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Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

This project is also to walk along the ruins of a real river in Chuo-ku in the past. And this time, I spotted Horikawa in Sanjuma and walked around the city.

Then, speaking of Sanjuma Horikawa, I wrote it on my blog before, but it was divided into the south from the confluence of Kaedegawa, Kyobashigawa, Sakuragawa, turn right at Shinpukuji Temple Bridge, flowed west, turned left at Ginza 1-chome ahead, flowed south, and joined the Shiodome River at Ginza 8-chome.

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

I think it would be easy to understand if you could refer to the information board on the jig bank. It was said that the river was thirty, so it was called Sansanbori. The Sanjuma Horikawa, which is connected to the Kaede River, has the Iji Riverbank, the Higashi Toyotama Riverbank, and the Nishitoyo Tama Riverbank, and was used as an important waterway for transporting goods. In 1906, the confluence of Sanjuma Horikawa and Kaedegawa / Kyobashigawa / Sakuragawa was carried out so that Sanjuma Horikawa directly joins the Kyobashi River near the current Mizutanibashi Park. . However, after the war, it was reclaimed for the disposal of surplus soil from the war.

 

That's why the starting point this time is Kyobashi Park. And the goal will be Gomon Street.

Head west from Kyobashi Park and cross Showa-dori to Mizutanibashi Park. Then you can see the public bath Ginza Yu in Ginza. The back of Ginza Yu is Mizutanibashi Park, but I knew that it was under construction in the previous blog "Walking along the Kyobashi River Ruins!"

 

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

Mizutani Bridge Park seems to be reborn as a park and a nursery school. However, since the site area is not large, Mizutani Bridge Park became a building. I think the rooftop will probably be a park.

I heard that there was a Earthly Branches relief in the previous park. Would you like to leave the relief?

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

Head toward Ginza 2-3-chome, with Mizutanibashi Park behind. Sanjuma Horikawa flowed between Showa-dori and Chuo-dori. Go straight toward Gomon-dori (Ginza 8-chome). And when I tried to cross Ginza Yanagi-dori St., I found a building that I had seen somewhere before.

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

This building with a spiral pillar on the outer wall is yes, Yonai Building. And the plants in front of this Yonai building are willows. Personally, I thought I was able to take a good picture, but it was natural because it was Ginza Yanagi-dori St.

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

And I came out to Harumi-dori St. This is where the Mihara Bridge was located. It is also famous for the fact that an underground shopping mall was built when Horikawa was reclaimed for thirty years after the war. Even now, Harumi-dori St. was excited. In front of this intersection, there is the Miharabashi Community Safety Center at Tsukiji Police Station. And since I walked around here at the end of the year, I can see the stalls selling Shinto straw festoon decorations on the right side of the photo. Cross the Harumi-dori St. and enter Ginza 5-chome.

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

This photo is a tenement house in Ginza that still remains. I think some people are a little surprised, but there are such places in the alleys of Ginza.

By the way, it costs 650,000 yen for one line price postcard of Hatoi Domae in Ginza 5-chome.

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

If you walk like this, you will arrive at Galle Ginza 8-chome today. This photo shows the explanation board of the site of the Sanjuma moat and the stone of the excavated Sanjuma moat. In addition, there was a public toilet at the former Yatsutsutsubashi side next to the information board.

This time, Sanjuma Horikawa had a land pattern called Ginza, so traces of the river could not be found, but the names of Mizutani Bridge, Mihara Bridge, and Yatsutsutsu Yatsuhashi were confirmed.

Then, I decided to stay home, but today's theme is Sanjuma Horikawa, so I decided to stop by another place and return the road I just came to Ginza 4-chome.

 Walk along the ruins of Horikawa!

That's right. I came to Ginza Susei guardian of children and travelers on the rooftop of Ginza Mitsukoshi. It is said that guardian of children and travelers succeeded in Ginza at the beginning of the Meiji era from Sankumabori. It is also said that the Ginza stall in fair, Ginza success guardian of children and travelers, began.