KOBE


Meaning of KOBE in English

city and capital of Hyogo ken (prefecture), west-central Honshu, Japan. Kobe, its neighbouring city Osaka, and nearby Kyoto are the centres of the Keihanshin Industrial Zone, the second largest urban and industrial agglomeration in Japan. Kobe is situated at the eastern end of the Inland Sea on Osaka Bay, about 20 miles (32 km) west of Osaka. The city is confined to a narrow shelf of land between the Rokko Mountains to the north and the sea to the south. Kobe's climate is temperate, with cool winters and hot, humid summers; annual rainfall is about 54 inches (1,360 mm). The area is subject to typhoons in September that occasionally are disastrous. On January 17, 1995, Kobe was struck by a powerful earthquake that damaged or destroyed about 100,000 buildings in the metropolitan area and left more than 5,000 people dead. The street pattern of Kobe reflects its location between the mountains and the bay: main streets run east-west, crossed by short north-south streets. The coastline has been altered by reclamation for port facilities and industries. The central shopping street, Motomachi, runs between the city's two major railway stations, while the central business district is near the harbour. Kobe's port has long been one of the most important in Japan; in the early 1970s it was combined administratively with that of Osaka. In addition to its prominence in shipping, Kobe is preeminent among Japanese cities in shipbuilding and steel production. The city is served by a dense network of freight and commuter rail lines, including Shinkansen bullet express trains. Express highways also link Kobe with Osaka, Kyoto, and Nagoya. The Akashi Kaikyo Bridge, the world's longest suspension bridge at the time of its completion in 1998, links Kobe with the island of Awaji, in Osaka Bay, and another road bridge connects Awaji Island to the city of Naruto on Shikoku. There are several institutions of higher education in Kobe, including Kobe University and Hyogo University of Education. The Inland Sea National Park in the Rokko Mountains is accessible by motor road or by cable car; its recreational facilities include a golf course, ponds for swimming, and a spa at Arima. Area 210 square miles (545 square km). Pop. (1995) 1,423,830.

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