Iidabashi
Iidabashi 飯田橋 | |
---|---|
District | |
Coordinates: 35°42′09″N 139°44′41″E / 35.70250°N 139.74472°E / 35.70250; 139.74472 | |
Country | Japan |
City | Tokyo |
Ward | Chiyoda |
Area | Kōjimachi Area |
Population (February 1, 2009) | |
• Total | 2,707 |
Time zone | UTC+9 (JST) |
Area code | 03 |
Iidabashi (飯田橋, Iidabashi) is a district of Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. It was in the former ward of Kōjimachi, which existed in Tokyo until 1947.
Etymology
Iidabashi is named after a nearby bridge called Iida Bridge (飯田橋, Iidabashi), itself named after an Edo-period farmer, Iida Kihee (飯田喜兵衛, Iida Kihee).
Places
- Iidabashi Station
- Iida Bridge
- Kanda River
Economy
Several companies have their headquarters in Iidabashi, among them Japan Freight Railway Company,[1] KDDI[2] Nikken Sekkei,[3] and Shohakusha.[4]
Education
Chiyoda Board of Education [ja] operates public elementary and junior high schools. Fujimi Elementary School (富士見小学校) is the zoned elementary school for Iidabashi 1-4 chōme.[5] There is a freedom of choice system for junior high schools in Chiyoda Ward, and so there are no specific junior high school zones.[6]
References
- ^ "Corporate Overview Archived 2012-02-21 at the Wayback Machine." Japan Freight Railway Company. Retrieved on March 27, 2010.
- ^ "Corporate Data Archived 2010-01-19 at the Wayback Machine." KDDI. Retrieved on February 21, 2010.
- ^ "Corporate Data Archived 2013-10-22 at the Wayback Machine." Nikken Sekkei. Retrieved on March 04, 2014.
- ^ "会社案内 Archived 2019-08-06 at the Wayback Machine." Shohakusha. Retrieved on December 23, 2014. "〒102-0072 東京都千代田区飯田橋1-6-1"
- ^ "区立小学校の通学区域". Chiyoda Board of Education. Retrieved 2022-10-08.
- ^ "区立中学校の通学区域と学校選択". Chiyoda Board of Education. Retrieved 2022-10-08.
千代田区では、[...]
- v
- t
- e
- Akihabara/Iwamotochō (JR, Metro, Toei, Tsukuba Express, bus terminal)
- Ichigaya (JR, Metro, Toei)
- Iidabashi (JR, Metro, Toei)
- Jimbōchō (Metro, Toei)
- Kanda (JR, Metro)
- Kasumigaseki (Metro)
- Kokkai-gijidō-mae/Tameike-Sannō (Metro)
- Kudanshita (Metro, Toei)
- Nagatachō (Metro)
- Ōtemachi (Metro, Toei)
- Tōkyō (JR, Shinkansen, Metro, bus terminal)
- Yūrakuchō/Hibiya (JR, Metro, Toei)
- Casals Hall
- Comic Takaoka (closed)
- Hotel New Otani Tokyo
- Holy Resurrection Cathedral
- Jimbōchō Book Town
- Kanda Shrine
- Kasumigaseki Common Gate
- Kasumigaseki Building
- Marunouchi Building
- National Archives of Japan
- National Diet Building
- National Diet Library
- National Museum of Modern Art
- National Theatre of Japan
- Nippon Budokan
- Old Ministry of Justice Building
- Prime Minister's Official Residence
- Prudential Tower
- Sanno Park Tower
- Shin-Marunouchi Building
- Supreme Court of Japan
- Tokyo Imperial Palace
- Tokyo International Forum
- Tokyo Garden Terrace Kioicho
- Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department Headquarters
- Wadakura Bridge
- Yasukuni Shrine
- Graduate School of Management, Globis University
- Hitotsubashi University Kanda Campus
- Hosei University
- Meiji University
- Nihon University
- Kudan campus of the Nishogakusha University
- Senshu University
- Sophia University
- Gyosei Junior and Senior High School
- Hibiya High School
- Otsuma Women's University
- Tokyo Chinese School
- Tokyo Kasei-Gakuin University
- Sakuradamon incident (1860)
- Hibiya incendiary incident
- February 26 incident
- Toranomon incident
- Sakuradamon incident (1932)
- May 15 incident
- Greater East Asia Conference
- Kyūjō incident
- 1974 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries bombing
- Akihabara massacre
- 2015 Tokyo drone incident
This Tokyo location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e