이 직접 만든 해외여행전문 유투브 채널 【Everywhere, K】
■ The Travels of Nearly Everywhere! 10,000 of HD world travel video clips with English subtitle! (Click on 'subtitles/CC' button)
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[한국어 정보]
1868년, 미-일 수호통상조약에 의해서 개항한 이래 지금은 일본 제 3의 무역항으로 성장한 고베시. 항구에 우뚝 솟은 고베 포트 타워는 고베의 상징이다. 108m높이의 전망대에 오르면 롯코산 아래 펼쳐진 고베시부터 인공섬 포트 아일랜드, 조선소까지 360도 모든 방향에서 고베를 볼 수 있다. 일찌감치 문호를 개방하게 된 고베. 개항당시 외국인들이 사용했었던 옛 건물들이 지금도 남아 있다.
[English: Google Translator]
1868, the US - one patron who opened since now grown by the conventional trading port Treaty Kobe, Japan third. Kobe Port Tower is a towering symbol of the Kobe port. 108m climb to the observation deck stretches down from the height of Mt. Rokko Kobe Port Island Artificial Island, up to 360 shipyard can be seen in all directions Kobe. It opened its doors early in Kobe. It has opened at the time foreigners had used the old buildings remain today.
[Japanese: Google Translator]
1868年、米 - 日修好通商条約によって開港して以来、今では日本第3の貿易港として成長した神戸市。港にそびえる神戸ポートタワー神戸の象徴である。 108mの高さの展望台に上がると六甲山の下に広がる神戸市から人工島ポートアイランド、造船所まで360度すべての方向から神戸を見ることができる。早目に門戸を開放した神戸。開港当時の外国人が使用した古い建物が今も残っている。
[Information]
■클립명: 아시아036-일본15-15 108미터 전망대, 고베 포트 타워/Port Tower/Observatory
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 강민희 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2012년 2월 February
[Keywords]
아시아,Asia,,일본,Japan,Nihon,Nippon,강민희,2012,2월 February,혼슈,Honshu,Honshu,본주
Animal Kingdom in Kobe Japan?
Make sure to like and subscribe! Here's a strange one for you take a HUGE greenhouse, on Port Island in Kobe, Japan. Load it with animals most of them roaming free in their areas. Put other people in. See what happens. This folks is Kobe's ANIMAL KINGDOM! A pretty amazing combination of how a metric ton of animals can seemingly get a long in interesting enviroments!. Half petting zoo, Half experiemental co habiation of large animals, all amazing!
Feel free to join the Yukendoit group on facebook! Become a Yukester! About Yukendoit.
Welcome! What you are looking at is a former Universal Studios, Halloween Horror Night, Walt Disney World actor/worker youtuber here. I really want to show the world to you! I was pretty inspired by Adamthewoo to get out and start making videos, and now I've left America to do just that. Now I'm out in Osaka, Japan. Living daily life in Japan. But I make adventure videos of exploring strange Japanese locations, theme parks like Universal Studios Japan, and generally showing off life as an American Abroad Jvlogging in Japan. As well I like to make Jvlogs about life in Japan. As I am a former scareactor at Halloween Horror Nights in Florida, I am very interested in the strange side of Japanese culture. Ghosts, Yokai, the Japanese equivlent of Oujia boards, abandoned Japanese buildings, and Japanese haunted houses like the one at Fuji Q Highland it's the longest one in the world!
Why the name Yukendoit? Well I think that you can do it! I'm currently teaching English in Japan and I love it. Patreon patreon.com/yukendoit
Fire on Port Island, Kobe.
Building 56, 6th floor.
Cruise to Japan from China (Nagasaki Port)
From Tianjin, China to Nagasaki, Japan. My job was to give a lecture about Japan and had a beautiful stateroom with views of the sea for 36 hours. Incredible experience!
What’s a Japan cruise like? It’s pretty special. Japan’s smaller cities and now building new ports for cruise ships so this industry is on the rise!
Fire on Port Island, Kobe. Part Two.
Apartment 608, building 56.
KOBE CITY JAPAN.
Check my previous video for more:
Kobe is the sixth-largest city in Japan and is the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture. It is located on the southern side of the main island of Honshū, on the north shore of Osaka Bay and about 30 km (19 mi) west of Osaka. With a population around 1.5 million, the city is part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kyoto.
Kobe is most famous for its Kobe beef and Arima Onsen (hot springs). Notable buildings include the Ikuta Shrine as well as the Kobe Port Tower. It is well known for the night view of the city, from mountains such as Mount Rokkō, and Mount Maya as well as the coast. Kobe is also known for having a somewhat exotic atmosphere by Japanese standards, which is mainly as a result of its history as a port city.
