Maidashi Ryokuchi park entrance marker

Maidashi Ryokuchi (馬出緑地, マイダシ・リョクチ) is an elevated linear park, greenway and rail trail in Higashi ward, Fukuoka, Japan.[1] The park is located in Fukuoka's green belt, and is an example of the reuse of abandoned railway land in an urban setting. Nishi-Nippon Railroad sold the property to the city in 1980.[2]

Location

Maidashi Ryokuchi entrance
Barrier-free stone pavement

Maidashi Ryokuchi was designed as a children's playground with a public water fountain, playing equipment, and a nature trail.[3] The barrier-free nature trail provides a recreation area for older people and for students from the nearby Fukuoka Junior High School. Located near Yume Town Hakata, it is overlooked by the local intermediate school. The park is a safe place for children to play. It is the biggest of the ten public parks in the Maidashi school district.[3]

Historical development

The garden and the surrounding building estate.

In the Edo period Hakata Bay covered the site of Maidashi Ryokuchi. At the beginning of the Meiji era, it was reclaimed by a large-scale landfill. In those days, before mechanized equipment, the reclamation was done by human laborers who carried dirt with straw mats onto the silt layer. Before these renovations, the majority of the coastline was natural, as described in the parable 白砂青松 as Shirahama aomatsu (白砂青松, シラハマ・アオマツ, lit.'White beaches and green pines'). This is no longer visible in today's Maidashi greenbelt.

In 1924, Hakata wan Tetsudo Kisen (博多湾鉄道汽船, Hakata Bay Railway and Steamship Company) built the electrical tramway between Shin Hakata (新博多, New Hakata station) and Kazu shirama (和白間). In 1925, it was extended to Miyaji dake (宮地岳). After the extension, the company became the Nishi-Nippon Railroad Co., Ltd. (西日本鉄道会社) In 1951, the railroad between Miyajidake and Tsuyazaki (津屋崎) was opened. In 1954, the block distance of southern 3.3 kilometers railway from Nishi tetsu tatara (西鉄多々良) was set apart, and combined with Nishi-tetsu Fukuoka city line (西鉄福岡市内線). In 1980, after the Nishi-tetsu Takechi line ceased operations, the grounds were bought by Fukuoka City Council. After six years of construction as part of the redevelopment of Maidashi, the land was finally transformed into the park we have today.[2] The park was built in keeping with the low-rise apartments surrounding it and as a garden city.

Pedestrian bridge
Maidashi 3th Koen

As the property was not originally designed as a park, its shape is elongated, conforming to the shape of the railway line. The gate of the park replaces the now-absent Maidashi 3 chome depot. The Nishi tetsu (Nishi-Nippon Railroad Co., Ltd.) Bus has replaced the railway. The park is not independent as the eighth Maidashi green belt, there are battery of green belts with serial numbers as province.[2] As presented above, arising from the unusual history of the installation, the Maidashi green belt gives the citizens opportunities to learn from the modern history of Fukuoka since the Meiji era.

As a route to youme Town Hakata

At the line extension of this belt, there is an area of pre-road over Route 3 youme Town Hakata from Prefectural Road 517 to youme Town Hakata. Between this green belt and youme Town Hakata, there is Route 3 with a pedestrian bridge built over it where children can cross safely.

Voluntary management

The management of Maidashi Ryokuchi is run by the Maidashi Green Belt Community Association, which employs a model of self-management. General maintenance of the area and its amenities is carried out by local residents on a volunteer basis and is supported by the Fukuoka City Council.

Associated Parks

Maidashi 1st park

Maidashi 1st park is a small garden located next to Maidashi Ryokuchi. The 8th Maidashi Ryokuchi is a children's playground with a sandpit. [4]

Nearest stations

See also

Notes

  1. Index of Fukuoka city parks, park-fukuoka.tanoshii.info; accessed 15 September 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Miyajidake Line closed section, Nishitetsu 西鉄部分廃止宮地岳線 Archived 2012-03-31 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 15 September 2015.
  3. 1 2 『22年度 校区カルテ 馬出地区』 Archived 2011-10-09 at the Wayback Machine
  4. 「筥崎瓦版ねっ!と---地域資源・馬出1号公園(Japanese)

Media related to Maidashi Ryokuchi at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.