Recommendations Near Onokoba Mudslide Prevention Museum & Observatory
Onokoba Mudslide Prevention Museum & Observatory Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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You can see that this Sabo protects the area at the foot of Mt. Heisei by looking at the rooftop scenery here.
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You can see that this Sabo protects the area at the foot of Mt. Heisei by looking at the rooftop scenery here. You can also feel that the pyroclastic flow was terrible.
I visited for business. Although volcanic observation is also performed, remote monitoring and embankments are made by unmanned machines to prevent damage to debris flows. I want to know such an important facility.
It is an exhibition hall that records the Unzen Fugendake disaster, and is still a facility of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism in preparation for sediment-related disasters. Equipment that was active in the unmanned chemical method was exhibited, but it smelled like cigarettes. It's not a smoking room, so is it the smell of a machine? Or is it the smell of another substance that is not cigarettes? Anyway, the 1 floor smelled great. Other floors were fine.
There may be a distance in reality, but when the clouds cleared, Mt. Fugen could be seen very close. It is next to the damaged elementary school and is in a place where you can feel the fear realistically.
It is adjacent to the site of the former Onokiba Elementary School, which was damaged by the fire of Mt. Fugen in Unzen. Inside, you can see videos such as actual videos. There are also exhibits such as panels. Real until the man of the time, such as a bent drain pipe and a window frame. It is also a place where you can think of it as color 々 and feel something that appeals deeply to your heart. It's different from just a ruin.
You can see that this Sabo protects the area at the foot of Mt. Heisei by looking at the rooftop scenery here.
You can see that this Sabo protects the area at the foot of Mt. Heisei by looking at the rooftop scenery here. You can also feel that the pyroclastic flow was terrible.
Disaster prevention の the front line
I visited for business. Although volcanic observation is also performed, remote monitoring and embankments are made by unmanned machines to prevent damage to debris flows. I want to know such an important facility.
1 The floor smells like cigarettes.
It is an exhibition hall that records the Unzen Fugendake disaster, and is still a facility of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism in preparation for sediment-related disasters. Equipment that was active in the unmanned chemical method was exhibited, but it smelled like cigarettes. It's not a smoking room, so is it the smell of a machine? Or is it the smell of another substance that is not cigarettes? Anyway, the 1 floor smelled great. Other floors were fine.
Fugendake is close.
There may be a distance in reality, but when the clouds cleared, Mt. Fugen could be seen very close. It is next to the damaged elementary school and is in a place where you can feel the fear realistically.
It's too real.
It is adjacent to the site of the former Onokiba Elementary School, which was damaged by the fire of Mt. Fugen in Unzen. Inside, you can see videos such as actual videos. There are also exhibits such as panels. Real until the man of the time, such as a bent drain pipe and a window frame. It is also a place where you can think of it as color 々 and feel something that appeals deeply to your heart. It's different from just a ruin.