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Universal Studios Japan (ユニバーサル・スタジオ・ジャパン) is a theme park located in Osaka, Japan.Opened on March 31, 2001, it is one of six Universal Studios theme parks worldwide and was the first to open outside the United States. [3]
PiTaPa is operated by Surutto KANSAI [], a private company composed of various transit companies and transportation bureaus.. Unlike most other electronic fare collection systems and IC cards in Japan, including JR East's Suica and JR West's ICOCA which operate on a "pre-pay" basis, PiTaPa is a "post-pay" card.
Namba Parks (なんばパークス Nanba Pākusu) is an office and shopping complex located in Namba-naka Nichome, Naniwa-ku, Osaka, Japan, the south of Namba Station on Nankai Railway. It consists of a high-rise office building called Parks Tower and a 120-tenant shopping mall with rooftop garden.
The head store of Hanshin Department Store in Umeda, Kita-ku, Osaka. Hanshin Department Store (阪神百貨店, Hanshin Hyakkaten) is a Japanese department store ...
An afternoon in Shinsaibashi. Shinsaibashi (心斎橋) is a district in the Chūō-ku ward of Osaka, Japan and the city's main shopping area.At its center is Shinsaibashi-suji (心斎橋筋), a covered shopping street, that is north of Dōtonbori and Sōemonchō, and parallel and east of Mido-suji street.
Denden Town Denden Town (Nipponbashi 3 chome, Sakai-Suji) Otaroad (Nippombashi, Naniwa-Ku). Nipponbashi (日本橋) [1] is a shopping district of Naniwa Ward, Osaka, Japan.The area is centered along Sakaisuji Avenue, extending from the Ebisu-chō Interchange of the Hanshin Expressway in the south, to Nansan-dōri (just east of Nankai Namba Station) in the north.
In Japan, there are currently 107 stores open. In the U.S., there are currently stores open in 27 states. More locations are planned to open in Indiana, and South Carolina. [5] [6] As of 2019, Round 1 plans to expand at a rate of 10 stores per year. [7] [1] [8] [9] The brand also plans to open stores in the Asia-Pacific region.
The kimono store changed to a department store in 1910. In 1924, the Matsuzakaya store in Ginza allowed street shoes to be worn indoors, something innovative at the time. [1] These former kimono-shop-turned-department-stores dominated the market in its early department store history.