Nishikasugai District

Nishikasugai (西春日井郡, Nishikasugai-gun) is a district located in Aichi Prefecture, Japan.

Map of Nishikasugau District in Aichi Prefecture

About

Located on the central Owari Region. As of 1 October 2019 the population was 15,630 persons with a population density of 2,529 per km². The total area is 6.18 km². Currently the district has the town of Toyoyama.

Description

About

During the old days, the district extended as far as Nagoya Castle, but since Taisho Era to the 1950s, most of the areas were merged into the city of Nagoya.

Recently, there were proposals to turn the entire district into a city but the merger was killed due to differences of opinion. After the merger was killed, the towns of Kiyosu, Shinkawa and Nishibiwajima merged in 2005 (City of Kiyosu). Again in 2006, the towns of Nishiharu and Shikatsu merged into (City of Kitanagoya). And most recently in 2009, the town of Haruhi merged into Kiyosu. As a result of this merger, the district has only the town of Toyoyama.

  • November 1, 1963 - The village of Nishiharu gained town status. (5 towns, 2 villages)
  • April 1, 1972 - The village of Toyoyama gained town status. (6 towns, 1 village)
  • April 1, 1990 - The village of Haruhi gained town status. (7 towns)
  • July 7, 2005 - The towns of Kiyosu, Shinkawa and Nishibiwajima merged to form the City of Kiyosu. (4 towns)
  • March 20, 2006 - The towns of Nishiharu and Shikatsu merged to form the city of Kitanagoya. (2 towns)
  • October 1, 2009 - The town of Haruhi merged into the city of Kiyosu. This leaves Nishikasugai District with one municipality.[1]

Economy

J-Air, a subsidiary of Japan Airlines, is headquartered in Toyoyama, Nishikasugai District, in the Nagoya Airfield Terminal Building.[2] Nakanihon Air Service, a general aviation operator, is also located in Toyoyama on the airport grounds.[3]

gollark: That has many problems.
gollark: No it's not.
gollark: I think the issue is just that most people have different preferences (favouring the newer aesthetics, higher-priced devices, not caring much about removable batteries), and phone companies mostly deliver stuff for them.
gollark: But not "modular" in the sense people were hyped about where the phone would be a bunch of modules you could swap out.
gollark: Those are "modular" in the sense that you can swap parts, at least, which is nice.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-07-28. Retrieved 2009-10-08.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "会社案内." J-Air. Retrieved on May 19, 2009.
  3. "Welcome To Nakanihon Air Service Station." Nakanihon Air Service. Retrieved on May 20, 2009.

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