Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Luna Park, Osaka

Osaka Luna Park, also known as Shinsekai Luna Park, ca. 1912. An aerial tramway connected the amusement park with the original Tsutenaku Tower. The park closed in 1923; the tower was dismantled 20 years afterward.
Original Tsutenkaku Tower, with Osaka (Shinsekai) Luna Park in the foreground, ca. 1912. The arch in the right foreground marks the park's main entrance in Shinsekai; the buildings and the tower in the background are in nearby Tsutenkaku.

Osaka's Luna Park (Runa pāku, also known as Shinsekai Luna Park) was Japan's second amusement park of the same name, replacing the destroyed Luna Park in Tokyo.[1] In operation from 1912 to 1923, the 132,000 square meter[2] park in the Shinsekai section of Osaka featured a unique entrance: an aerial tramway from the original Tsutenkaku Tower.[3][4]

History

The park was constructed and owned by Ken'ichi Kawaura after he sold his interest in the Japanese motion picture company Yoshizawa Shōten to Shōkichi Umeya in the wake of the destruction by fire of Luna Park, Tokyo and two Osaka theaters in 1911. Prior to the suspicious fires, all three were owned by the film studio.[5]

Rather than rebuilding in Tokyo, Kawaura decided to build his second Luna Park in Shinsekai ("New World"), an Osaka subdivision that was under construction at the time. At the same time, the original Tsutenkaku Tower was being built in nearby Tsutenkaku to the north. Plans were being made to connect the 86 m (282 ft)[6][7] tower to the park by an aerial tramway to provide visitors a unique "flying sensation" as they entered the park.[8][9]

The Osaka Luna Park featured an arcade, mechanical rides (including one called the Circular Wave, which had seated riders rise and fall as the revolve in a circular motion), a funhouse, a music hall, a theater, and a hot springs spa.[10]

The Osaka Luna Park closed permanently after the 1925 season; in January 1943, the first Tsutenkaku Tower was destroyed by a fire and was subsequently closed and demolished by the Japanese government.[11][12] A new Tsutenkaku Tower was built and opened to the public in 1956.[11]

Pavilion #1 (Ichigō-kan) of Osaka Luna Park, also known as Shinsekai Luna Park, between 1912 and 1920. The original Tsutenaku Tower can be seen in the background. The park closed in 1923; the tower was dismantled 20 years afterward.
Ichigō-kan (Pavilion #1) of Osaka Luna Park, between 1912 and 1920.
An aerial tramway connected the amusement park with the original Tsutenaku Tower. The park closed in 1923; the tower was dismantled in 1943.
Aerial tramway connecting the original Tsutenkaku Tower with Luna Park, Osaka in Shinsekai, in the 1910s
Main entrance of Osaka Luna Park, also known as Shinsekai Luna Park, ca. 1912. An aerial tramway connected the amusement park with the original Tsutenaku Tower. The park closed in 1923; the tower was dismantled 20 years afterward.
Main entrance of Osaka Luna Park, ca. 1912. The original Tsutenkaku Tower can be seen in the background through the entrance arch.
Nighttime picture of Osaka Luna Park, also known as Shinsekai Luna Park, ca. 1912. An aerial tramway connected the amusement park with the original Tsutenaku Tower. The park closed in 1923; the tower was damaged in a fire and dismantled 20 years afterward.
Nighttime picture of the original Tsutenkaku Tower, with Osaka (Shinsekai) Luna Park in the foreground, ca. 1912

References

  1. ^ Joseph L. Anderson and Donald Richie, The Japanese Film: Art and Industry (Princeton University Press 1982) ISBN 0-691-00792-6
  2. ^ 2010 NOMS page Archived 2012-04-14 at the Wayback Machine - IEEE
  3. ^ History of Shinsekai Archived 2009-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Osaka Journal: Japan’s New World Offers a Slice of the Past - New York Times 15 October 2008
  5. ^ Volker Grassmuck, Geschlossene Gesellschaft: Mediale und diskursive Aspekte der "drei Öffnungen" Japans English translation
  6. ^ NOMS 2010 page Archived 2012-04-14 at the Wayback Machine - IEEE
  7. ^ Some sources state the height to have been 75 meters
  8. ^ Sharon Minichiello, Japan's Competing Modernities: Issues in Culture and Democracy, 1900-1930 (University of Hawaii Press 1998) ISBN 0-8248-2080-0
  9. ^ Isolde Standish, A New History of Japanese Cinema: A Century of Narrative Film (Continuum International Publishing Group 2006) ISBN 0-8264-1790-6
  10. ^ "History of Shinsekai - Re-use of the Expo Ground". Archived from the original on 29 August 2009.
  11. ^ a b Kippo News, 5 November 1996 Archived 3 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "The History of Shinsekai----- Shinsekai in the Showa Era". Archived from the original on 29 August 2009.