Osaka Prefectural Neyagawa Park

Osaka Prefectural Neyagawa Park

Info

JR Neyagawa Park Station → 3 minutes walk
3km 5 minutes from Daini Keihan Road Neyagawa Minami IC (Half Inter) via National Route 1
370 units/190 yen per hour (from 390 yen on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays), 60 to 130 yen per hour thereafter

Business Hours

Freedom to enter (depending on the facility)

Price

Freedom to enter (depending on the facility)

Spot Category

Park, tennis


Arch at the entrance of Neyagawa Park


Central square fountain

The information provided reflects the details available at the time of the survey.
Please note that facility details may change due to the facility’s circumstances, so please check for the latest information before visiting. This content has been translated using machine translation.

Information provided by: JTB Publishing

This content uses automatic translation services. Automatic translations may not always be accurate.
Please note that the translated content may differ from the original meaning. We ask for your understanding when using this content.

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Yuyaya no Yuyagawa store

The feeling of coming to a hot spring inn, a stop-by hot spring facility where you can expect such healing. You can enjoy a variety of baths such as Utsuto, Nukuyu, and a three-stage open-air bath with three tubs of high-concentration carbonates, and a sauna. The high-concentration carbonic acid spring in which the carbon dioxide gas of the inner water is dissolved is characterized by feeling 2 ~ 3 ° C warmer than the actual temperature because fine foam adheres to the skin and has a high heat retention effect. Five kinds of unlimited time rock baths such as rock salt buns and herb buns are also recommended. There is also a restaurant where you can enjoy authentic dishes and a manga corner of 20,000 comics, so you can relax slowly for a day.

Osaka Naritayama Fudosan (Naritayama Meiouin)

Naritayama Fudouson is a prominent temple as a collective appendix of the Fudouson Faith, who purifies the Omotemon of the commercial capital, Osaka, and guards the back-on of the Buddhist capital, Kyoto. Among them, the benefit of traffic safety is famous. It is known as the first temple in Japan to pray for people and vehicles together. Apart from the main hall, there is a dedicated prayer hall where you can pray for 100 automobiles at a time. About 2.2 million visitors are visited annually, of which about 750,000 are visited on January 1-3. In addition, the number of car prayers is as high as 200,000 per year, and during January 1-3, many cars line up until late at night to pray for a year of no accident.

Linchang Temple

A Shingon sect temple reportedly opened by Gyoki; burned down by Oda Nobunaga, but rebuilt as late as the Edo period; and a famous garden as the site of the Hirado Azalea; and a natural monument of the prefecture at the nearby Okanaka-Jinshasha.

Jokoji Temple

It was reportedly founded by Gyoki by Emperor Shōmu's royal service in Tenpō 7 (745). It became more desolated during the later North and South Dynasties, but was rebuilt by Moritsugu Fujiwara in the third year of Shitoku (1386). Honson, who has a strong faith from the locals, is known as Yao Jizo. It is said that there is a safe-living ritual. In the precinct stands a stone monument of the oldest kawachi noontodo cradle, and the festival is greatly enlivened by Bon Dance during the annual summer Jizo ceremony.

Nakamuraya

A croquette shop in a nostalgic shopping street since 1955. 80 yen croquettes fried over high heat are popular for children and adults. It is a signboard product that sells 3000 pieces a day. I want to wander around the Tenjin Hashibasi shopping street with freshly made croquettes fried in front of me. Minchi cutlet is 130 yen.

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