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Chikusa Station

Chikusa-ku, NagoyaChūō Main LineInternal link templates linking to redirectsRailway stations in Aichi PrefectureRailway stations in Japan opened in 1900
Railway stations in Japan opened in 1960Railway stations in NagoyaStations of Central Japan Railway CompanyStations of Nagoya Municipal Subway
NGO Chikusa 20221117 03
NGO Chikusa 20221117 03

Chikusa Station (千種駅, Chikusa-eki) is an interchange railway station in Higashi-ku and Chikusa-ku, Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Tōkai) and the Transportation Bureau City of Nagoya.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Chikusa Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Chikusa Station
Chikusa Station East Lane, Nagoya Chikusa Ward

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Wikipedia: Chikusa StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.1701424 ° E 136.930697 °
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Address

Chikusa Station East Lane
464-0075 Nagoya, Chikusa Ward
Japan
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NGO Chikusa 20221117 03
NGO Chikusa 20221117 03
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Nearby Places

Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Money Museum
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Money Museum

The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Money Museum (三菱東京UFJ銀行貨幣資料館) is a numismatic museum located in Nagoya, central Japan. As "Tokai Bank Money Museum", it opened in 1961. After a name change due to bank mergers, the present name was adopted in 2006. In 2009, it relocated to its present location near the Akatsuka-shirakabe (赤塚白壁) bus stop on Dekimachi-dori. It contains 10,000 exhibits of world currency. Utagawa Hiroshige's Ukiyo-e, "Fifty-three Stages of the Tokaido", also owns.With the aim of contributing to society by preserving cultural properties and educating the public about them, this museum owns around 15,000 rare coins and bank notes and 1,800 ukiyo-e woodblock prints which are put on public display. The money exhibition room displays rare coins and notes from Japan and various countries around the world, including the world's oldest currency in the form of Shang dynasty cowrie shells. The Japanese currency features a gold coin called "Tensho Oban" whose production was ordered by Hideyoshi Toyotomi as well as Edo period currency and printing blocks, few of which are extant today.MUFG and MUFG Bank operate the Money and Ukiyo-e Museum (Formerly MUFG Bank Money Museum), located on the first floor of their Nagoya Building. The museum has some special collections, including rare coins from Japan and around the world, as well as important ukiyo-e prints by Hiroshige Utagawa.