Ōsaka

大阪

Industrial, economic and financial hub of Japan

Osaka is on the other side of Mount Fuji from Tokyo, and like many cities in Japan is a highly developed sprawling metropolis. By most measures it is the third city in Japan (the second being Yokohama) and it has a population something in the order of three million.

A friend of ours happened to playing with the UK’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in Osaka, so we headed over to see if we could catch the show. Unfortunately it was sold out, so we went to get some of those tasty okonomiyaki pancakes instead. We met up with the RPO after the show and had a night on the lash – musicians fairly like a good bucket.

The Umeda Sky Garden is one of many examples of modern architecture in Osaka, but this one has a public observation deck on top. It reminded me of the Grand Arch in Paris in the way that the lifts go up in glass tubes between the towers.

Osaka cityscape as viewed from the roof of the Umeda Sky Garden. There was very little evidence of actual garden to be seen up there, it must be noted.

Escalators strung high between the towers of the Umeda Sky Garden. An impressive engineering sight, if not particularly pleasing on the eye.

Looking north to the river flowing through Osaka, a mighty sweep of water. The city seems endless, and certainly felt that way when walking back from our night out with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Weird head sculptures form part of the support columns of an Osaka hotel, not quite as pretty as the caryatids of Greece. I wonder if they’re supposed to be anyone famous?

Space is at such a premium in Japan that many car parks operate like a giant vending machine, with turntables and cassettes. Press a button and hopefully your car will reappear.

We spent many hours in Japanese arcades, with particular focus on vintage Street Fighter. However there were some more practical arcade attractions, such as this model horse racing.

Japanese businessmen slurping ramen from a late-night stall, just like in the movies.

A historical planning quirk/argument gives Osaka perhaps the world’s only “highway through a skyscraper”, with a slip road of the Hanshin Expressway cutting right through several floors of the Gate Tower Building.

Our hotel was a standard cheap business hotel, very much Premier Travelodge Inn, but it was in Dotonbori district which looks pretty cool at night. Plenty of bars and eateries along this way.

Created 2010 | Updated 2023

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