Showing posts with label observation deck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label observation deck. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Venus Bridge Kobe

 


The Venus Bridge is a unique scenic viewpoint offering panoramic views of Kobe and its surrounding areas.


Opened in 1971, its is a spiral bridge shaped in a figure 8 that connects tow observatorys.


I reached it via a short, but steep, walk from Suwa Shrine.


Apparently it is very popular at night but I was here early in the morning on my way up into the mountains to a temple on the Kinki Fudo Myo Pilgrimage.


The name comes from 1874 when a frenchman observed the transit of Venus across the sun from a nearby observatory.


With Venus being the Goddess of Love, coupes have been leaving padlocks with their names on at the site for some years.


A special monument has been set up for the purpose now and padlocks left around the main  structure have been removed.


At approximately 150 meters above sea level it is not so high but the views are nonetheless worth the walk.








Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Best Vantage Point in Japan

 


Japan is home to a multitude of observation decks atop high-rise buildings and towers, with Tokyo Skytree being the tallest and most famous. Most of the high-rise buildings are in the biggest cities, but the many towers are often found on the coast with views along the seashore.


At 289 meters in height5, the observation deck on top of the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge is taller than most of the others, and the views are astounding.


The Akashi Kaikyo Bridge opened in 1998 and connects the main island of Honshu with Awaji Island. It has the longest central span of any suspension bridge in the world at almost 2 kilometers. The total length is almost 4 kilometers.


To visit the observation deck you must book well in advance as there are a very small number of places on the tour and though relatively little-known is quickly booked up. After being kitted out in a hardhat and hi-viz vest you first have a lecture on safety protocols and how the tour will be conducted. Then you get a guided tour of the bridge museum which showcases the amazing technology that went into building it. Then you are taken out under the bridge on a walkway to the public observation deck below the bridge, 50 meters above the sea below.


Then you walk out about 1 kilometer under the bridge to the base of the tower on the Akashi, Hionshu side of the bridge where a small elevator takes you up to the top of the tower.


The observation deck is open to the elements, and there is no glass or fence obscuring your views. This makes it somehow more exciting.


The views are 360 degrees, as well as down on the bridge roadway and the ships passing underneath. Akashi is the closest view, and then west along the Okayama coast, then east to Kobe and Osaka beyond that.


I should really amend the title, as I have seen some amazing views from the tops of mountains on islands in the Inland Sea, but the views from the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge are the best I've seen from a man-made vantage point.