Shinagawa

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Shinagawa-ku
品 川 区
Shinagawa
Geographical location in Japan
Shinagawa (Japan)
Red pog.svg
Region : Kanto
Prefecture : Tokyo
Coordinates : 35 ° 37 '  N , 139 ° 44'  E Coordinates: 35 ° 36 '33 "  N , 139 ° 43' 49"  E
Basic data
Surface: 22.72 km²
Residents : 411.070
(October 1, 2019)
Population density : 18,093 inhabitants per km²
Community key : 13109-1
Symbols
Flag / coat of arms:
Shinagawa flag / coat of arms
Tree : Shii castanopsis , maple
Flower : Rhododendron indicum
Bird : Black-headed gull
town hall
Address : Shinagawa City Hall
2 - 1 - 36 , Hiro-machi
Shinagawa-ku
Tōkyō  140-8715
Website URL: http://www.city.shinagawa.tokyo.jp
Location of Shinagawas in Tokyo Prefecture
Location of Shinagawa in the prefecture

Shinagawa ( Japanese 品 川 区 , - ku ) is one of the 23 districts of the Japanese prefecture of Tokyo . It is located in the south of Tokyo , the capital of Japan .

geography

Shinagawa is divided into the districts Ebara ( 荏 原 地区 , -chiku ), Ōi ( 大 井 地区 , -chiku ), Ōsaki ( 大 崎 地区 , -chiku ), Shinagawa ( 品 川 地区 , -chiku ) and Yashio ( 八 潮 地区 , -chiku ) .

Neighboring cities and communities

history

Today's "special district" Shinagawa was created on May 3, 1947 during the occupation during the expansion (or restoration) of the self-government of the local authorities, which has since been guaranteed in the constitution , although for decades it remained controversial as to whether this guarantee would also apply to the "special districts." “( Tokyo ) extends. Shortly before that, on March 15, 1947, the Shinagawa district was created from the merger of the Ebara and Shinagawa districts, which had been directly prefecture-level since 1943 , of the city ​​of Tokyo , which was abolished in the war . The two city districts were created in 1932 when the cities (- machi ) Shinagawa, Ebara, Ōsaki and Ōi from the Ebara district were incorporated into the city of Tokyo. Shinagawa City was the seat of the county government until the county government was abolished in the 1920s. In the early Meiji period, the area was part of Shinagawa Prefecture , which administered parts of Musashi Province until 1871.

During the Edo period , Shinagawa was the Tōkaidō's first post office . With the many hotels with 6,000 rooms around the train station - the highest concentration in all of Tokyo - this post office function continues into the present.

Political groups in Parliament
(as of May 27, 2019)
       
A total of 40 seats
  • Jimin ・ mushozoku ・ kodomo mirai (" LDP , Independent, Future Children"): 9
  • Shinagawa-kugikai jimintō (" LDP [in] Shinagawa District Parliament"): 8
  • Kōmeitō : 7
  • KPY : 6
  • Kaikaku rengō ("Reform Union"; with Tomin First ): 3
  • Seikatsusha Network : 2
  • Non-attached: 5
View from a building on Tennōzu Isle

politics

Shinagawa has been mayor since 2006, Takeshi Hamano, previously a civil servant and from 2002 vice mayor (joyaku) . He was re-elected in September 2018, now at the age of 71, with the support of the LDP and Kōmeitō against the KDP - KPJ - LP - Tomin-First -backed former prefectural parliamentarian Hirohiko Satō (60) and another candidate for a fourth term. The 40 seats in Shinagawa's parliament were filled in the 2019 unified elections .

In prefectural parliamentary elections, the district forms a four-mandate constituency, which elected two members of Koike's prefectural party Tomin First no Kai and one each from Kōmeitō and KPJ in the last election in 2017 . The two candidates from the Liberal Democratic Party landed in fifth and seventh place.

For the House of Commons , the majority of Shinagawa together with part of sowieta and the cities and villages on the Izu and Ogasawara Islands form the constituency of Tokyo 3 . After the 2000 election, the constituency was alternately represented by the Democrat Jin Matsubara (2000-2005 and 2009-2012) and the Liberal Democrat Hirotaka Ishihara (2005-2009 and since 2012), son of the former Prefectural Governor Shintarō Ishihara . Parts of Ōsaki and Gotanda in the north-west of the district have belonged to constituency 7 since the 2017 election , which otherwise mainly includes the Shibuya district.

Infrastructure

education

Shinagawa is home to Hoshi University , Risshō University , Seisen University , Shōwa University, and Sugino Women's University .

traffic

Street

rail

Despite its name, Shinagawa Station is in the neighboring Minato District .

Ebara shrine

economy

Numerous Japanese companies have their headquarters in Shinagawa.

Buildings

Town twinning

sons and daughters of the town

Web links

Commons : Shinagawa  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Shinagawa District Parliament : Factions , accessed June 7, 2019.
  2. 品 川 区長 選 4 選 の 浜 野 さ ん が 抱負 「期待 に 政策 で 応 え る」 . In: Tōkyō Shimbun . October 1, 2018, accessed June 7, 2019 (Japanese).
  3. 統一 地方 選 2019> 東京> 品 川 区 議 選 . In: Tōkyō Shimbun . April 2019, accessed on June 5, 2019 (Japanese).
  4. Tōkyō Shimbun : Results of the prefecture parliamentary elections in Tokyo 2017, Shinagawa-ku (Japanese)