2011/05/04

Shinjuku 新宿区





Shinjuku (新宿区, Shinjuku-ku?) is one of the 23 special wards of Tokyo, Japan. It is a major commercial and administrative center, housing the busiest train station in the world (Shinjuku Station) and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, the administration center for the government of Tokyo.

As of 2008, the ward has an estimated population of 312,418 and a density of 17,140 persons per km². The total area is 18.23 km².[2]

As of October 1, 2005, 29,353 non-Japanese with 107 different nationalities were registered in Shinjuku.[citation needed]



[edit] GeographySurrounding Shinjuku are six other wards: Chiyoda to the east; Bunkyo and Toshima to the north; Nakano to the west, and Shibuya and Minato to the south[citation needed]. In addition, Nerima is only a hundred meters away[citation needed]. The highest point in Shinjuku is Hakoneyama (箱根山?) in Toyama Park at 44.6 m[citation needed]. The lowest point is 4.2 m near Iidabashi[citation needed].

[edit] Neighbourhoods
Street level in ShinjukuAlthough the area immediately surrounding Shinjuku Station is home to hotels, department stores, specialist electronic and camera shops, cinemas, restaurants, and bars, the rest of the city is a mix of residential with commercial areas concentrated around railway stations[citation needed].

Notable areas of Shinjuku include:

Ichigaya: A commercial area in eastern Shinjuku, site of the Ministry of Defense.
Golden Gai: An area of tiny shanty-style bars and clubs. Musicians, artists, actors and directors gather here, and the ramshackle walls of the bars are literally plastered with movie posters.
Kabukichō: A red-light district well-known for its bars, restaurants, and sex-related establishments.
Kagurazaka: One of Tokyo's last remaining hanamachi or geisha districts[citation needed].
Nishi-Shinjuku: Home to Tokyo's largest concentration of skyscrapers. Several of the tallest buildings in Tokyo are located in this area, including the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, KDDI Building and Park Tower. Located west of Shinjuku Station.
Ōkubo: Tokyo's best-known Korean district[citation needed].
Shinjuku Gyoen is a large park, 58.3 hectares, 3.5 km in circumference, blending Japanese traditional, English Landscape and French Formal style gardens.
Shinjuku Ni-chōme: Tokyo's best-known gay district[citation needed].
Takadanobaba and Waseda: The area between Waseda University, one of the most prestigious private universities in Japan, and Takadanobaba Station is a major residential and nightlife area for students[citation needed].
Yotsuya: An upscale residential and commercial district; the Arakichō area is well-known for its many small restaurants, bars, and izakaya.
[edit] History
Shinjuku at night.In 1634, during the Edo period, as the outer moat of the Edo Castle was built, a number of temples and shrines moved to the Yotsuya area on the western edge of Shinjuku. In 1698, Naitō Shinjuku had developed as a new (shin) station (shuku or juku) on the Kōshū Kaidō, one of the major highways of that era. Naitō was a daimyo whose mansion stood in the area; his land is now a public park, the Shinjuku Gyoen.

In 1920, the town of Naitō-Shinjuku that comprised large parts of present-day Shinjuku, parts of Nishi-Shinjuku and Kabukichō was integrated into Tokyo City. Shinjuku began to develop into its current form after the Great Kantō earthquake in 1923, since the seismically stable area largely escaped the devastation. Consequently, West Shinjuku is one of the few areas in Tokyo with many skyscrapers.

The Tokyo air raids from May to August 1945 destroyed almost 90% of the buildings in the area in and around Shinjuku Station.[3] The pre-war form of Shinjuku, and the rest of Tokyo, for that matter, was retained after the war because the roads and rails, damaged as they were, remained, and these formed the heart of the Shinjuku in the post-war construction. Only in Kabuki-cho was a grand reconstruction plan put into action.[4]

The present ward was established on March 15, 1947 with the merger of the former wards of Yotsuya, Ushigome, and Yodobashi. It served as part of the athletics 50 km walk and marathon course during the 1964 Summer Olympics.[5]

In 1991, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government moved from the Marunouchi district of Chiyoda to the current building in Shinjuku. (The Tokyo International Forum stands on the former site vacated by the government.)

