Wikipedia

Kansai Science City

Keihanna Science City

関西学術文化研究都市

けいはんな学研都市
Kansai Science City
Keihanna Plaza in Seika
Keihanna Plaza in Seika
Coordinates: 34°44′42″N 135°45′54″E / 34.745°N 135.765°E
CountryJapan
RegionKansai
Prefectures
OpenedOctober 1994
Founded byAzuma Okuda
Area
 • Total15,410 ha (38,080 acres)
Population
(April 1, 2019)[1]
 • Total251,857
 • Density1,600/km2 (4,200/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+9 (JST)
Websitewww.kri.or.jp/en/
Doshisha University in Kyōtanabe

Kansai Science City (関西文化学術研究都市, Kansai Bunka-gakujutsu-kenkyū-toshi) is an unincorporated city located in the Keihanna Hills (京阪奈丘陵, Keihanna kyūryō), a border region between Kyoto, Osaka, and Nara Prefectures in Kansai region, Japan. The name is commonly shortened[a] to Keihanna Science City (けいはんな学研都市, Keihanna Gakken-toshi) or Gakken-toshi (学研都市). The name Keihanna is constructed by extracting a representative kanji from Kyoto, Osaka, and Nara. It is about 25 kilometers (16 mi) south of the city of Kyoto and 30 kilometers (19 mi) east of the city of Osaka. The city was constructed to help the advancement of creative arts, sciences, and research, as well as to spur the creation of new industries and cultures.

Location

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1986 128,278—    
1991 171,805+33.9%
1996 194,514+13.2%
2001 212,826+9.4%
2006 228,425+7.3%
2011 241,020+5.5%
2016 248,435+3.1%
2020 252,833+1.8%
Source: "Population" (PDF) (in Japanese). Kansai Research Institute. p. 3.

Kansai Science City is located in portions of the following eight cities (, shi) and towns (, chō), in three prefectures:

Out of these, Seika in Kyoto Prefecture is completely inside the Kansai Science City.

The overall area of the Kansai Science City is 154 square kilometers (59 sq mi), with an estimated population of 250,000. There are 12 "Cultural and Academic Research Zones" within the Kansai Science City, encompassing 33 square kilometers (13 sq mi), with an estimated population of 100,000. Seika & Nishikizu is the central district of this city. Fugenji and Kita-Tawara are science districts in land use adjustment.

Areas, populations, and zones as of 1 April 2019[1]
Jurisdiction Osaka Prefecture Kyoto Prefecture Nara Prefecture Total
Hirakata Shijōnawate Katano Kyōtanabe Seika Kizugawa Nara Ikoma
Area 15.10 km2 14.70 km2 15.50 km2 24.42 km2 25.66 km2 23.62 km2 14.60 km2 20.50 km2 154.10 km2
Population 33,295 11,288 14,473 21,505 56,963 37,248 52,825 25,236 251,857
Cultural and Academic Research Zone Himuro & Tsuda (0.74 km2) Seika & Nishikizu (5.06 km2) Takayama (3.33 km2)
  • (33.29 km2)
  • Population : 97,895
Kiyotaki & Muroike (3.40 km2) Heijo & Soraku (6.26 km2)
Tanabe (1.00 km2) Kizu (7.37 km2)
Minami-Tanabe & Komada (3.44 km2) Heijo Palace Site (1.42 km2)
Tawara (1.27 km2) Fugenji Kita-Tawara

Main research institutes and universities

Universities

  • Shijonawate Campus, Osaka Electro-Communication University
  • Doshisha University - Kyotanabe Campus, Tatara Campus, and Gakken Toshi Campus
  • Kyotanabe Campus, Doshisha Women's College of Liberal Arts
  • Institute of Free electron laser (iFEL), Osaka University[2]
  • Nara Institute of Science and Technology
  • Seika Campus, Kyoto Prefectural University
  • Experimental Farm, Kyoto University

Research institutes

  • Universal Communication Research Institute, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT)
  • Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR)[3]
  • Technology Research Laboratory, Shimadzu
  • Keihanna Research Center, Kyocera - optical and electronic devices, solar cells, advanced thin-film technologies
  • Kansai Photon Science Institute, National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology (QST)
  • Keihanna Site, Panasonic
  • Keihanna Technology Innovation Center, OMRON
  • International Institute for Advanced Studies (IIAS)[4]
  • Nara Research and Development Center, Santen Pharmaceutical
  • Rohto Research Village Kyoto
  • Kansai Electronic Industry Development Center - supported by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry[5]
  • Ion Technology Center
  • Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth (RITE) - supported by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry[6]
  • Keihanna Campus, Riken
  • Suntory World Research Center
  • Nidec Center for Industrial Science
  • Keihanna Area, NTT Communication Science Laboratories
  • Nara Research Institute for Cultural Properties

Other

  • Kansai-kan of the National Diet Library
  • Heijō Palace
  • Keihanna Open Innovation Center @Kyoto (KICK)
  • Keihanna Plaza

Transportation

  • Gakkentoshi Line, West Japan Railway Company (JR West)
  • Nara Line (JR West)
  • Kyoto Line, Kintetsu Railway (Kintetsu)
  • Keihanna Line (Kintetsu)
  • Shin-Meishin Expressway
  • Second Keihan Highway
  • Keinawa Expressway

In 2016, a government committee planning the final Kyoto-Osaka segment of the Hokuriku Shinkansen proposed routing the new high-speed line through Kyōtanabe.[7]

About 100 minutes by bus from Kansai International Airport.

Notes

  1. ^ The Japanese form of the official name, which literally translates to Kansai Culture and Academic Research City, is substantially longer than the official English name.

References

This article was translated from a portion of the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved on December 10, 2006.

See also

External links

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