Kinuta Park

Kinuta Park (砧公園, Kinuta Kōen) is a park in Setagaya, Tokyo. The total area is 39 hectares (96 acres), 240,000;m² of which are grass.[1]

Park entrance, October 2018
Cherry blossoms in Kinuta Park, March 2004

Kinuta Park is famous for its cherry blossom (sakura) viewing. It has at least three varieties: Someiyoshino (photo), Yamazakura, and Yaezakurawhich makes for a relatively long hanami viewing season of over two weeks.

Facilities

There are baseball fields, soccer fields, cycling courses and the Setagaya Art Museum.[1] The one and two-thirds of a kilometre cycling course doubles as a walking course outside the hours of 9:00am and 4:00pm.

Access

The Tōmei Expressway (東名高速道路, Tōmei Kōsoku Dōro) runs along the south side; Kampachi (環八, the #8 ring road), along the east. The Tōmei Expressway ends at that intersection.

History

The park was a wooded area. It was planned as a park in 1935 ahead of the 2,600th anniversary of the legendary founding of Japan by Emperor Jimmu, the mythical first emperor of Japan. After Japan was awarded the 1940 Summer Olympics in 1936 it was planned that the Olympic village would have built either here in the Todoroki Gorge area. After the start of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937 the Olympics were forfeited to Helsinki in Finland, (the runner-up in the bidding process) but were later cancelled entirely due to World War II.

In 1957 the area became a public golf course, which was later closed and turned into the park in its current form.[2][1] The park still resembles a golf course when seen from above.

gollark: *Apparently* this is just the script for my Discord bot. Boring.
gollark: I clicked "MEM" in `htop`.
gollark: I'm not joking about the mysterious Python program. I forgot what this actually is.
gollark: This makes it the most RAM-consuming thing on my server, followed by VictoriaMetrics, Factorio, systemd-journald, syncthing, and a mysterious python program.
gollark: Correction: 300MB presently.

References

  1. "砧公園" [Kinuta Park]. Dijitaru Daijisen (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2012. OCLC 56431036. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2012-08-24.
  2. Tokyo Metropolitan Park Association - Parks Retrieved May 3, 2017


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