[edit] EconomyMany companies have their headquarters or Tokyo offices in Shinjuku.

Seiko Epson's Tokyo office is in the Shinjuku NS Building in Nishi-Shinjuku.[6]
Atlus has its headquarters in Kagurazaka.[7]
Nissin Foods's Tokyo offices are in Shinjuku.[8]
Airtransse, a regional airline, has its headquarters near Shinjuku Gyoen.[9]
Futabasha has its headquarters in Higashigokenchō, Shinjuku[10]
Yoshinoya has its headquarters in the Da Vinci Shinjuku Building (ダヴィンチ新宿ビル, Davinchi Shinjuku Biru?) in Shinjuku.[11]
H.I.S.'s headquarters is in the Shinjuku Oak Tower in Nishi-Shinjuku[12]
Jorudan has its headquarters in Shinjuku.[13][14]
In March 1990 the headquarters of Bandai Visual moved to the Shinjuku neighborhood in Shinjuku Ward. In August 1991 the headquarters moved to Taitō, Tokyo.[15] Previously the headquarters of MOS Burger were in Shinjuku.[16]

[edit] Government and politics
Shinjuku City OfficeLike the other wards of Tokyo, Shinjuku has a status equivalent to that of a city. The current mayor is Hiroko Nakayama. The ward council (区議会, kugikai?) consists of 38 elected members; the Liberal Democratic Party and New Komeitō Party together currently hold a majority. The Democratic Party of Japan, Japanese Communist Party and the Social Democratic Party are also represented together with four independents. Shinjuku's city office (区役所, kuyakusho?) is located on the southeastern edge of Kabukichō.

Shinjuku is also the location of the metropolitan government of Tokyo. The governor's office, the metropolitan assembly chamber, and all administrative head offices are located in the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building.

[edit] ElectionsShinjuku local election, 2004
Shinjuku mayoral election, 2006
Shinjuku local election, 2007
[edit] TransportationFurther information: Transportation in Greater Tokyo
Shinjuku is a major urban transit hub. JR Shinjuku Station sees an estimated 3.64 million passengers pass through each day, making it the busiest station in the world. It houses interchanges to three subway lines and three privately owned commuter lines, as well as several JR lines.

[edit] RailA list of railway lines passing through and stations located within Shinjuku includes:

JR East
Yamanote Line: Takadanobaba, Shin-Ōkubo, Shinjuku
Chūō Line (Rapid), Chūō-Sōbu Line: Yotsuya, Shinanomachi, Shinjuku, Ōkubo
Saikyō Line, Shōnan-Shinjuku Line‎: Shinjuku
Tokyo Metro
Marunouchi Line: Yotsuya, Yotsuya-sanchōme, Shinjuku-gyoenmae, Shinjuku-sanchōme, Shinjuku, Nishi-Shinjuku
Yūrakuchō Line: Ichigaya, Iidabashi
Tōzai Line: Kagurazaka, Waseda, Takadanobaba, Ochiai
Fukutoshin Line: Nishi-Waseda, Higashi-Shinjuku, Shinjuku-sanchōme
Namboku Line: Iidabashi, Ichigaya, Yotsuya
Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation
Toei Shinjuku Line: Akebonobashi, Shinjuku-sanchōme, Shinjuku
Toei Ōedo Line: Ochiai-Minaminagasaki, Nakai, Nishi-Shinjuku-gochōme, Tochō-mae, Kokuritsu-Kyōgijō, Ushigome-Kagurazaka, Ushigome-Yanagichō, Wakamatsu-Kawada, Higashi-Shinjuku, Shinjuku-Nishiguchi
Toden Arakawa Line: Omokagebashi, Waseda
Odakyū Electric Railway Odawara Line: Shinjuku
Keio Corporation Keiō Line, Keiō New Line: Shinjuku
Seibu Railway Seibu Shinjuku Line: Seibu-Shinjuku, Takadanobaba, Shimo-Ochiai, Nakai
[edit] Roads
Traffic on Ōme-kaidō heading towards Kabukichō at nightShuto Expressway:

No.4 Shinjuku Route (Miyakezaka JCT - Takaido)
No.5 Ikebukuro Route (Takebashi JCT - Bijogi JCT)
National highways:

