Japan Travel Tokyo - Asakusa-Odaiba Direct Line @Tokyo Cruise Ship Company 东京游轮 (2016 0418)
Address: 1-1-1 Hanakawado, Daitou-ku, Tokyo
Open: 1100-0700 Hours
Getting There (Asakusa's Water Bus Pier):
Tobu Isesaki Line Asakusa Station (Approx. 1 min. walk)
Tokyo Subway Asakusa Station (Approx. 3 min. walk)
Asakusa's Water Bus Pier
Hotaluna
Hotaluna was designed by Manga and anime artist Leiji Matsumoto to look like a spacecraft. The design includes a viewing deck, and at night the ship lights up the Sumida river with a firefly-like luminescence.
AzumaBashi Bridge 吾妻桥
The version was built in 1931 Stretching across the Sumida River and connecting the Sensoji Temple area with Tokyo Skytree, the Azuma-bashi Bridge is one of Asakusa’s most historic icons.
KomagataBashi Bridge 驹形桥
This bridge is named after Komagata-do Hall of Senso-ji Temple. The bridge was built in 1927 to connect Komagata in western Taito with Higashi-komagata.
The blue, 150-meter-long, tied-arch bridge has a small balcony-like space in the middle — a nice place to take a break, and a popular spot for photographing Tokyo Skytree or the Asahi Beer building with its famous golden crown. Close to Komagata Nishizume Crossing near the A2 Exit of Asakusa Station on the Toei Asakusa Line.
UmayaBashi Bridge 厩桥
The present structure was built in 1929 after the Great Kanto Earthquake. Some 151.4 meters long and bearing a glass ornament of a horse on its main pier, it is the only three-arch bridge with through composite girders on the Sumida. In summer, banks between the Umaya and Komagata Bridges become filled with onlookers during the Sumida-gawa Fireworks Festival. A four-minute walk from Kuramae Station on the Toei Oedo Line.
KuramaeBashi Bridge 藏前桥
Built in 1927, this three-span, golden arch deck bridge, with six traffic lanes and wide sidewalks, forms a dramatic silhouette as it crosses the Sumida River. Look out for the alcoves that line the way, featuring motifs of sumo wrestlers.
Sobu Line Sumida River Bridge (JR Soubu Line JR总武线)
The bridge is the first railway bridge in Japan with so-called "Langer girder" (arch stiffened plate girder) structure. The portion of Sobu Line between Ryogoku and Ochanomizu stations, where this bridge is located, was inaugurated in 1932.
Sino-ohashi Bridge Sumida River 新大桥
KiyosuBashi Bridge 清洲桥
Kiyosu Bridge has been praised as the most beautiful of all bridges on the Sumida River. Modeled after a bridge over the Rhine in Cologne, Germany, it was completed in March 1928, A seven-minute walk from Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station on the Hanzomon Subway Line.
EitaiBashi Bridge 永代桥
he Eitai-bashi Bridge spans the Sumida River, connecting Fukagawa with Nihonbashi. It is said to have been constructed in 1696 for the 50th birthday of Tsunayoshi Tokugawa, fifth shogun of the Edo Shogunate. A ten-minute walk from Monzen-nakacho Station on the Tozai Line brings you to the bridge.
KachidokiBashi Bridge 勝鬨桥
The bridge was named after the old ferry landing, Kachidoki-no-Watashi. The mouth of the Sumida River had served as a port from the Edo period (1603–1868) to the beginning of the Showa period (1926). Since tallships and other large vessels sailed there, a bascule bridge was built in which the middle swings upwards to let such ships through. Although that function of the bridge ended in 1970, you can take a guided tour of the piers and mechanisms. An eight-minute walk from Exit A1 of Tsukijishijo Station, or a four-minute walk from Exit A4 of Kachidoki Station, both on the Toei Subway Oedo Line.
Tsukiji-ohashi Bridge 築地桥
It was built in 1964 At the parapet of the bridge is a relief sculpture detailing the origins of the Tsukuda-ohashi bridge. A three-minute walk from Tsukishima Station on the Toei Subway Oedo Line or Tokyo Metro Yurakucho Line.
The Rainbow Bridge 彩虹桥 (officially called the Shuto Expressway No. 11 Daiba Route - Port of Tokyo Connector Bridge, is a suspension bridge crossing northern Tokyo Bay in Minato, Tokyo.)
The Rainbow Bridge (レインボーブリッジ, Reinbō Burijji) is a suspension bridge crossing northern Tokyo Bay between Shibaura Pier and the Odaiba waterfront development in Minato, Tokyo, Japan.
Odaiba Seaside Park Pier
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