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Misu Kōmon Locks
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Misu Kōmon Locks

landmark

Misu Kōmon Locks

三栖閘門

Est. 90Kyoto, Kansai
JTA Approved

Overview

Misu Kōmon is a lock gate system that was built in 1929 to facilitate the passage of boats between the Horikawa and Ujigawa Rivers.

Misu Komon is a lock gate system built in 1929 to connect the Horikawa and Ujigawa rivers, which run at substantially different water levels due to flood embankments. Using the same engineering principle as the Panama Canal, the chamber between the gates raises or lowers water to match the target river's level. In its first year over 20,000 cargo boats passed through, keeping trade flowing between Kyoto and Osaka through Fushimi. After rail transport made river shipping obsolete, the locks ceased operation in 1962. Fully restored in 2000, the site now includes the Misu Komon Museum explaining Fushimi's history as an inland port.

Practical info

Japanese name
三栖閘門
Nearest station
Shijo Station (7 min walk)
Reservations
not required
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