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The newly reconstructed passenger terminal is named the Yokohama International Passenger Terminal, designed by Foreign Office Architects (Alejandro Zaera-Polo and Farshid Moussavi), the pier was the subject of a major international design competition attracting over 660 entries. The new pier can accommodate up to four 30,000-ton class ships or ...
Sovereign Maersk container ship at Minami Honmoku Pier, Yokohama. Yokohama Port has ten major piers. Honmoku Pier is the port's core facility with 24 berths including 14 container berths. [1] Osanbashi Pier handles passenger traffic including cruises, and has customs, immigration and quarantine facilities for international travel. [2]
The Port Service Corporation (ポートサービス, Pōto Sābisu) is a passenger ship operating company in Yokohama.. Founded in 1953, the company operates seabuses, an excursion cruise ship, and a restaurant ship, all within the Port of Yokohama.
Yokohama Three Towers viewed from Akarenga. Yokohama three towers (横浜三塔, Yokohama Santō), are a group of historical towers at the Port of Yokohama. They have been given the nicknames The King, The Queen and The Jack. The best view of the three towers is considered to be from Ōsanbashi Pier. [1]
The Keihin Ferry Boat (京浜フェリーボート, Keihin Ferī Bōto) is a ship operating company in Yokohama. Founded in 1963, the company operates water buses and an excursion cruise ship, both within the Port of Yokohama. The services include public lines listed below, as well as event cruises and chartered ships.
Daikoku Pier (大黒埠頭, Daikokufutō) is an area of Tsurumi-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture. The pier was built as a freight base, but it also functions as a transportation hub for traffic around the Port of Yokohama. It is an access point for the Shuto Expressway and a docking point for large cruise ships
The Port Service, an operator of seabuses, excursion and restaurant ships, operating from the park pier. Ship services include scheduled public lines as far as Yokohama Station as well as larger charter ships. The Guardian of Water, a Donal Hord sculpture gifted by Yokohama's sister city San Diego in 1960.
The area around Shin-Sugita Station was formerly a rural pocket within downtown Yokohama. The property was developed into a large housing district in the early 1970s. The Japanese National Railways (JNR) Keihin-Tōhoku Line was extended from its former terminus at Isogo Station , and Shin-Sugita Station was opened on 17 March 1970.