Takamine Park Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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OJIJI-PAPA
The statue stands, but it is an ordinary small park in the city
Original Text
This park itself is a small park like an ordinary children's park in the city. This park itself is not a tourist destination, but I thought it would be okay to stop by with the facility that honors Dr. Takamine in the neighborhood and think about the achievements of the doctor.
It is a park that uses the site of the birthplace of a scientist named Jokichi Takamine (this person learned here for the first time), but it looks like a civic park and cannot be said to be a tourist destination.
It is a park called the site of the Takamine Jokichi birthplace. There is a statue. It's really nothing park. Some people do gymnastics in the morning.
It is a park that is said to be the site of Mr. Jokichi Takamine's birthplace.
Original Text
It is a park that is said to be the site of Mr. Jokichi Takamine, who is famous for the invention of Takagiastaze. There are Takaoka Post Office and the former telegraph and telephone station (NTT site) in the immediate vicinity, and it is a place where you can feel that it was a commercial town and a cultural city where old Takaoka was very prosperous. This park is just a park that no one usually uses, but it is also used as a resting place for floats at the Takaoka Mikurayama Festival on May 1. There are few spectators here, so you can see Mt. Mikura slowly ...
It is a park about 10 minutes walk from Takaoka Station. It is near Yamamachisuji, which is famous for its Dozo-zukuri townscape. This park is the site of Dr. Jokichi Takamine's birthplace, famous for the invention of "Catadiastase" and the crystallization of "adrenaline". There are honor monuments, bust of Dr. Takamine, instruction manuals, etc. This is a recommended spot for those who are interested in pharmacy, chemistry and history.
The statue stands, but it is an ordinary small park in the city
This park itself is a small park like an ordinary children's park in the city. This park itself is not a tourist destination, but I thought it would be okay to stop by with the facility that honors Dr. Takamine in the neighborhood and think about the achievements of the doctor.
I've never heard of it before.
It is a park that uses the site of the birthplace of a scientist named Jokichi Takamine (this person learned here for the first time), but it looks like a civic park and cannot be said to be a tourist destination.
Peak Maggie
It is a park called the site of the Takamine Jokichi birthplace. There is a statue. It's really nothing park. Some people do gymnastics in the morning.
It is a park that is said to be the site of Mr. Jokichi Takamine's birthplace.
It is a park that is said to be the site of Mr. Jokichi Takamine, who is famous for the invention of Takagiastaze. There are Takaoka Post Office and the former telegraph and telephone station (NTT site) in the immediate vicinity, and it is a place where you can feel that it was a commercial town and a cultural city where old Takaoka was very prosperous. This park is just a park that no one usually uses, but it is also used as a resting place for floats at the Takaoka Mikurayama Festival on May 1. There are few spectators here, so you can see Mt. Mikura slowly ...
Dr. Peak Maggie
It is a park about 10 minutes walk from Takaoka Station. It is near Yamamachisuji, which is famous for its Dozo-zukuri townscape. This park is the site of Dr. Jokichi Takamine's birthplace, famous for the invention of "Catadiastase" and the crystallization of "adrenaline". There are honor monuments, bust of Dr. Takamine, instruction manuals, etc. This is a recommended spot for those who are interested in pharmacy, chemistry and history.