/ Nagoya / Places to Visit / Tsuruma Park
Lined with beautiful flower beds and 1200 cherry trees, the Tsuruma Park is a favorite spot with tourists for hanami or viewing cherry blossoms in spring..
Lined with beautiful flower beds and 1200 cherry trees, the Tsuruma Park is a favorite spot with tourists for hanami or viewing cherry blossoms in spring.
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1 Chome-1 Tsurumai, Shōwa-ku, Nagoya-shi, Aichi-ken 466-0064, Japan
+81 52-733-8340
The Yamazaki Mazak Museum of Art showcases French paintings from the 18thto 20thcentury, through various movements such as French Rococo, Romanticism, Neo-Classicism , Realism, Impressionism, the Ecole de Paris, and Art Nouveau
Stretching for 2 kms along Hisaya Odori boulevard in the heart of Nagoya, the Hisaya Odori Park is a green stretch with Orchid Gardens, water fountains, Sakaegawa River, plazas, sculptures and installations
Part of the Aichi Art Centre, the Prefectural Museum of Art has a refined collection of 20thcentury works across the major art movements, by eminent artists including Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Gustav Klimt, Yuichi Takahashi, and Paul Klee
Osu Kannon is a 14thcentury Shingon Buddhist temple dedicated to the Avalokitesvara Boddhisattva
A 400 year old shopping paradise that has 1200 shops, the Osu Shopping District near the Osu Kannon Temple is a shopaholic's dream come true
Oasis 21 is a huge shopping complex with various retail outlets, restaurants, and a Milky Way Square that hosts various events
The area between Nagoya Castle and Tokugawaen is called the Cultural Path for its historical treasures, among which is the Futaba Museum that was once home to Japan's first actress, Sadayakko Kawakami
The Nagoya City Art Museum showcases a collection of contemporary Japanese and Western art from the École de Paris, as well as Mexican Renaissance works
The Nagoya City Science Museum is a prominent landmark, featuring a giant silver globe of 35 metre diameter that is home to the world's largest planetarium
A sister concern of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the N/BMFA has no permanent collection but showcases works from the MFA Boston on short loans for 5 months, or longer loans for 5 years