🇯🇵 Ebina is a city located in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. Ebina is home to over 150 factories. The town is a centre of the production of electrical appliances, metal products, and machinery. The Taito Corporation operates the Ebina Development Center in Ebina. The city was once known for its broad rice paddies, but agriculture now centres on the cultivation of strawberries, tomatoes, and ornamental plants. Ebina serves as a bedroom community to the greater Tokyo and Yokohama area.
Geography Ebina is located approximately 50 km from central Tokyo and 20 km from Yokohama. The city is roughly rectangular, 8.7 km north-to-south by 6.15 km east-to-west, with an elevation of 11 to 84 meters above sea level. It is in the middle of the Sagami Plain, part of western Kantō Plain. The city sits on the eastern bank of the Sagami River, and the Hikiji River flows through part of the city. The Tōmei Expressway cuts across the southern end of the city.
Surrounding municipalities Kanagawa Prefecture • Atsugi • Samukawa • Zama • Ayase • Fujisawa • Yamato.
Demographics Per Japanese census data, the population of Ebina has grown steadily over the past century.
History The area of modern Ebina has been settled since prehistoric times, and has a number of remains from the Kofun period. Ebina became the provincial capital of Sagami Province in the Nara period, and was the location of the kokubunji, or provincial temple. It was home to the Yokoyama clan, one of the seven warrior clans of the Musashi region during the early Kamakura period. During the Edo period, the lands around Ebina were tenryō territory theoretically administered directly by the Tokugawa Shogunate in Edo; however, in reality, the area was a patchwork of small fiefs held by various hatamoto, as well as exclaves under the control of Sakura Domain and Karasuyama Domain.
After the Meiji Restoration, the area became part of Kōza District, Kanagawa Prefecture and was administratively divided into Ebina Village and Arima Village on April 1, 1889 with the establishment of the modern municipalities system. The area was connected by rail in 1926 via the Sagami Railway and in 1927 by the Odakyu Electric Railway, leading to an increase in population and a change in status of Ebina from village to town in 1940. In 1955, Arima Village merged into Ebina Town. Ebina was elevated to city status on November 1, 1971. Urban development projects in the 1980s and 1990s have modernized the city center.
Government Ebina has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city council of 22 members. Ebina contributes one member to the Kanagawa Prefectural Assembly. In terms of national politics, the city is part of Kanagawa 13th district of the lower house of the Diet of Japan.
Economy Ebina is home to over 150 factories. The town is a centre of the production of electrical appliances, metal products, and machinery. Taito operates the Ebina Development Center in Ebina. The city was once known for its broad rice paddies, but agriculture now centres on the cultivation of strawberries, tomatoes, and ornamental plants. Ebina serves as a bedroom community to the greater Tokyo and Yokohama area.
Education Ebina has 13 public elementary schools and six public middle schools operated by the city government. The city has three public high schools operated by the Kanagawa Prefectural Board of Education, and the prefecture also operates two special education schools for the handicapped.
Transport: Rail JR East – Sagami Line ◦ Ebina–Atsugi–Shake–Kadosawabashi; Odakyu Electric Railway – Odakyū Odawara Line • Ebina–Atsugi; Sagami Railway – Sagami Railway Main Line • Ebina–Kashiwadai–Sagamino.
Transport: Road • Tōmei Expressway - Ebina Service Area - Ebina Junction • Shin-Tōmei Expressway - Ebina-minami Junction • Ken-Ō Expressway - Ebina-minami Junction - Ebina Interchange - Ebina Junction • National Route 246.
Local attractions • Sagami Kokubun-ji, provincial temple of Sagami Province and national historic site • Ebina Premium Film Festival (held annually in autumn).
Ebina has a population of over 136,312 people. Ebina also forms part of the Greater Tokyo Metropolis which has a population of over 37,843,000 people.
To set up a UBI Lab for Ebina see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork
Twin Towns - Sister Cities Ebina has links with:
🇯🇵 Noboribetsu, Japan 🇯🇵 Shiroishi, Japan🇯🇵 Minamihonjukucho 35.467
🇺🇸 Huntersville 35.401
Locations Near: Ebina 139.383,35.4333
🇯🇵 Atsugi 139.367,35.433 d: 1.4
🇯🇵 Isehara 139.322,35.407 d: 6.3
🇯🇵 Yamato 139.45,35.483 d: 8.2
🇯🇵 Chigasaki 139.417,35.323 d: 12.6
🇯🇵 Fujisawa 139.467,35.35 d: 12
🇯🇵 Hiratsuka 139.348,35.319 d: 13.1
🇯🇵 Machida 139.448,35.538 d: 13.1
🇯🇵 Sagamihara 139.387,35.57 d: 15.2
🇯🇵 Minamihonjukucho 139.533,35.467 d: 14.1
Antipodal to: Ebina -40.617,-35.433
🇨🇱 La Reina -33.45,-33.45 d: 19322
🇧🇷 Tubarão -49,-28.467 d: 18908.9
🇧🇷 Criciúma -49.372,-28.678 d: 18900.3
🇧🇷 São José -48.617,-27.6 d: 18861.2
🇧🇷 Palhoça -48.667,-27.633 d: 18860.9
🇧🇷 Biguaçu -48.667,-27.5 d: 18849.4
🇧🇷 Itapema -48.612,-27.091 d: 18816.9
🇧🇷 Balneário Camboriú -48.633,-26.983 d: 18806.1