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Getting There & Around
Getting There
Hiroshima is almost 5 hours from Tokyo by Shinkansen bullet train,
2 hours from Kyoto, and 1 hour and 20 minutes from Hakata
Station on Kyushu. The fare from Tokyo is ¥17,540 ($146)
for an unreserved seat.
A bus departs from Tokyo Station every
night at 8pm and reaches Hiroshima Station at 8am the next
morning. The one-way fare is ¥12,060
($101).
You can also reach Hiroshima by boat from Matsuyama
on Shikoku, which takes 1 hour and 10 minutes by high-speed
boats costing ¥5,800
($48) or 2 hours and 40 minutes by ferries costing ¥2,500
($21). From Beppu on Kyushu, the trip costs ¥8,500 ($71)
and takes 3 hours and 20 minutes.Visitor Information
Before leaving Tokyo, Kyoto, or the Narita or Kansai airports,
pick up a copy of the leaflet "Hiroshima and Miyajima" at
the Tourist Information Center.
Upon arrival in Hiroshima,
you'll find two local tourist offices at Hiroshima Station.
The main office (tel. 082/263-6822),
on the north side where Shinkansen bullet trains arrive,
is
open
daily from 9am to 12:30pm and 1:30 to 5:30pm. The other
tourist office (tel. 082/261-1877), in the underground passage
on
the station's south side, is open daily from 9 to 11:30am
and 12:30
to 5:30pm. A third tourist office is located in the north
end of Peace Memorial Park in the Rest House (tel. 082/247-6738;
open daily 9:30am-6pm Apr-Sept, 8:30am-5pm Oct-Mar). All
three
facilities have brochures of both Hiroshima and Miyajima
with maps in English.
Be sure, too, to ask for the Seto
Inland Sea
Welcome Card, available free to visitors; it offers discounts
on member hotels, restaurants, some attractions, and
more. More information is available at www.hiroshima-navi.or.jp,
including
dates for the Yukata Matsuri, a festival which transforms
Hiroshima as everyone strolls the streets in yukata (cotton
kimono).
Getting
Around
One legacy of Hiroshima's total destruction was its
rebirth into one of Japan's most navigable cities,
with wide,
open boulevards
instead of the usual cramped streets. Hiroshima's main
attractions, including Peace Memorial Park, Hiroshima
Castle, Shukkei-en
Garden, Hiroshima Prefectural Art Museum, and Hiroshima
Museum of Art,
lie to the west and southwest of Hiroshima Station.
The
most convenient mode of transportation in the city is
streetcar, which costs only ¥150 ($1.25) one-way;
children pay half fare. If you need to transfer to
another line, ask the driver for a
transfer card, which you then pass through the card
machine upon alighting from the first bus and again
when boarding the second
bus. When you arrive at your destination, return
the card to the bus driver. A 1-day pass costs ¥600
($5); note that it does not cover the ferry to Miyajima.
It's
probably easiest to make the circuit to Hiroshima's
centrally located attractions on foot. From Hiroshima
Station you can
walk to Shukkei-en Garden and the Prefectural Art
Museum in about
12 minutes, from where it's another 7-minute walk
to Hiroshima Castle. You can walk onward to Peace
Memorial
Park in about
15 minutes, passing the Hiroshima Museum of Art
and the A-Bomb Dome
on the way. Just east of Peace Park is the Hondori
covered shopping arcade and its neighboring streets,
considered
the heart of the
city with its many department stores, shops, and
restaurants.
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