Kawaguchi, Saitama
Kawaguchi (川口市, Kawaguchi-shi) is a city located in Saitama Prefecture, Japan. As of 1 March 2018, the city had an estimated population of 600,388, and a population density of 9,691.49 persons per km². Its total area is 61.95 square kilometres (23.92 sq mi). It is the Greater Tokyo Area's 8th most populated city (after passing Hachioji), and second largest in Saitama Prefecture.
Kawaguchi
川口市 | |
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View of downtown Kawaguchi | |
Flag Seal | |
Location of Kawaguchi in Saitama Prefecture | |
Kawaguchi Location of Kawaguchi in Saitama Prefecture | |
Coordinates: 35°48′27.7″N 139°43′26.8″E | |
Country | Japan |
Region | Kantō |
Prefecture | Saitama Prefecture |
First official recorded | 940 AD |
City settled | April 1, 1933 |
Government | |
• Mayor | Nobuo Okunoki (since February 2014) |
Area | |
• Total | 61.95 km2 (23.92 sq mi) |
Population (March 1, 2018) | |
• Total | 600,388 |
• Density | 9,691.49/km2 (25,100.8/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+9 (Japan Standard Time) |
- Tree | Camellia sasanqua |
- Flower | Lilium longiflorum |
Phone number | 048-258-1110 |
Address | 2-1-1 Aoki, Kawaguchi-shi, Saitama-ken 332-0031 |
Website | http://www.city.kawaguchi.lg.jp/ |
Geography
Kawaguchi is located near the center of the Kantō Plain in southern Saitama Prefecture, and is bordered by the Tokyo wards of Kita-ku and Adachi-ku to the south. The city area is mostly flat and mainly residential except for the Omiya tableland, which occupies part of the north and east area. The Arakawa River runs across the border with Kita-ku to the south.
Surrounding municipalities
Demographics
Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
---|---|---|
1933 | 45,573 | — |
1945 | 97,709 | +6.56% |
1955 | 130,545 | +2.94% |
1965 | 231,193 | +5.88% |
1975 | 335,864 | +3.81% |
1980 | 373,123 | +2.13% |
1990 | 433,262 | +1.51% |
2000 | 455,886 | +0.51% |
2010 | 500,598 | +0.94% |
2015 | 592,602 | +3.43% |
Source: [1] |
As of May 1, 2010, registered population was 516,409, including 20,808 alien residents, continuing a trend of population growth in the city since 1933 when the city was founded. There has been a gradual increase in the number of non-Japanese residents living in the city because of the convenient location to Tokyo and relatively low rent. Now, the number of people from China is the largest, followed by Korea and Philippines.[2]
Kawaguchi is a typical suburb city of Tokyo metropolitan area, where population greatly changes between daytime and nighttime due to commute to big cities, especially to Tokyo. In mid 1990s, population growth rate declined, but recent apartment construction boom in the city helps increase population growth rate again. The number of children continues to decrease in accordance with the decline of number of birth: 4,735 in 2009 down from the highest number of 7,932 in 1971. By contrast, the rate of people over the age of 65 is increasing, approximately 18.5% as of January 1, 2010. Yet the number is below the national average.[1]
History
After the last ice age, during early and middle Jōmon period, most of the area which is now Kawaguchi was under sea level except for the area which is now Omiya Tableland. Ancient peoples living in this area left several shell middens, in which shells, Jōmon pottery, and pit houses have been discovered by archaeologists. Many Kofun period barrows were also found in Kawaguchi, however many have also been destroyed by urban development. From the Heian period onwards, Kawaguchi was part of Musashi Province. The name "Kawaguchi" appears in the Kamakura period chronicle Gikeiki, but it is not proven that this name designated current area of Kawaguchi.
During the Edo period, Kawaguchi-juku developed as a post station on the Nikkō Onari Kaidō, a highway used by the Tokugawa shōgun and daimyō to visit Nikkō Tōshō-gū. Towards the Bakumatsu period and into the Meiji period, the demand for metal products increased. Because of proximity to Tokyo and convenient water transportation using Arakawa River, Kawaguchi became the center of metal casting industry, for which it has remained famous until modern times.
The modern town of Kawaguchi was established within Kitaadachi District, Saitama on April 1, 1889 with the establishment of the municipalities system. Kawaguchi was elevated to city status on April 1, 1933 by the merger of Kawaguchi with the neighboring villages of Aoki, Minami-Hirayanagi and Yokozone. The city expanded by annexing the town of Hatogaya and villages of Shiba, Kamine and Shingō in 1940. However, Hatogaya separated from Kawaguchi in 1948 in accordance with the results of a referendum.
Kawaguchi has experienced many disasters, including flood, earthquake and war. The Arakawa River has inundated Kawaguchi countless times and ruined agriculture, which resulted in famines. Also, the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake damaged buildings in Kawaguchi, killing 99 people.
