is a city located in central Sorachi Subprefecture, Hokkaido, Japan. The name comes from the Ainu language but the meaning is uncertain; possibly it means "mountain ridge" or "cliff".
As of January 2024, the city has a population of 8,709 people living in 5,333 households. The total area is 129.88 km<sup>2</sup>. The city was once a prosperous coal-mining city, its population reaching 59,430 in 1960. The population has been gradually declining. There have been efforts to create tourism around the city's coal mining heritage and other sights in order to strengthen the local economy. Other than that, there are also hot springs and campsites.
History
- 1891 - Settlement begins.
- 1918 - Moshiri Coal Mine opens.
- 1922 - Second-class municipality Akabira Village split off of first-class municipality Utashinai.
- 1929 - Akabira becomes a First-Class municipality.
- 1937 - ShÃ
Âwa DenkÃ
 Toyosato Mine opened.
- 1938 - Sumitomo Coal Mine, Hokkaido Coal Mine Railroad and Akama Coal Mine opened.
- 1943 - Akabira Village becomes Akabira Town.
- July 1, 1954 - Akabira Town becomes Akabira City.
- 1967 - ShÃ
Âwa DenkÃ
 Toyosato Mine closed.
- 1969 - Moshiri Coal Mine closed.
- 1973 - Akama Coal Mine closed.
- 1994 - Sumitomo Coal Mine closed.
- 2003 - Mid-Sorachi Merger Committee established.
- 2007 - A major elementary school in Akabira closed down. It once had about 5000 students but has dropped rapidly after the closure of the coal mines.
- 2008 - Hokkaido provides the city with a low-interest loan to support the city
- February 28, 2015 - Guinness World Record for number of snowmen made in an hour (2036) for the filming of the drama Fuben na Benriya ("Inconvenient Handyman").
Geography
Akabira is located in the central region of the Hokkaido Sorachi Subprefecture jurisdiction. The Sorachi River flows through the city limits from east to west. Originally, development stretched from Utashinai (æÂÂå¿ÂÃ¥ÂÂ
) to Mojiri (èÂÂå°»), but now is an urban region along the Sorachi River.
Mountains
- Mt. Irumukeppu (ã¤ã«ã ã±ãÂÂãÂÂå±±)
- Mt. Akabira (赤平山)
- Mt. Kamui (ç¥Âå¨Âå²³)
Rivers
- Sorachi River (空çÂ¥å·Â)
- Horokura River (å¹ÂÃ¥ÂÂå·Â)
- Akamazawa River (赤éÂÂæ²¢å·Â)
- Katsura River (æ¡Âå·Â)
Neighborhoods
- Akabira (赤平)
- Izumachi (æ³Âçº), Blocks 1-4
- ErumuchÃ
 (ã¨ã«ã çº)
- Oomachi (大çº), Blocks 1-4
- North BunkyÃ
ÂchÃ
 (Ã¥ÂÂæÂÂ京çº), Blocks 1-5
- KyowachÃ
 (Ã¥Â
±åÂÂçº)
- SaiwaichÃ
 (幸çº), Blocks 1-7
- SakuragichÃ
 (æ¡ÂæÂ¨çº), Blocks 1-5
- ShÃ
ÂwachÃ
 (æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂçº), Blocks 1-6
- SumiyoshichÃ
 (ä½ÂÃ¥ÂÂçº)
- ToyookachÃ
 (è±Âä¸Âçº), Blocks 1-3
- Toyosato (Ã¥ÂÂè±ÂéÂÂ)
- Nishikimachi (é¦çº), Blocks 1-3
- West ToyosatochÃ
 (西è±ÂéÂÂçº)
- West BunkyÃ
ÂchÃ
 (西æÂÂ京çº), Blocks 1-5
- East Oomachi (æÂ±å¤§çº), Blocks 1-3
- East ToyosatochÃ
 (æÂ±è±ÂéÂÂçº)
- East BunkyÃ
ÂchÃ
 (æÂ±æÂÂ京çº), Blocks 1-4
- HyakkochÃ
 East (ç¾æÂ¸çºæÂ±), Blocks 1-5
- HyakkochÃ
 West (ç¾æÂ¸çº西), Blocks 1-6
- HyakkochÃ
 North (ç¾æÂ¸çºåÂÂ)
- HiragishikatsurachÃ
 (平岸æ¡Âçº)
- HiragishishinkÃ
ÂchÃ
 (平岸æÂ°åÂ
卼), Blocks 1-9
- Hiragishinakamachi (平岸仲çº), Blocks 1-6
- Hiragishihigashimachi (平岸æÂ±çº), Blocks 1-6
- Hiragishinishimachi (平岸西çº), Blocks 1-6
- Hiragishiminamimachi (平岸åÂÂçº)
- HiragishiakebonochÃ
 (平岸æÂÂçº), Blocks 1-6
- HÃ
ÂeichÃ
 (è±Âæ Âçº), Blocks 1-5
- HorookachÃ
 (å¹Â岡çº)
- HonchÃ
 (æÂÂº), Blocks 1-3
- MisonochÃ
 (ç¾ÂÃ¥ÂÂçº), Blocks 1-5
- MiyashitachÃ
 (å®®ä¸Âçº), Blocks 1-5
- Mojiri (èÂÂå°»)
- Mojiriasahimachi (èÂÂå°»æÂÂçº), Blocks 1-3
- MojirikasugachÃ
 (èÂÂå°»æÂ¥æÂ¥çº), Blocks 1-3
- Mojirisakaemachi (èÂÂå°»æ Âçº), Blocks 1-5
- MojirishinkasugachÃ
 (èÂÂå°»æÂ°æÂ¥æÂ¥çº), Blocks 1-2
- Mojirishinmachi (èÂÂå°»æÂ°çº), Blocks 1-5
- MojirichÃ
«Ã
ÂchÃ
 South (èÂÂå°»ä¸Â央çºåÂÂ), Blocks 1-6
- MojirichÃ
«Ã
ÂchÃ
 North (èÂÂå°»ä¸Â央çºåÂÂ), Blocks 1-2
- MojirihonchÃ
 (èÂÂå°»æÂÂº), Blocks 1-4
- MojirimiyashitachÃ
 (èÂÂ尻宮ä¸Âçº)
- Mojirimotomachi South (èÂÂå°»åÂ
ÂçºåÂÂ), Blocks 1-5
- Mojirimotomachi North (èÂÂå°»åÂ
ÂçºåÂÂ), Blocks 1-6
- WakakichÃ
 East (èÂ¥æÂ¨çºæÂ±), Blocks 1-9
- WakakichÃ
 West (èÂ¥æÂ¨çº西), Blocks 1-6
- WakakichÃ
 South (èÂ¥æÂ¨çºåÂÂ), Blocks 1-5
- WakakichÃ
 North (èÂ¥æÂ¨çºåÂÂ), Blocks 1-8
Demographics
Per Japanese census data, the population of Akabira has declined precipitously in recent decades.
Transportation
Nemuro Main Line: Akabira - Moshiri - Hiragishi
Education
Junior high school
- Akabira junior high school
Elementary schools
- Akama elementary school
- Toyosato elementary school
- Mojiri elementary school
In popular culture
A climactic scene in the 2021 Academy Awards winning film Drive My Car was shot in Akabira, leading to interest from visitors.
Friendship cities
References
External links