Jōhoku-Chūō Park (城北中央公園, Jōhoku-Chūō Kōen) is a public park that straddles the Nerima and Itabashi wards of Tokyo in Japan. The western half of the park lies in Nerima Ward, while the eastern half is in Itabashi Ward. The park opened on 1 April 1957.[1]

Jōhoku-Chūō Park
The park in April 2010
Map
LocationItabashi/Nerima, Tokyo, Japan
Coordinates35°45′23″N 139°40′26″E / 35.75639°N 139.67389°E / 35.75639; 139.67389
Area262,369.07 square metres (64.83281 acres)[1]
Opened1 April 1957 (1957-04-01)
Public transit accessKami-Itabashi Station (Tobu Tojo Line), Hikawadai Station (Tokyo Metro Yurakucho Line)
Websitewww.tokyo-park.or.jp/park/format/index022.html

Sports facilities

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Jōhoku-Chūō Park has two main Japanese-style baseball fields and two small baseball fields (for softball and junior Japanese-style baseball). It also has an athletics stadium (dirt surface) and tennis courts (four hard courts, four clay courts, one artificial grass court). There is a gymnasium called Itabashi Kuritsu Kamiitabashi Gymnasium (上板橋体育館, Kami-Itabashi Taiikukan) next to the park.[1]

Nature

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The main trees and plants that can be found in the park include Chinese parasol tree, ginkgo, Japanese zelkova, cherry (someiyoshino), sawara cypress, sasanqua, azalea and camellia.[1] Further, Tama Zoological Park cultivates Eucalyptus in six locations in Japan as food for its koalas, and Jōhoku-Chūō Park is one of them. Nine kinds of Eucalyptus are grown here.

Archaeological sites

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Both the Kurihara Ruins and the Moro Heritage Site are located in the park.

Retention basin

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Retention basin under construction in March 2020
 
September 2022

A retention basin is currently being constructed in the park to handle excess water in the Shakujii River particularly during times of torrential rainfall. Expropriation of residential land in the area between Oyama High School and Shakujii River began in the mid-2010s. The first phase of the construction started in January 2018, and it is scheduled to be completed in March 2025.

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Johoku-Chuo Park" (pdf). The Bureau of Construction. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
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