National Route 20 (Shinjuku-dōri, Kōshū-kaidō)
Other major routes:

Tokyo Metropolitan Route 8 (Mejiro-dōri, Shin-Mejiro-dōri)
Tokyo Metropolitan Route 302 (Yasukuni-dōri, Ōme-kaidō)
Tokyo Metropolitan Route 305 (Meiji-dōri)
[edit] Education[edit] Colleges and universitiesChuo University graduate school
Gakushuin Women's College
Japan Electronics College
Keio University Medical College
Kogakuin University
Lakeland College Japan
Mejiro University
Tokyo Fuji University
Tokyo Medical University
Tokyo University of Science
Tokyo Women's Medical University
Waseda University
[edit] SchoolsPublic elementary and junior high schools in Shinjuku are operated by the Shinjuku City Board of Education. Public high schools are operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education.

Koishikawa Technical High School
Ichigaya Commercial High School
Shinjuku High School
Shinjuku Yamabuki High School
Toyama High School
[edit] Public institutions
Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building[edit] LibrariesShinjuku operates several public libraries, including the Central Library (with the Children's Library), the Yotsuya Library, the Tsurumaki Library, Tsunohazu Library, the Nishi-Ochiai Library, the Toyama Library, the Kita-Shinjuku Library, the Okubo Library, and the Nakamachi Library. In addition there is a branch library, Branch Library of Central Library in the City Office, located in the city office.[17]

[edit] HospitalsThere are several major hospitals located within the city limits.

Keio University Hospital
International Medical Center of Japan
Social Insurance Chūō General Hospital
Tokyo Medical University Hospital
Tokyo Women's Medical University Hospital
Tokyo Metropolitan Health and Medical Treatment Corporation Ohkubo Hospital
[edit] Cultural centers[edit] MuseumsNational Printing Bureau Banknote and Postage Stamp Museum
National Museum of Nature and Science, Shinjuku Branch
Shinjuku Historical Museum
Tokyo Fire Department Museum
[edit] HallsTokyo Opera City
Shinjuku Bunka Center
WelCity Tokyo
Meiji Yasuda Life Hall
Shinjuku Koma Theater
[edit] SightseeingShinjuku is home to many well-known sights and tourist attractions.

Shinjuku Gyoen
Shinjuku Central Park (Shinjuku Chūō Kōen)
Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building (designed by renowned architect Kenzo Tange)
Park Hyatt Tokyo and Park Tower (featured in the film Lost in Translation)
Waseda University's Ōkuma Auditorium
Meiji Shrine Outer Gardens and the Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery
[edit] Sister citiesShinjuku has sister city agreements with several localities:[18]

Lambeth, London, England
Lefkada, Greece
Mitte, Berlin, Germany
Dongcheng, Beijing, People's Republic of China

西門町




西門町,在台灣通常是指台北市的西門町。該區域位於台北市萬華區東北方,為台北市西區最重要的消費商圈,最具特色的則是台北市第一條且有指標性意義的徒步區。

西門町一般而言包括中華路、康定路、漢口街及成都路之內的範圍,由於中華路公車路線密集,所以也是公車轉乘的重點區域,台北捷運的藍線、綠線,亦在此設立西門站。


[编辑] 名稱西門町得名自日治時期行政區劃-西門町;日治時期西門町約為今成都路、西寧南路、昆明街、康定路之一部,但今日之西門町更為廣大,尚包括有昔日之新起町、若竹町等,並不全然相同。官方公文仍延用西門里。

[编辑] 緣起西門町因為位於台北城的西門外,因此得名。在日治時代,西門町原本還只是一片荒涼的地方,後來日本人決定仿效東京淺草區,在此設立休閒商業區。其中最早的娛樂設施為1897年的台北座、1902年的榮座(現為新萬國商場)及1908年的八角堂(西門紅樓)。