Currently, the population of Kawaguchi continues to increase, and many tall apartment buildings are being built around train stations. This is because many casting foundries moved to suburban industrial parks and the former sites were turned into residential areas.[3]
On April 1, 2001, Kawaguchi was designated a special city, with increased local autonomy.
On October 11, 2011, Kawaguchi re-absorbed the city of Hatogaya.
Education
Universities and colleges
- Saitama Gakuen University
- Kawaguchi Junior College
- Kawaguchi Art School of Waseda University
High schools
- Saitama Prefectural Kawaguchi High School
- Saitama Prefectural Kawaguchi Kita High School
- Saitama Prefectural Kawaguchi Technical High School
- Saitama Prefectural Kawaguchi Seiryo High School
- Saitama Prefectural Kawaguchi Higashi High School
- Saitama Prefectural Hatogaya High School
- Kawaguchi Municipal High School
- Kawaguchi Municipal Kenyo High School
- Kawaguchi Municipal Sogo High School
Middle schools
(all managed by the city)
- Angyo Middle School
- Angyo-higashi Middle School
- Aoki Middle School
- Haimatsu Middle School
- Higashi Middle School
- Kamiaoki Middle School
- Kamine Middle School
- Kishikawa Middle School
- Kita Middle School
- Koyaba Middle School
- Minami Middle School
- Motogo Middle School
- Nakacho Middle School
- Nishi Middle School
- Ryoke Middle School
- Sachinami Middle School
- Shiba Middle School
- Shiba-higashi Middle School
- Shiba-nishi Middle School
- Shibazono Middle School
- Shiwasuda Middle School
- Tozuka Middle School
- Tozuka-nishi Middle School
- Zaike Middle School
- Hatogaya Middle School
- Sato Middle School
- Hachimangi Middle School
Elementary schools
(all managed by the city)
- Angyo Elementary School
- Angyo-higashi Elementary School
- Aoki-kita Elementary School
- Aoki-chuo Elementary School
- Asahi-higashi Elementary School
- Asahi-nishi Elementary School
- Funato Elementary School
- Haramachi Elementary School
- Higashihongo Elementary School
- Higashiryoke Elementary School
- Honcho Elementary School
- Iinaka Elementary School
- Iizuka Elementary School
- Jirin Elementary School
- Kamiaoki Elementary School
- Kamiaoki-minami Elementary School
- Kamine Elementary School
- Kamine-higashi Elementary School
- Kizoro Elementary School
- Nakacho Elementary School
- Namiki Elementary School
- Negishi Elementary School
- Hatogaya Elementary School
- Sato Elementary School
- Sakuramachi Elementary School
- Tuji Elementary School
- Nakai Elementary School
- Minamihatogaya Elementary School
- Ryoke Elementary School
- Saiwaicho Elementary School
- Sashima Elementary School
- Shiba Elementary School
- Shiba-chuo Elementary School
- Shiba-fuji Elementary School
- Shiba-higashi Elementary School
- Shiba-hinotume Elementary School
- Shiba-minami Elementary School
- Shiba-nishi Elementary School
- Shingo Elementary School
- Shingo-higashi Elementary School
- Shingo-minami Elementary School
- Shiwasuda Elementary School
- Tozuka Elementary School
- Tozuka-ayase Elementary School
- Tozuka-higashi Elementary School
- Tozuka-kita Elementary School
- Tozuka-minami Elementary School
- Yanagisaki Elementary School
- Zaike Elementary School
Transportation
Railway
Buses
Kawaguchi has a highly developed bus network, mainly operated by Kokusai Kogyo Bus. The east region of the city is relatively far from train stations, many people use buses to the nearest train stations. Some bus routes have over twenty bus services an hour in the morning.[5]
Bus operators
- Kokusai Kogyo Bus
- Tobu Bus Central
Highway
- Tōhoku Expressway – Kawaguchi Junction
- Tokyo Gaikan Expressway – Kawaguchi-Nishi Interchange, Kawaguchi-Chūō Interchange, Kawaguchi Junction, Kawaguchi-Higashi Interchange
- Shuto Expressway
- Kawaguchi Route – Kawaguchi Junction, Araijuku, Angyō, Shingo, Higashi Ryoke
- National Route 122
- National Route 298
Noted people from Kawaguchi
- Yoshitaka Shindō, politician
- Yukio Tomioka, politician
- Yukio Ninagawa, stage director
- Kumiko Ohba, actress
References
- 川口市統計書 平成27年版 [The statistics of Kawaguchi (2015)]. Kawaguchi City Office. 2015.
- Ministry of Justice. "Press release June 2009".
- 川口市史縮小版 [The short history of Kawaguchi]. Kawaguchi City Office. 1996.
- Home page. Saitama Korean Kindergarten. Retrieved on 14 October 2015. "〒333-0831 埼玉県川口市木曽呂1392-1"
- Kokusai Bus.com
External links
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kawaguchi. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kawaguchi, Saitama. |
- Official Website (in Japanese)