Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan

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Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan
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The Kaiyukan Aquarium
Date opened May 1990 [1]
Location Osaka, Japan
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Land area 26,570 square metres (286,000 sq ft) [2]
Number of animals 29,000 [3]
Number of species 470 [3]
Volume of largest tank 5,400 cubic metres (190,699 cu ft) [4]
Total volume of tanks 10,941 cubic metres (386,378 cu ft) [4]
Memberships JAZA[5]
Website www.kaiyukan.com/language/eng/

The Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan (海遊館 Kaiyūkan?, known as the Kaiyukan) is an aquarium located in the ward of Minato in Osaka, Japan, near Osaka Bay. It is one of the largest public aquariums in the world,[6] and is a member of the Japanese Association of Zoos and Aquariums (JAZA).

The aquarium is about a five-minute walk from Osakako Station on the Osaka Municipal Subway Chūō Line, and is next to the Tempozan Ferris Wheel.[6]

Exhibits

The walk-through aquarium displays marine life in several habitats comprising 27 tanks in 16 main exhibits with a total volume of 10,941 tons of water. The habitats are from the Ring of Fire area of the Pacific Ocean. The largest tank is 9 metres (30 ft) deep and holds 5,400 cubic metres (190,699 cu ft) of water and a variety of fish including manta rays and a whale shark.[4]

The tanks used in the aquarium are made of 314 tonnes (346 tons) of acrylic glass. The largest single pane measures six meters by five meters by thirty centimeters and weighs roughly 10 tons. At the thicknesses used, regular glass would be unwieldy and would not have the desired transparency.

The themes, displays and their respective organisms at Kaiyukan are as follows;

Tunnel Tank

Japanese Forests

Aleutian Islands

Monterey Bay

Panama Bay

Ecuadorian Jungle

Antarctica

Tasmanian Sea

Great Barrier Reef

The Pacific Ocean

This is largest tank in the aquarium.

Seto Inland Sea

  • Fish native to Seto, Japan

The Giant Kelp Forest

Chilean Rocks

Cook Strait

  • Sea tortoises and other species

Japanese Trench

Deep sea Zone

Jellyfish Area

Architecture

The Kaiyukan’s conceptual design, architecture, and exhibit design was led by Peter Chermayeff of Peter Chermayeff LLC while at Cambridge Seven Associates.[1]

Notes

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External links