[编辑] 電影1930年代開始,西門町成為台北著名的電影街,日本戰敗後,榮景也繼續維持下去,40年代起每家戲院門庭若市,黃牛票猖獗,電影院一家接著一家開,僅武昌街二段就連開了十多家戲院,其盛況自此可見一斑。但由於台北市區逐漸向東發展,西門町許多機能被取代,80年代起逐漸沒落。90年代初期,台北市政府與西門町當地商家,重新將西門町規劃為行人徒步區,並在週末和國定假日禁止車輛通行,才又將青少年拉回這個區域。目前在西門町,幾乎每個周末都有小型演唱會、簽唱會、唱片首賣會登場,各種電影宣傳、街頭表演等等活動也常常可見。目前西門町還有20家以上的電影院,在台北要看首輪電影,西門町幾乎都找得著。而各種大小店家則有6千間左右。

以西門町為背景的電影《超級公民》(萬仁導演,1998年)、《六號出口》(林育賢導演,2007年)、等。

[编辑] 青少年天堂
台北市西門町的夜景西門町現在被稱為台北的「原宿」,除了有日文雜誌專賣店外,各種日本的書籍、唱片、服飾等,幾乎都同步流行,是所謂「哈日族」的天堂。除了獨立的街邊商店之外,這類商店也特別集中於區域內幾棟專門的集合商業建築裡面,其中較著名的包括有老字號的萬年商業大樓、獅子林廣場,乃至於較後期的萬國百貨與誠品116等等。

但是,正因為青少年聚集密度高,所以西門町也與東區、士林夜市並列台北青少年犯罪率最高的地方。

此外,當年林青霞就是在西門町與友人逛街時由星探發掘而起,成為了有名的電影明星;舞台劇主持人李國修、金融鉅子蔡宏圖皆在此成長。

[编辑] 紅包場文化紅包場是一種臺灣的歌廳形式,多分佈於西門町徒步區的漢口街、峨嵋街、西寧南路上。

紅包場起源於1960年代,當時針對由中國大陸來臺的軍官、軍眷,模仿上海歌廳形式設立,一開始並無「紅包場」的稱呼,因為後來有聽眾為了鼓勵自己喜愛的歌手,會直接將金錢包在紅包袋中,上前獻給演出中的歌手,漸漸的這類型的歌廳,被稱為紅包場。

早期紅包場演唱的曲目多是1920年代-1950年代上海的流行歌曲,例如:天涯歌女、舞衣、蘇州夜曲、秋水伊人等,聽眾也多屬於年紀較長的老兵,歌廳為了招徠客人,會為歌手另外取個「小周璇」、「小白光」等稱號,歌手也會刻意模彷當時歌手的演唱方法。

但隨著時代的演變和聽眾的轉變,曲目也由上海時期,轉為1950年代-1970年代在臺灣、香港等地的流行歌曲,例如:神祕女郎、情人的眼淚、意難忘、月亮代表我的心、小城故事、問白雲、甜蜜蜜。歌手的舞臺肢體動作也較以往活潑。

紅包場的消費不高,歌手多穿著華麗的禮服,舞臺上下交流互動熱絡是紅包場的特色之一。

[编辑] 特產西門町也有獨特的名產,例如中華路上的鴨肉扁、巷子內的阿宗麵線、賽門甜不辣、專賣滷味的老天祿、成都路上的成都楊桃冰與蜂蜜咖啡,加上許多日式餐廳(例如峨嵋街的美觀園)及傳承中國口味的各式外省餐廳,將老台北人及新台北人的味覺搭起了傳承的橋樑。

在電影《向左走向右走》中,梁詠琪尋找金城武的場景就是西門町,也賦予了現代西門町更新的意義。電影《六號出口》亦以西門町為主題,這個年輕人聚集的場所,什麼都有可能,似乎也象徵了年輕人豐富的創造力。

西門町百年老店蜂蜜咖啡(蜂大咖啡)
隨時都擠滿人潮的阿宗麵線
數十年的老店成都楊桃冰
[编辑] 名勝古蹟西門町媽祖廟:原日本真言宗的弘法寺,二次大戰後,入奉艋舺新興宮媽祖,後來又改名「台北天后宮」,俗稱「西門町媽祖廟」。
西門紅樓:三級古蹟
台北晉德宮:市定古蹟,位於康定路,木結構具對場作
慈雲寺:市定古蹟,位於漢口街
[编辑] 歷史建築西門:位於西門捷運站上方,於1905年拆除。
中華商場:位於中華路上,因建設捷運而拆除。