Parking In Tokyo

A car parking system (also referred to as multi-level stacked parking system, or car stacker) is a mechanical device that multiplies parking capacity inside a building or a parking lot. In Europe, Japan and Asia, hundreds of mechanical garages were built between the mid 1950’s and the late 1980s. Most are still in operation. It has only been recently that much more advanced car parking systems came into operation. The technology involved has been developing over the last 75 years, and has now reached the stage where it can be utilized on a wide scale.

Top Gear (referred to as Old Top Gear when mentioned on the present version of the show) was a car-based BBC television series produced by BBC Birmingham, and broadcast on BBC2 from 1977 to 2001.

Jeremy Charles Robert Clarkson (born 11 April 1960) is a British Television presenter, journalist and writer who specialises in motoring.

Dekotora Event

A truck is a large motor vehicle, commonly for carrying goods and materials, and also sometimes as a platform for specialist equipment

The Dekotora or Decotora (デコトラ), an abbreviation for “Decoration Truck”, is a kind of loudly decorated truck most commonly found in Japan. Dekotora commonly have neon or ultraviolet lights, extravagant paints, and shiny stainless or golden exterior parts. These decorations can be found on both the cab and the trailer, and not only on the exterior but also in the interior. Dekotora may be created by workers out of their work trucks for fun, or they may be designed by hobbyists for special events. They are sometimes also referred to as Art Trucks (アートトラック).

Musical Memories of Summer in Gunma

A Musical road is a road, or part of a road, which when driven over causes a tactile vibration and audible rumbling transmitted through the wheels into the car body in the form of a musical tune. As of 2016, there are now over 30 Melody Roads in Japan, [including] one in Hokkaido, another in Wakayama (where, at 40km/h, a car can produce the Japanese ballad “Miagete goran yoru no hoshi wo” by Kyu Sakamoto), and a third in Gunma, which consist of 2,559 grooves cut into a 175 meter stretch of existing roadway and when driven over at 50 km/h, produce the tune of “Memories of Summer”.

National Route 401 is a national highway of Japan connecting Aizuwakamatsu, Fukushima and Numata, Gunma in Japan, with a total length of 171.1 km (106.32 mi).

Located in northern Gunma, Katashina is bordered by Tochigi Prefecture to the east and Fukushima Prefecture to the northeast. Much of the village is within the borders of Oze National Park. Katashina is not served by any railway lines.

Gunma Prefecture (群馬県, Gunma-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the northwest corner of the Kantō region on Honshū island. Its capital is Maebashi. One of only eight landlocked prefectures in Japan, Gunma is the northwestern-most prefecture of the Kantō plain.