(Redirected from Taiheiyo Belt)The is the name for the 'continuous urbanization zone' in Japan extending from
Ibaraki Prefecture in the north all the way to
Fukuoka Prefecture in the south, running for almost 1,200 km. The urbanization zone runs mainly along the Pacific coast (hence the name) of Japan from
Kanto region to
Osaka, and the
Inland Sea (on both sides) to
Fukuoka, and is concentrated along the
Tōkaidō-
Sanyō rail corridor. A view of Japan at night clearly shows a rather dense and continuous
strip of light (that demarcates urban zones) that basically delineates the region.
Although it contains the majority of Japan's population, references to it in Japanese are mainly economic or regional in nature.
The term was first used in 1960 in an Economic Commission Subcommittee Report formed to double the national income. At this time, it was identified as the core of the nation's industrial complex. The region is specifically defined by the Ministry of International Trade and Industry as the following prefectures: Ibaraki, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Shizuoka, Aichi, Gifu, Mie, Osaka, Hyogo, Wakayama, Okayama, Hiroshima, Yamaguchi, Fukuoka, and Oita. As economic development (along with urban development) spilled over to nearby regions, they were added to this list.
By extension of the definition for
megalopolis worldwide, Taiheiyo belt would be a great candidate because the cities literally are completely connected and adjacent from one end to the other without rural areas in between, but technically no scholarly definition exists for megalopolis for any region outside of the USA.
The
Sea of Japan has a much less well developed string of cities named Ura-nippon (), stretching 1000 km from
Akita to
Yamaguchi. It is often referenced in relation to the Taiheiyo belt.
Major Cities
These are cities that form the largest contiguous swath of urbanization in Japan, with very little or no rural areas in between, listed from north to south.
★ Greater
Utsunomiya (pop. 900,000) including
Nikkō,
Kanuma,
Tochigi,
Oyama,
Shimotsuke.
★ Greater
Maebashi (pop. 1,500,000) including
Takasaki,
Kiryu,
Isesaki,
Ota,
Ashikaga,
Sano, and
Tatebayashi.
★ Greater Ibaraki (pop. 1,300,000) including
Mito,
Tsuchiura,
Hitachinaka,
Hitachi,
Tsukuba.
★
Greater Tokyo (pop. 35.5 million)
★ Mt. Fuji Area (pop. 700,000) including
Gotemba,
Atami,
Numazu,
Fujinomiya,
Fujieda,
Mishima
★ Greater
Shizuoka (pop. 1,000,000)
★ Greater
Hamamatsu (pop. 1,100,000) including
Kakegawa and
Iwata.
★
Toyohashi (pop. 400,000)
★ Greater
Nagoya (
Chūkyō Metropolitan Area) (pop. 8,000,000)
★
Greater Osaka (pop. 17,000,000) including
Osaka,
Kyoto,
Kobe,
Sakai, and
Higashiosaka
★ Greater
Nara (pop. 1,000,000)
★
Himeji (pop. 500,000)
★
Tokushima (pop. 300,000)
★ Greater
Okayama (pop. 1,900,000) including
Okayama,
Kurashiki,
Takamatsu,
Marugame,
Sakaide,
Tamano,
Soja.
★
Fukuyama-
Kure (pop. 1,100,000) including
Onomichi,
Mihara,
Higashi Hiroshima.
★ Greater
Hiroshima (pop. 1,300,000) including
Hatsukaichi.
★ Greater
Matsuyama (pop. 1,050,000) including
Imabari,
Saijō,
Niihama,
Shikokuchūō.
★
Iwakuni -
Yamaguchi (pop. 1,000,000) including
Ube,
Hofu,
Shunan,
Hikari,
Sanyō-Onoda.
★
Kanmon Straits (pop. 1,700,000) including
Shimonoseki and
Kitakyushu including
Iizaka.
★ Greater
Fukuoka (pop. 2,500,000) including
Saga and
Kasuga.
★ Kurume (pop. 300,000)
★ Greater
Kumamoto (熊本都市圏) (pop. 1,000,000)
★
Sasebo (pop. 200,000)
★
Nagasaki (pop. 650,000) including
Isahaya,
Unzen.
'Total population': approx 82.9 million
External links
★
Satellite images of stable night time lights in Japan
★
Urban Employment Areas in Japan
★
List of metropolitan areas in Japan by population