The city is widely associated with cosmopolitanism and fashion, encapsulated in the Japanese phrase,
If you can't go to Paris, go to Kobe.
Kobe, Japan - Akashi Kaikyō Bridge (2019)
The Akashi Kaikyō Bridge (明石海峡大橋 Akashi Kaikyō Ōhashi) is a suspension bridge, which links the city of Kobe on the Japanese mainland of Honshu to Iwaya on Awaji Island. It crosses the busy Akashi Strait (Akashi Kaikyō in Japanese) as part of the Honshu–Shikoku Highway. It was completed in 1998, and has the longest central span of any suspension bridge in the world, at 1,991 metres (6,532 ft; 1.237 mi). It is one of the key links of the Honshū–Shikoku Bridge Project, which created three routes across the Inland Sea.
Kobe (神戸市 Kōbe-shi, Japanese: [koːꜜbe]) is the sixth-largest city in Japan and the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture. It is located on the southern side of the main island of Honshū, on the north shore of Osaka Bay and about 30 km (19 mi) west of Osaka. With a population around 1.5 million, the city is part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kyoto.
The earliest written records regarding the region come from the Nihon Shoki, which describes the founding of the Ikuta Shrine by Empress Jingū in AD 201. For most of its history, the area was never a single political entity, even during the Tokugawa period, when the port was controlled directly by the Tokugawa shogunate. Kobe did not exist in its current form until its founding in 1889. Its name comes from kanbe (神戸, an archaic title for supporters of the city's Ikuta Shrine). Kobe became one of Japan's designated cities in 1956.
Kobe was one of the cities to open for trade with the West following the 1853 end of the policy of seclusion and has since been known as a cosmopolitan and nuclear-free zone port city. While the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake diminished much of Kobe's prominence as a port city, it remains Japan's fourth-busiest container port. Companies headquartered in Kobe include ASICS, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, and Kobe Steel, as well as over 100 international corporations with Asian or Japanese headquarters in the city, such as Eli Lilly and Company, Procter & Gamble, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Nestlé. The city is the point of origin and namesake of Kobe beef, as well as the site of one of Japan's most famous hot spring resorts, Arima Onsen.
Beautiful View Above Kobe
A wee excursion in Kobe, Japan. Enjoy the view! We did!
Akashi Kaikyō Bridge. Kobe,Japan.
Akashi Kaikyō Bridge is a suspension bridge, which links the city of Kobe on the Japanese mainland of Honshu to Iwaya on Awaji Island. It crosses the busy Akashi Strait (Akashi Kaikyō in Japanese) as part of the Honshu-Shikoku Highway.
Since its completion in 1998, the bridge has had the longest central span of any suspension bridge in the world,at 1,991 metres (6,532 ft; 1.237 mi).
National Geographic - Megastructures - Kansai Airport 1
Kobe, Japan - Kobe Port Tower HD (2017)
Kobe (神戸市 Kōbe-shi, Japanese: [koːꜜbe]) is the sixth-largest city in Japan and is the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture. It is located on the southern side of the main island of Honshū, on the north shore of Osaka Bay and about 30 km (19 mi) west of Osaka. With a population around 1.5 million, the city is part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kyoto.
The earliest written records regarding the region come from the Nihon Shoki, which describes the founding of the Ikuta Shrine by Empress Jingū in AD 201. For most of its history, the area was never a single political entity, even during the Tokugawa period, when the port was controlled directly by the Tokugawa shogunate. Kobe did not exist in its current form until its founding in 1889. Its name comes from kanbe (神戸), an archaic title for supporters of the city's Ikuta Shrine. Kobe became one of Japan's 17 designated cities in 1956.
Kobe was one of the cities to open for trade with the West following the 1853 end of the policy of seclusion and has since been known as a cosmopolitan port city. While the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake diminished much of Kobe's prominence as a port city, it remains Japan's fourth busiest container port. Companies headquartered in Kobe include ASICS, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, and Kobe Steel, as well as over 100 international corporations with Asian or Japanese headquarters in the city such as Eli Lilly and Company, Procter & Gamble, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Nestlé. The city is the point of origin and namesake of Kobe beef, as well as the site of one of Japan's most famous hot spring resorts, Arima Onsen.
