Where is rikuzentakata japan




















You can admire the dynamic landscape of rock formations over three hundred million years old. Our wide, scenic bay is polka-dotted with aquaculture rafts where oysters and scallops are cultivated. If your homestay is with a local fishing family, they will likely take you out on their boat. Help with their harvest. Seed oysters. Apple harvesting is another way to help a farmer. The numerous orchards are close to the ocean, a true rarity seen nowhere else in Japan.

The bright red orbs are filled with honey and are known for their sweetness. Enjoy and appreciate the gifts nature has given us. Just another reason to visit. Our city is one of the hardest hit in the tsunami of March 11, The massive damage destroyed the once-famous and beautiful Takata Matsubara, a coastal pine grove of around seventy thousand pine trees. Limited employment options, lingering psychological issues and population decline have made full recovery a long-term issue for many parts of Tohoku.

Due to population outflows, however, many regions have been failing to make full use of infrastructure improvements resulting from the reconstruction budgets. Officials say maintaining the sites has become an increasing struggle amid public apathy and drops in both donations and paying visitors.

The public, industry and academic sectors in four northeastern prefectures hit by the March earthquake and tsunami are collaborating on a project to highlight disaster-related monuments and remains across the region. Dubbed the "3. On a vast, coastal flatland, trucks and bulldozers move about, building what could almost be mistaken for giant pyramids.

When merged, the mounds will make up a gigantic, tsunami-safe hill to cover as much as On top of that hill, Rikuzentakata plans to build a new downtown. The first shopping complex is scheduled to open April But nobody is sure if the rebuilt towns will regain their vigor from before the tsunami, given their rapidly aging and shrinking populations.

Others simply left their hometown. The population of Rikuzentakata had fallen Likewise, the population of the 31 tsunami-hit coastal towns in Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures fell 5. Six years after the disaster struck, many cities in the Tohoku region are finally getting key parts of their land preparation done, a step needed to rebuild. In the late s, a train line was laid down in Rikuzentakata, and the developing economy came to be mainly comprised of mining, forestry, and fishing.

Now, as mayor, he has used that experience as motivation for enacting overarching social inclusion as he works to rebuild the city of Rikuzentakata back from zero after the events of the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami. This includes both infrastructure and urban design efforts like ensuring Universal Design standards of accessibility for new buildings, as well as cultural and social efforts such as creating job opportunities for those with disabilities.

This level of devotion to making an entire city accessible is a unique opportunity for Rikuzentakata, as it is rebuilding almost from zero after the tsunami, and we are doing to most we can to make the most of it for the benefit of current and future citizens of the city, as well as visitors.



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