Suma Aqualife Park
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The , formerly known as the Suma Aqualife Park(須磨海浜水族園), is a
public aquarium A public aquarium () or public water zoo is the aquatic counterpart of a zoo, which houses living aquatic animal and aquatic plant, plant specimens for public viewing. Most public aquariums feature tanks larger than those kept by home aquarists, ...
located in
Suma-ku, Kobe is one of 9 wards of Japan, wards of Kobe, Japan. Population As of February 1, 2012, it had an area of 30.0 km2 and a population of 166,324, with 71,745 households. Attractions There is a white sandy beach in this ward, which attracts ...
,
Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
. Suma Aqualife Park was closed on May 31, 2023, privatized, and later reopened as Kobe Suma Sea World in June 2024 at its current location. It is a member of the
Japanese Association of Zoos and Aquariums The Japanese Association of Zoos and Aquariums (JAZA, in Japanese: , ''Nihon Dōbutsu-en Suizokukan Kyōkai'') is an organisation for the zoo and aquarium community in Japan. As of April 30, 2021, JAZA has 90 member zoos and 50 member aquariums. J ...
(JAZA).


History


Warakuen aquarium

In 1895, when the 4th National Industrial Exhibition was held in Kyoto, the city of Kobe, which cooperated with the event, built the ''Wadamisaki Water Tribe Nursery'' in the amusement park ''Warakuen'' at Cape Wadamasaki as a facility attached to the exhibition. was established. It consists of the Hyogo Aquaria Room and the Aquaria Rearing Pond.神戸を知る 神戸の水族館
最終更新日2011年4月6日 神戸市立中央図書館総務課 2013-2-27閲覧
Even after the exposition ended, the aquarium remained, and in 1897, the Warakuen Aquarium (和楽園水族館) was built at the amusement park Warakuen, which was the venue for the 2nd Japan Fisheries Exposition held at Cape Wada in Hyogo Ward, Kobe City. Warakuen Aquarium was Japan's first aquarium equipped with a full-scale filtration system. It was designed by Kai Iijima, a professor at the University of Tokyo, and was built using Kobe's advanced shipbuilding technology, with a seawater tank equipped with full-scale circulation filtration equipment equipped with pumps, valves, and piping. After the exposition ended, the aquarium was moved to the grounds of Minatogawa Shrine in April 1902, and closed in February 1910.


Minatogawa Aquarium

In September 1930, the Minatogawa Aquarium(湊川水族館) was built by the City of Kobe in Minatogawa Park to coincide with the Kobe Seaport Exposition, and was closed in February 1943 due to the intensification of World War II, and was destroyed by fire during the Kobe Air Raid in March 1945.


Suma Aquarium

In 1957, 12 years after the end of the war, the Suma Aquarium(須磨水族館) was established. The Suma Aquarium was requested to be an aquarium suitable for the international port city of Kobe, and it was opened. In 1958, the aquarium was designated as a facility equivalent to a museum the Museum Act from then
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology The , also known as MEXT, is one of the eleven ministries of Japan that compose part of the executive branch of the government of Japan. History The Meiji period, Meiji government created the first Ministry of Education in 1871. In January 2001 ...
, and began active social education activities. At that time, the aquarium was calling itself the "Aquarium Science Class" and creating programs in cooperation with elementary schools and other schools.