Kobe Portliner | 神戸 ポートライナー
Port Island to Sannomiya Station - Via Portliner
This video will show some of the views of Kobe Port Harbour. I have left the sound so you can listen to the train announcements ^^
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Kobe Port Tower and Iwaya. Kobe, Japan.
Kobe is the sixth-largest city in Japan and the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture. It is located on the southern side of the main island of Honshū, on the north shore of Osaka Bay and about 30 km (19 mi) west of Osaka. With a population around 1.5 million, the city is part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kyoto.
Port (Part 1) - Cities Skylines: Maya [EP 1]
Welcome to “Maya”
It's Cities Skylines Asia city series, Inspired by some parts in Kobe, Japan.
Mixed with my own ideas. That means Japanese styles & my ideas will blend together!
In this episode. I'm beginning to build port area. Including the warehouses, Large container yard and the lighthouse.
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Project Info:
Map Theme:
Coastal Theme by Ronyx69
LUT:
Relight Natural
Map:
Made by me (Unreleased)
Assets Collection:
PART ONE:
PART TWO:
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Kobe, Japan - Port of Kobe Earthquake Memorial Park HD (2017)
Kobe (神戸市 Kōbe-shi, Japanese: [koːꜜbe]) is the sixth-largest city in Japan and is the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture. It is located on the southern side of the main island of Honshū, on the north shore of Osaka Bay and about 30 km (19 mi) west of Osaka. With a population around 1.5 million, the city is part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kyoto.
The earliest written records regarding the region come from the Nihon Shoki, which describes the founding of the Ikuta Shrine by Empress Jingū in AD 201. For most of its history, the area was never a single political entity, even during the Tokugawa period, when the port was controlled directly by the Tokugawa shogunate. Kobe did not exist in its current form until its founding in 1889. Its name comes from kanbe (神戸), an archaic title for supporters of the city's Ikuta Shrine. Kobe became one of Japan's 17 designated cities in 1956.
Kobe was one of the cities to open for trade with the West following the 1853 end of the policy of seclusion and has since been known as a cosmopolitan port city. While the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake diminished much of Kobe's prominence as a port city, it remains Japan's fourth busiest container port. Companies headquartered in Kobe include ASICS, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, and Kobe Steel, as well as over 100 international corporations with Asian or Japanese headquarters in the city such as Eli Lilly and Company, Procter & Gamble, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Nestlé. The city is the point of origin and namesake of Kobe beef, as well as the site of one of Japan's most famous hot spring resorts, Arima Onsen.
Fireworks in Kobe Japan
Fireworks in Japan Kobe
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Originally used to ward off evil spirits, fireworks (Japanese word- Hanabi) have a long history in Japan and are an integral part of Japanese summers. Hundreds of firework shows are held every year across the country, mainly during the summer holidays in July and August, with some of them drawing hundreds of thousands of spectators. On the other hand, fireworks are not typically used to celebrate New Year.
In past years, approximately a quarter of a million people have gathered to see 15,000 explosive projectiles shot into the night sky. Meriken Park is the main free spot for viewing the fireworks, but you can expect huge crowds.
The fireworks are launched from barges located between Kobe Harborland and Port Island.
Secondary attraction of Japanese fireworks is the relaxed festival atmosphere that comes with them, people dressed in yukata (summer kimono), and streets lined by food and game stalls. The firework shows themselves typically start some time after sunset and last one to two hours.
The competition for good viewing spots can be quite strong, and people often show up and reserve the best spots hours in advance, especially in cities where tall buildings limit the number of spots with unobstructed views of the fireworks.
While large cities like Tokyo and Osaka tend to have enough hotel rooms to accommodate festival crowds, smaller cities usually get booked out months ahead of popular fireworks together with nearby cities. The lack of hotel rooms can pose a particularly serious challenge if there are no more late-night train or bus connections back into a larger city after the end of the show.
Furthermore, crowded buses and trains can pose an inconvenience especially after the end of the show. Because of traffic congestions, it is often faster and more comfortable to walk from the venue back to the nearest station instead of using shuttle buses.
The first public firework display dates back to 1733 when fireworks were launched around the Sumida River to honor the souls of the one million people who had died the previous year due to extreme poverty as well as provide some entertainment to the general public.
Most fireworks worldwide are packed in cylindrical shells resulting in a fountain shape when they explode. In Japan, they are most commonly packed in a round shell resulting in a more or less round display upon explosion.
Most famous fireworks are conducted at Tokyo, Osaka and Kobe.
#fireworks2018
#japanfireworks
#fireworks_showkobe
#fireworkdisplay
5:00am in Kobe, Japan
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