city in Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan

Mt. Fuji as seen from Mishima.
Not to be confused with Mishima Islands, Kagoshima.

Mishima (三島) is a city in Shizuoka in Japan.

Understand

edit
Rakujuen

Mishima city is locally called the “City of Water” due to its enviable position of being at the base of a peninsula, surrounded by the sea and also being directly south of Mt Fuji, historically collecting much of its annual meltwater runoff. In line with this claim, water features feature proiminantly around the station front area to symbolise it. However, the harsh reality is that throughout the modernisation of the country, more and more industrial facilities have been placed upstream and their insatiable need for water has resulted in less and less actually reaching Mishima. Today, Mishima's prized park with its beautiful landscaped lake, Rakujuen (楽寿園), is little more than a sad, dry bed of craggy basalt. Water does still flow throughout certain parts of town, but not without heavy application of the hand of mankind.

Tourist information sites

edit

Get in

edit

By train

edit
  • 1 Mishima Station. Mishima is located both on the Tōkaidō Shinkansen and Tōkaidō Main Line. All Kodama and some Hikari services from Tokyo stop at Mishima, taking about 60 and 45 minutes, respectively. Both cost ¥4,200 for a reserved seat or ¥3,890 for an unreserved seat. Local train services on the Tōkaidō Main Line require a transfer at Atami and take two hours, but only cost ¥2,210. Mishima Station (Q375061) on Wikidata Mishima Station on Wikipedia

All services mentioned above are fully covered by the Japan Rail Pass.

Get around

edit
Map
Map of Mishima

The Izu-Hakone Sunzu Line travels further into the Izu Peninsula to Shuzenji, with several local stops in Mishima.

Genpei river

Mishima is near Suruga Bay, with Numazu as a nearby port city. Being close to Mt. Fuji, the view of it can be very good, depending on the weather.

  • 1 Mishima Shrine (三嶋大社 Mishima Taisha), 2-1-5 Ōmiyachō (walk 10 minutes from Mishima Station, or 5 minutes from Mishima-Tamachi Station on the Sunzu Line), +81 55 975-0172. This shrine dates its history from the Nara Period (710-794), and became famous when Minamoto no Yoritomo became shogun during the Kamakura Period (1185-1333) and rebuilt the shrine.
  • 2 Rakuju-en (楽寿園), 19-3 Ichibanchō (walk a few steps from the south exit of Mishima Station), +81 55 975-2570, fax: +81 55 975-8555. 9:00-17:00 (16:30 Nov-Mar). This garden dates from the Meiji era (1868-1912), and contains a lake "fed" by meltwater from Mt. Fuji. In the same area, there is also a small amusement park, a small zoo, and a city museum. adults ¥300, children (ages 4-15) ¥50.
  • 3 Genpei River (源兵衛川) (Just south of the station on a sidestreet running east-west across the main road. Alternately, the southern exit of Rakuju-en, with the turnstyle, leads right onto it.). 24hrs. The Genpei is a little stream right in the middle of Mishima city made of the springwater of Mount Fuji. It's shallow, clear and cold so children often play in it. Some Japanese killifish (めだか), minnow (ハヤ), crabs (沢ガニ), pond snails (タニシ) and fireflies (蛍) inhabit the stream. The city has restored parts of its waterways with stepping stones, waterwheels, little models and other such stuff to try and evoke a nostalgic feel. Free.

Many people visit Mishima Shrine on New Year's Day for hatsumōde (初詣), the first shrine visit of the new year.

  • Tagonotsuki (田子の月), 3-16-13 Ōmiyachō, +81 55 975-8818. 9:00-20:00. This shop sells many different kinds of delicious Japanese sweets. One option is Fujisanchō (富士山頂), a custard-filled cake shaped like Mount Fuji. Try this delicious option, or try others to find your favorite!
  • Cherry shrimp (桜海老 sakura ebi), a tiny variety caught in Suruga Bay.
  • Eel (鰻 unagi). Try the traditional bowl of rice and broiled eel.
  • Wasabi-zuke (わさび漬け), a mix of grated wasabi and sake lees.
  • Uogashi Zushi (魚がし鮨) Shizuoka mishima city hagi 41-1 (静岡市三島市萩41-1) TEL:+81 55-987-9383 Uogashi is a very popular sushi shop that can get quite crowded at dinner time.

Drink

edit
  • Green tea (緑茶 ryokucha). The first tea of the season is very good.

Sleep

edit
  • Hotel Shōmeikan (ホテル昭明館), Ichibanchō 11-14 (walk about 2 minutes from the south exit of Mishima Station), +81 55 972-7171, fax: +81 55 972-4997. Check-in: 15:00, check-out: 10:00. A convenient business hotel near the station. Wireless Internet access and Japanese-style rooms are available. Single ¥5,355, twin ¥8,400, triple ¥12,600.
  • Hotel Massimo Mishima, 12-21 Ichiban-cho (1-minute walk from JR Mishima Station south exit.), +81 55-972-1101. Check-in: 3:00p.m. - 0:00a.m., check-out: 10:00a.m.. Rates are reasonable yet they care about the quality of the interior.
  • 1 Dormy Inn Mishima (ドーミーイン三島), 3-12-33 Omiyacho (One the south-west side of the train station, after a car park). Check-in: 15:00, check-out: 11:00. A 12-storey business hotel that features a hot spa (onsen) and open bath (rotenburo) on the top floor with views to Mount Fuji. ¥8,000.

Go next

edit

Mishima is located at the intersection between the Tokaido line and a private line running down the guts of the Izu Peninsula and thus acts as the natural gateway to the Izu interior and Izu via train and western Izu regions via road.

Other locations:

Routes through Mishima
Nagoya Shin-Fuji  W  E  Atami Tokyo
Shizuoka Numazu  W  E  Atami Tokyo


This city travel guide to Mishima is an outline and needs more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. Please plunge forward and help it grow!