place

Hiratsuka Museum of Art

1991 establishments in JapanArt museums and galleries established in 1991Art museums and galleries in Kanagawa PrefectureHiratsuka, KanagawaJapanese museum stubs
Hiratsuka MOA
Hiratsuka MOA

The Hiratsuka Museum of Art (平塚市美術館, Hiratsuka-shi bijutsukan) opened in 1991 in Hiratsuka, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The collection of approximately twelve thousand objects has a particular focus on the Shōnan area.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hiratsuka Museum of Art (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hiratsuka Museum of Art
606, Hiratsuka

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Hiratsuka Museum of ArtContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.338079 ° E 139.347595 °
placeShow on map

Address

平塚市美術館

606
254-0041 Hiratsuka
Japan
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
city.hiratsuka.kanagawa.jp

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q24807748)
linkOpenStreetMap (1420822202)

Hiratsuka MOA
Hiratsuka MOA
Share experience

Nearby Places

Sagami River
Sagami River

The Sagami River (相模川, Sagamigawa) is a river in Kanagawa and Yamanashi Prefectures on the island of Honshū, Japan. The upper reaches of the river in Yamanashi prefecture are also sometimes known as the Katsura River (桂川, Katsuragawa), and the portion near the river mouth as the Banyu River (馬入川, Banyugawa). The river overall was sometimes referred to as the Ayu River (鮎川, Ayugawa) from the sweetfish (ayu) which were once abundant in its waters. The Sagami River drains Lake Yamanaka, the largest and easternmost of the Fuji Five Lakes in Yamanashi Prefecture. It loops northwest, then northeast through Yamanashi, before following a generally southerly course to exit into Sagami Bay of the Pacific Ocean between the cities of Hiratsuka and Chigasaki. It is dammed at several locations along the way, forming a number of reservoir lakes, the largest of which are Lake Sagami and Lake Tsukui. The river has had to re-cut its course several times due to repeated eruptions of Mount Fuji, and river terraces are in evidence along its upper reaches in Yamanashi. As the river crosses Kanagawa, it forms natural levees in the soft soils of the alluvial plains of central Kanagawa's Sagamino plateau, and forms almost no river delta as it exits into the ocean. The potential of the upper reaches of the Sagami River for hydroelectric power development began to be developed in the 1930s, with the growth of industry and electrical consumption in the Yokohama-Kanagawa industrial belt, and the growing need for a reliable supply of drinking and industrial water. Work on the Sagami Dam began in 1938; however, lack of funding and the advent of World War II delayed completion until after the end of the war. In the post war period, the Shiroyama Dam was also completed on the main stream of the Sagami River in 1965. A number of dams have also been completed on the Nakatsu River, the main tributary of the Sagami River, including the Miyagase Dam.