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Sagamihara-Yaei High School

1983 establishments in JapanBuildings and structures in SagamiharaEducational institutions established in 1983High schools in Kanagawa Prefecture
Yaei High School
Yaei High School

Kanagawa Prefectural Sagamihara Yaei High School (神奈川県立相模原弥栄高等学校, Kanagawa Kenritsu Sagamihara Yaei Kōtōgakkō) is a high school located in Sagamihara, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. Founded in 1983 as Yaei East (弥栄東) and Yaei West (弥栄西), the two schools merged in 2008. They were merged as part of the "Kanagawa 100 New High Schools" plan.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sagamihara-Yaei High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sagamihara-Yaei High School
銀河西通り, Sagamihara Chuo Ward

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N 35.555638888889 ° E 139.38772222222 °
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Address

神奈川県立相模原弥栄高等学校

銀河西通り
252-0227 Sagamihara, Chuo Ward
Japan
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Yaei High School
Yaei High School
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Sagamihara Vending Machine Park
Sagamihara Vending Machine Park

The Sagamihara Vending Machine Park (相模原レトロ自販機, Sagamihara Retoro Jihanki) is a collection of retro vending machines in the city of Sagamihara in Kanagawa, Japan. It was created by Tatsuhiro Saitō (齋藤辰洋, Saitō Tatsuhiro), the president of the Rat Sunrise used tire shop, originally to entertain waiting customers. It has over 100 machines in two rows adjacent to the shop's parking lot. There is also a small room near the shop's office that contains classic arcade games. All of the vending machines are functional and dispense goods ranging from food, such as ramen, and drinks, to toys and fortune slips. The machines are restocked daily, with hot food for some of the machines cooked on site, and others prepared by vendors. While the tire shop has regular business hours, the vending machines are available around the clock. Saitō started the collection in 2016. He obtained the collection through online auctions and word of mouth. A majority of the machines are from the 1970s and 1980s, the end of Japan's Shōwa era. Saitō repairs and maintains the machines himself, since they are no longer supported by their manufacturers. In September 2021, a button on one of the machines was broken by a vandal, and a plastic parts manufacturer created a replacement for free using CAD.The collection is more time-consuming than the tire shop, and Saitō has as many employees to restock and cook for the machines as his shop. The kitchen makes more than 600 meals a day. In 2022, Saitō estimated that the collection drew 300–400 customers on weekdays and 1,000 customers on weekends. The collection is considered a "pilgrimage site" for fans of retro vending machines.