Suma Aqualife Park

In 1987, the Kobe City Suma Aquarium was closed due to aging facilities, and a new building was constructed and renamed Suma Aqualife Park. The current facility was the pioneer of the many large aquariums that were to follow. In 1987, the aquarium recorded 2.4 million annual visitors, a Japanese record until
Tokyo Sea Life Park is a public aquarium located in Kasai Rinkai Park, Edogawa, Tokyo, Edogawa Ward, Tokyo. Its predecessor was the Ueno Aquarium in the Ueno Zoo. The building was designed by Yoshio Taniguchi. The aquarium is accredited as a museum-equivalent facil ...
achieved 3.55 million in 1989. On January 17, 1995, the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake occurred, and the Aquarium was severely damaged. Although the buildings and aquarium tanks were spared from the damage of the earthquake, more than half of the animals kept in the aquarium were lost due to the severing of lifelines, such as power and water outages. For a while, the aquarium served as a shelter for the victims, but it was restored during that time and reopened on April 20, about three months after the disaster. In July 2000, five years after the earthquake, the "Amazon Pavilion" was newly opened and the world's first tube-shaped tunnel aquarium was installed. On January 5, 2022, construction of the Suma Aquarium and Seaside Park Redevelopment Project began. With the construction, only the main building was open for business, and the main building closed on May 31, 2023, closing all facilities. Kobe City announced that it had decided to privatize Kobe Municipal Suma Seaside Aquarium and announced that it had made an informal offer to a group of seven companies, including , which operates
Kamogawa Sea World Kamogawa Sea World is a large scale comprehensive marine leisure center/museum equivalent facility located between the Tojo coast and the national highway No. 128 in Kamogawa city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. It is not affiliated with SeaWorld in ...
.


Facilities


Orca Stadium

The Blue Ocean Orca Stadium, a restaurant where visitors can dine while watching orcas through the aquarium windows, and the OrcaLab and Orca Hall, the world's first educational zone for orcas, will also be located in the museum.


Dolphin Stadium

The Dolphin Stadium introduces visitors to the speedy locomotion of dolphins, and the Dolphin Beach and Dolphin Hall, which are located next door, offer programs that allow visitors to interact directly with the dolphins.


Aqua Live

Aqua Live is a four-story structure with a fish exhibit area consisting of “Local Life,” which recreates the original landscape of the Rokko water system and the Seto Inland Sea through exhibits such as a giant eelgrass bed, and “Coral Life,” which takes visitors on a journey through the Pacific Ocean and coral reefs. The “Rocky Life” zone is home to California sea lions, sargassum seals, Magellanic penguins, sea turtles, and other creatures, while the “Jellyfish Life” zone allows visitors to appreciate the fantastic spectacle of jellyfish. In the “Suma Collection,” an area open to the general public free of charge, visitors can observe freshwater fish such as longnose gar, pirarucu, Russian sturgeon, paiyu, and Australian pond skaters. File:Kobe Suma Sea World 4.jpg, Entrance File:Kobe Suma Sea World 1.jpg, Orca Monument and Orca Studium File:Kobe Suma Sea World 3.jpg, Orca performance at the Orca Stadium File:Kobe Suma Sea World 2.jpg, dolphin medium File:Kobe Suma Sea World 6.jpg, Aqua Live, Tropical Life beach File:Kobe Suma Sea World 5.jpg, Aqua Live, Tropical Life Tank


Kobe Suma Sea World Hotel

The hotel has a permanent Dolphin Lagoon, as well as premium rooms with a large aquarium tank and special rooms with a view bath overlooking the Seto Inland Sea.神戸須磨シーワールドホテル
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Orcas

On 29 March 2024, the first orca, Stella (F) was transferred to Kobe Suma Sea World from
Port of Nagoya Public Aquarium The is a public aquarium in Minato-ku, Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan. It is a member of the Japanese Association of Zoos and Aquariums (JAZA), and It is the public aquarium with the largest tank capacity and total area in Japan. It also own ...
. On 24 April 2024, Ran (F) was transferred to Kobe Suma Sea World from
Kamogawa Sea World Kamogawa Sea World is a large scale comprehensive marine leisure center/museum equivalent facility located between the Tojo coast and the national highway No. 128 in Kamogawa city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. It is not affiliated with SeaWorld in ...
.


See also

*
Kamogawa Sea World Kamogawa Sea World is a large scale comprehensive marine leisure center/museum equivalent facility located between the Tojo coast and the national highway No. 128 in Kamogawa city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. It is not affiliated with SeaWorld in ...


References


External links

{{Authority control Aquaria in Japan 1987 establishments in Japan