This is along Road 116 (the road from Iwamizawa to Ashibetsu). (Because it is on private land, you can't go nearby) It is a pioneering existence of modern coal mines in Japan, and it is one of the historically important coal mines that supported Japan under the edge from modernization in the Meiji period to the reconstruction period after the Pacific War. , It is the largest in Japan, exceeding 1,000m below the sea level, and it is said that 13 people were killed in a large-scale gas accident in 1975. The signboard in the Horonai of the pit is rotten and the time is ...
In the past に active した male の true の workplace です
Original Text
I visited a coal mine two years ago. I was impressed by the explanation of the volunteer staff for the guide. A long time ago, there was a workplace where men worked at their lives. It is said that many people were dancing to national policies and threw their lives. If there are currently workplaces that bet their lives nationwide, you can think of "railway tunnel construction". It is also a place I want to visit many times.
Facilities that I want you to preserve as coal mine heritage
Original Text
It is located along the road to Lake Katsurazawa, and it is high, so you can see it even if you run on the road. The road leading to the Tatsuko turret is marked with private land and is prohibited from entering other than those involved, but with the consent, I was able to see it nearby. Although it is rusty red and lacks the signboard of "Horonai", it has a presence reminiscent of the times when it prospered in coal mines, and it is a facility that I would like it to be preserved as an industrial heritage.
It's exactly "the strong are the traces of dreams"
Original Text
Standing stunned in a place like a waste disposal plant. The company chapter of "Kita Sumi" at the top, the letter "Horonai" is proudly giving off an aura as if saying "how about". I stand with a strong will to fill the history that supported Japan's energy. I went to the last minute of the company site and stood for 30 minutes. i used to think of this place as a ...
It is a standing pit turret that remains in the town of Horonai. The red rusty turret still has a strong presence and is a symbol of the town. I would like you to leave it as a proof of the coal mine while other facilities are being removed.
No.
This is along Road 116 (the road from Iwamizawa to Ashibetsu). (Because it is on private land, you can't go nearby) It is a pioneering existence of modern coal mines in Japan, and it is one of the historically important coal mines that supported Japan under the edge from modernization in the Meiji period to the reconstruction period after the Pacific War. , It is the largest in Japan, exceeding 1,000m below the sea level, and it is said that 13 people were killed in a large-scale gas accident in 1975. The signboard in the Horonai of the pit is rotten and the time is ...
In the past に active した male の true の workplace です
I visited a coal mine two years ago. I was impressed by the explanation of the volunteer staff for the guide. A long time ago, there was a workplace where men worked at their lives. It is said that many people were dancing to national policies and threw their lives. If there are currently workplaces that bet their lives nationwide, you can think of "railway tunnel construction". It is also a place I want to visit many times.
Facilities that I want you to preserve as coal mine heritage
It is located along the road to Lake Katsurazawa, and it is high, so you can see it even if you run on the road. The road leading to the Tatsuko turret is marked with private land and is prohibited from entering other than those involved, but with the consent, I was able to see it nearby. Although it is rusty red and lacks the signboard of "Horonai", it has a presence reminiscent of the times when it prospered in coal mines, and it is a facility that I would like it to be preserved as an industrial heritage.
It's exactly "the strong are the traces of dreams"
Standing stunned in a place like a waste disposal plant. The company chapter of "Kita Sumi" at the top, the letter "Horonai" is proudly giving off an aura as if saying "how about". I stand with a strong will to fill the history that supported Japan's energy. I went to the last minute of the company site and stood for 30 minutes. i used to think of this place as a ...
Anthrax in the scorpion
It is a standing pit turret that remains in the town of Horonai. The red rusty turret still has a strong presence and is a symbol of the town. I would like you to leave it as a proof of the coal mine while other facilities are being removed.