Kitaibaraki, Ibaraki


Kitaibaraki is a city in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. As of September 2015, the city had an estimated population of 43,809, and a population density of 235 persons per km². Its total area is.

Geography

Kitaibaraki is in northern Ibaraki Prefecture, bounded by Fukushima Prefecture to the north and the Pacific Ocean to the east. As its name implies, it is the northernmost city within Ibaraki. Approximately 80% of the total area is mountainous forest. The eastern region is low ground facing the ocean with spacious open flatland along the Okita and Satone Rivers. It is approximately 57 kilometers to the northeast of Mito, the prefectural capital.

Surrounding municipalities

The towns of Otsu and Hirakata and the village of Kitanakago were created with the establishment of the municipalities system on April 1, 1889. Kitanakago became the town of Isohara on January 1, 1925. On March 31, 1956 the towns of Otsu, Hirakata, Isohara and the villages of Sekinan, Sekimonto and Minaminakago merged to form the city of Kitaibaraki.
The city suffered from serious damage caused by the tsunami from the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake.

Economy

Commerce developed during the Edo period along the Tanagura highway, which was also called the 'Road of Salt'. The area flourished with ports for water transportation and coal mining began at the end of the Edo period.
Kitaibaraki is now a regional commercial center with some light manufacturing. The Joban Coal Field, which was the mainstay of the economy from the Meiji period to the mid-Shōwa period, closed in 1976.
Commercial fishing from Otsu fishing port, notably for angler fish is also a factor in the local economy.

Education

Kitaibaraki has twelve elementary schools, five middle schools, and one high school.

Transportation

Railway