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Tsukuba

 
 
Tsukuba (tsʊkū'), city (1990 pop. 143,396) Ibaraki prefecture, central Honshu, E central Japan, 31 mi (50 km) S of Mito. The city's products include peanuts, mushrooms, tea, processed foods, sake, and housewares. It is the site of Tsukuba Science City, a research and technology center. The government began planning the science city in 1963 as a center dedicated to scientific research and as part of a strategy to decentralize Tokyo. It served as the site of Japan's science exposition in 1985. The city houses 46 national research facilities, including the National Laboratory for High Energy Physics. The Univ. of Tsukuba is located there.


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Tsukuba
つくば
—  Special city  —
つくば市 · Tsukuba

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Location of Tsukuba in Ibaraki
Tsukuba is located in Japan
Tsukuba
Coordinates: 36°2′N 140°4′E / 36.033°N 140.067°E / 36.033; 140.067
Country Japan
Region Kantō
Prefecture Ibaraki
Government
 - Mayor Ken'ichi Ichihara
Area
 - Total 284.07 km2 (109.7 sq mi)
Population
(January 2008)
207,394
 - Density 281.9/km2 (730/sq mi)
City Symbols
 - Tree Japanese zelkova
 - Flower Hoshizaki-yukinoshita (Saxifraga stolonifera Curtis f. aptera (Makino) H.Hara)
 - Bird Ural owl
Website City of Tsukuba
Phone number 029-836-1111
Address

4741 Yatabe, Tsukuba-shi, Ibaraki-ken
305-8555

Tsukuba Center, in the city central district
One of the buildings at the University of Tsukuba
The Tsukuba Express
Mount Tsukuba

Tsukuba (つくば市 Tsukuba-shi?) is a city located in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. It is known as the location of the Tsukuba Science City (筑波研究学園都市 Tsukuba Kenkyū Gakuen Toshi?), a planned city developed in the 1960s.

As of 2008, the city has an estimated population of 207,394 and a population density of 730 persons per km². Its total area is 284.07 km². Tsukuba is sometimes considered part of the Greater Tokyo Area.

Mount Tsukuba, particularly well-known for its toad-shaped Shinto shrine, is located near the city. Also found there is the Tsukuba Circuit, a popular short racetrack which hosts the D1 Grand Prix and other motorsports events.

Tsukuba is a twin city of Irvine, California and Cambridge, Massachusetts[1][2] in the United States of America.

Contents

History

Tsukuba Science City represents one of the world's largest coordinated attempts to accelerate the rate of and improve the quality of scientific discovery. The city was closely modeled on other planned cities and science developments, including Brasilia, Novosibirsk's Akademgorodok, Bethesda, and Palo Alto. The city was founded by the merger of Ōho, Sakura, Toyosato, and Yatabe.

Beginning in the 1960s, the area was designated for development. Construction of the city centre, the University of Tsukuba and 46 public basic scientific research laboratories began in the 1970s. The city became operational in the 1980s to stimulate scientific discovery. Its constituent municipalities were administratively united in 1987. By the year 2000, the city's 60 national research institutes and two universities had been grouped into five zones: higher education and training, construction research, physical science and engineering research, biological and agricultural research, and common (public) facilities. These zones were surrounded by more than 240 private research facilities. Among the most prominent institutions are the University of Tsukuba (1973; formerly Tokyo University of Education); the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK); the Electrotechnical Laboratory; the Mechanical Engineering Laboratory; and the National Institute of Materials and Chemical Research. The city has an international flair, with about 3,000 foreign students and researchers from as many as 90 countries living in Tsukuba at any one time.

Over the past several decades, nearly half of Japan's public research and development budget has been spent in Tsukuba. Important scientific breakthroughs by its researchers include the identification and specification of the molecular structure of superconducting materials, the development of organic optical films that alter their electrical conductivity in response to changing light, and the creation of extreme high-pressure vacuum chambers. Tsukuba has become one of the world's key sites for government-industry collaborations in basic research. Earthquake safety, environmental degradation, studies of roadways, fermentation science, microbiology, and plant genetics are some of the broad research topics having close public-private partnerships.

Tsukuba hosted the Expo '85 world's fair in 1985. A full-scale, working rocket in the city park commemorated the event.

Key reference: James W. Dearing (1995). Growing a Japanese Science City: Communication in Scientific Research. London: Routledge.

Transportation

On August 24, 2005, a rail service called the Tsukuba Express, or simply "TX", opened. Operated by the Metropolitan Intercity Railway Company, it provides Tsukuba with a rapid connection to Akihabara Station in Tokyo. It takes 45 minutes to travel between Tsukuba Station and Akihabara Station.

The bus center, in the same area as the TX, offers intracity transport as well as travel to stations in nearby towns and to major stations throughout Kantō.

Tsukuba is also located on the Joban Expressway, the express tollway which runs between Tokyo and Mito.

The closest major airport is Narita International Airport; Tokyo International Airport is also accessible from the city via a bus that carries people daily from the airport to the city's center. A new domestic airport is being built in nearby Omitama, Ibaraki which will connect with Sapporo, Hokkaido, Naha, Okinawa, Osaka, Osaka, and Fukuoka, Fukuoka.

Research institutes in Tsukuba

Museums in Tsukuba

Name in kanji

Tsukuba (つくば?) is one of a small number of hiragana cities in Japan whose names are written in hiragana rather than kanji (Chinese characters). When written in kanji, it is rendered "筑波."

Notes

External links



 
 
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JDM Option, Vol. 14: D1 Tsukuba Super Lap (2005 Sports & Recreation Film)
Odin: Starlight Mutiny (2004 Action Film)
Hideki Shirakawa (Japanese chemist)

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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