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KōTō, TOKYO

(Redirected from Koto, Tokyo)

is one of the 23 special wards of Tokyo, Japan. As of 2003, the ward has an estimated population of 429,224 and a density of 10,870 persons per km². The total area is 39.48 km². The ward refers to itself as Kōtō City in English.
Kōtō is located east of the Tokyo metropolitan center, bounded by the Sumidagawa to the west and the Arakawa to the east. Its major districts include Kameido, Kiba, Kiyosumi, Monzen-nakachō, and Shirakawa. The newly developed waterfront area of Ariake is in Kōtō, as is part of Odaiba (including the popular Palette Town shopping complex).

Contents
Geography
History
Transportation
Rail
Highway
Air
Famous places
Education
Colleges and universities
Famous people
Miscellaneous
External links

Geography


Kōtō occupies a position on the waterfront of Tokyo Bay sandwiched between the wards of Chūō and Edogawa. Its inland boundary is with Sumida. Much of the land is reclaimed, so there are few old temples or shrines.
Noteworthy places in Kōtō include

★ In the former ward of Fukagawa: Kiba, Fukagawa, Edagawa

★ In the former ward of Jōtō: Kameido, Ōjima, Sunamachi

★ On recently reclaimed land: Ariake, Yumenoshima, Tokyo Rinkai Fukutoshin

History


The western part of the ward was formerly part of Fukagawa Ward of Tokyo City. It suffered severe damage in the Great Kantō Earthquake and was heavily bombed during World War II.
The special ward was founded on March 15, 1947 by the merger of the wards of Fukagawa and Jōtō.

Transportation


Rail


JR East


★ 'Chūō-Sōbu Line': Kameido Station


★ 'Keiyo Line': Etchu-jima Station, Shiomi Station, Shin-kiba Station

JR Freight


★ 'Etchu-jima Branch Line': Etchu-jima Station

Tokyo Metro


★ 'Tozai Line': Monzen-nakacho Station, Kiba Station, Toyocho Station, Minami-sunamachi Station


★ 'Yurakucho Line': Toyosu Station, Tatsumi Station, Shin-kiba Station


★ 'Hanzomon Line': Sumiyoshi Station, Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station

Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation


★ 'Toei Shinjuku Line': Morishita Station, Sumiyoshi Station, Nishi-ojima Station, Ojima Station, Higashi-ojima Station


★ 'Toei Oedo Line': Morishita Station, Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station, Monzen-nakacho Station

Tobu Railway


★ 'Kameido Line': Kameido Station, Kameido-suijin Station

Tokyo Waterfront Area Rapid Transit


★ 'Rinkai Line': Shin-kiba Station, Shinonome Station, Kokusai-tenjijo Station, Tokyo Teleport Station

Tokyo Waterfront New Transit Corporation

★ 'Yurikamome': Fune-no-kagakukan Station, Telecom Center Station, Aomi Station, Kokusai-tenjijo-seimon Station, Ariake Station, Ariake-tennis-no-mori Station, Shijō-mae Station, Shin-toyosu Station, Toyosu Station
Highway


Shuto Expressway


★ C2 Central Loop (Itabashi JCT - Kasai JCT)


★ No.7 Komatsugawa Route (Ryogoku JCT - Yagochi)


★ No.9 Fukagawa Route (Hakozaki JCT - Tatsumi JCT)


★ B Bayshore Route (Kawasaki-ukishima JCT - Koya)
Air


Tokyo Heliport is in Shin-Kiba.

Famous places



ageHa nightclub

Kameido Tenjin Shinto Shrine

Tomioka Hachiman Shrine

Fukagawa Fudo-son

Kiyosumi Garden

Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo

Tokyo Big Sight (Tokyo International Exhibition Center)

Ariake Coliseum , site of Japan Open Tennis Championships, All Japan Tennis Championships and so on

Ariake Tennis Forest Park, which has Ariake Coliseum and 48 tennis courts

Suzaki Baseball Field, site of Japanese Baseball League games in 1930s

Kiba Metropolitan Park

Education


Public elementary and middle schools are operated by the Koto City Board of Education. Public high schools are operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education.
Colleges and universities


Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology (Tokyo Kaiyo Daigaku, part of the national university system)

Famous people



Shintaro Katsu, actor

Yoshimi Iwasaki, singer

Kaori Mochida, singer, former child actress

Genki Sudo, K-1 competitor

Kaishoryu Kuniaki, sumo wrestler

Daisuke Matsuzaka, baseball player (competed in Edogawa Little League)

Miyuki Miyabe, author

Suihou Tagawa, artist

Ken Kutaragi, videogame executive

Miscellaneous


As of April 20, 1989 Kōtō became the Sister City of Surrey, British Columbia, Canada.

External links



Kōtō official website in English

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