JR central tower
Nagoya is an important transportation structure of Japan's land, sea and air. There are many railway trunk lines and highway trunk lines passing through the city, and there is also a subway with a total length of 30 kilometers. Nagoya is one of the hub stations of the Shinkansen high-speed train. The city is connected by expressway such as Dongming, Shen Ming, Zhongyang Road and Dongming Osaka, and the traffic is very developed. Nagoya Port is the third largest international trade port after Yokohama and Kobe, with an annual throughput of about 1 100 million tons, ranking third in the country, while the throughput of foreign import and export goods ranks first in the country.
Nagoya is rich in humanities, history and culture, but it is naturally compatible with modern high-rise buildings. Well-designed Lin Yin Avenue, clean urban areas and energetic people can be seen everywhere in clean streets, all of which reveal a thriving atmosphere and have the reputation of "white streets". 1989 held a grand World Expo, which made urban construction and planning more perfect.
The main places of interest in Nagoya are: ancient castle, Nagoya TV Tower, sea-crossing bridge, Nagoya City Museum, Nagoya City Archives, Tokugawa Art Museum, Shiro Garden, Nagoya Harbor Aquarium, Nagoya Science Museum, Shibei Old Street, Toyota Industrial Technology Memorial Hall, Electric Power Museum, Nagoya City Art Museum and Currency Museum. There are dozens of universities such as Nagoya International Airport, the famous Koya University and Nagoya University of Technology in the north of the city.
1978, Nagoya and Nanjing, China became sister cities. Industries include watches, bicycles, sewing machines, special chemicals, petroleum, automobiles, aviation and shipbuilding.
Even South Kyoto has become twin cities with it, of course!