Shinsekai
Shinsekai is a neighbourhood located next to south Osaka City's downtown "Minami" area. The neighbourhood was created in 1912 with New York as a model for its southern half and Paris for its northern half. At this location, a Luna Park amusement park operated from 1912 until it closed in 1923. The centrepiece of the neighbourhood was Tsutenkaku Tower.
It is located on the northern border of Nishinari, one of Japan's poorest areas.
History and reputation
At the beginning of the 20th century, the neighbourhood flourished as a local tourist attraction showcasing the city's modern image. After World War II, it served to entertain the laborers who were rebuilding Osaka. Shinsekai's sulphurous reputation owes to criminal activity that flourished there.Continuing the area's chequered fortunes of recent years, Osaka's large permanent settlement of homeless has taken root in the areas around Shinsekai. Homeless men, often elderly, from all over Japan come to Osaka to escape the stigma of hometown societal shame and wander the streets around the area.
The neighbourhood is also close to Tobita, with a large presence of prostitutes and a concentration of Osaka's cross-dressing community.
Attractions
Shinsekai is the scene of low-cost restaurants, cheap clothing stores, cinemas, shogi and mahjong clubs, and pachinko parlours.It has several fugu restaurants, but the neighbourhood's real culinary forte is kushi-katsu. The neighbourhood abounds with kushi-katsu restaurants offering various kinds of meat, fish, and vegetables all breaded and deep fried on small sticks for around each.
Shinsekai lies west of Tennoji Zoo, Tennoji Park, and the Osaka Municipal Museum of Art. To the south is Spa World and the now-closed Festival Gate, a compact amusement park built to rejuvenate Osaka's most run-down area.
Tsutenkaku Tower
The top of Tsutenkaku Tower provides a panoramic and unobstructed view of Osaka. The original Tsutenkaku Tower, completed in 1912 and tall, was designed to resemble both the Eiffel Tower and the Arc de Triomphe, and was one end of a tramway connecting the neighborhood with the Luna Park grounds. It was damaged by fire in 1943 and disassembled, then replaced in 1956 with the current structure, which is tall and designed by Tachū Naitō.Access
- JR West Osaka Loop Line, Shin-Imamiya Station, East Exit
- Nankai Railway Nankai Line, Shin-Imamiya Station, East Exit
- Nankai Railway Koya Line, Shin-Imamiya Station, East Exit
- Osaka Municipal Subway Sakaisuji Line, Ebisucho Station, Exit 3
- Osaka Municipal Subway Midosuji Line, Dobutsuen-mae Station, Exit 5
- Hankai Tramway Hankai Line, Ebisucho Station
In popular culture