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Tsutenkaku Tower

Tsutenkaku, registered as a National Registered Tangible Cultural Property in May 2007, is the symbol of Shinsekai, featuring an Arc de Triomphe-inspired building topped by an Eiffel Tower-style steel structure. The first Tsutenkaku was built in July 1912 and stood 64 meters tall, making it the tallest structure in the East at the time. It was named “Tsutenkaku,” meaning “a tall building that reaches the heavens,” by the Meiji-era Confucian scholar Nangaku Fujisawa. In February 1943, the tower was dismantled and “donated” to Osaka Prefecture as war materials. The current Tsutenkaku, completed in 1956, stands 103 meters tall. On the 5th-floor observatory, the “Billiken-san” statue is enshrined—created by an American female artist based on a “god of happiness” she saw in a dream. It is said that rubbing Billiken’s protruding soles brings good fortune, and more than one million people visit the “Billiken Shrine” on the 5th floor each year. In addition, at the Tsutenkaku Theater in the basement, rakugo and manzai performances are held on Saturdays and Sundays, while on Mondays enka singers from various regions give live performances.

地址

〒556-0002 1-18-6 Ebisu-higashi, Naniwa Ward, Osaka City

交通

3-minute walk from ”Ebisucho Station” (Osaka Metro Sakaisuji Line); 10-minute walk from ”Dobutsuen-mae Station”

電話號碼

06-6641-9555

金額

Adults (high school and older): 800 yen; Junior high / elementary / preschool (age 5+): 400 yen

營業時間

8:30–21:30 (last admission 21:00)

  • Billiken arrived in Osaka in 1912, but went missing when Luna Park, the amusement park next to Tsutenkaku, was closed. In 1979, the second Billiken was created, but after many people rubbed its feet, it became heavily worn down and retired. The current Billiken is the third, made in 2012 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Tsutenkaku and Shinsekai. Seven Lucky Gods are also found around the Billiken Shrine, making it an ultimate power spot.

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