Ebino ( えびの市 , Ebino-shi ) is a city located in Miyazaki Prefecture , Japan . As of 1 November 2023 , the city had an estimated population of 16,397 in 7775 households, and a population density of 58 persons per km . The total area of the city is 282.93 km (109.24 sq mi).
11-1031: Expressway in Miyazaki prefecture, Japan [REDACTED] Miyazaki Expressway 宮崎自動車道 [REDACTED] [REDACTED] Route information Length 80.7 km (50.1 mi) Existed 1976–present Major junctions From Ebino Junction in Ebino [REDACTED] Kyushu Expressway To Miyazaki Interchange in Miyazaki [REDACTED] Hitotsuba Toll Road Location Country Japan Major cities Kobayashi , Miyakonojō Highway system National highways of Japan Expressways of Japan [REDACTED] Tenjin Tunnel Eastern Side, Miyazaki, Japan Miyazaki Expressway ( 宮崎自動車道 , Miyazaki Jidōsha-dō )
22-9050: A bulleted list or table of intersections which should be presented in a properly formatted junction table. Please consult this guideline for information on how to create one. Please improve this article if you can. ( November 2021 ) IC - interchange , SIC - smart interchange , JCT - junction , SA - service area , PA - parking area , BS - bus stop , TN - tunnel , BR - bridge Bus stops labeled "○" are currently in use; those marked "◆" are closed. No. Name Connections Dist. from Origin Bus Stop Notes Location (all in Miyazaki ) (21) Ebino JCT [REDACTED] Kyushu Expressway 0.0 Ebino BS Iino BS 7.6 ○ 1 Kobayashi IC Pref. Route 1 (Kobayashi Ebino Kogen Makizono Route) 15.9 ○ Kobayashi SA Kirishima SA 18.7 2 Takaharu IC [REDACTED] National Route 221 26.5 ○ Takaharu PA Hyūga Takasaki PA 30.1 Miyakonojō BS Takasaki-Higashi BS 38.0 ○ BS Miyakonojō-Kita BS 45.8 ○ 3 Miyakonojō IC [REDACTED] National Route 10 Miyakonojō Shibushi Road (planned) 46.9 BS Takajō BS 50.5 ○ 3-1 Yamanokuchi SA/SIA [REDACTED] National Route 269 via Miyakonojō city road 51.9 TN Tenjin Tunnel northbound: 1,670 m (5,480 ft) southbound: 1,648 m (5,407 ft) Miyazaki 4 Tano IC Pref. Route 28 (Nichinan Takaoka Route) 68.0 ○ BS Tano-Higashi BS 70.1 ○ (4-1) Kiyotake JCT [REDACTED] Higashikyushu Expressway 74.3 BS Kiyotake BS 78.0 ○ PA Kiyotake PA 78.7 Only accessible for Ebino TB Miyazaki TB 79.0 PA Kiyotake PA 79.2 Only accessible for Miyazaki 5 Miyazaki IC [REDACTED] National Route 220 (Miyazaki-Minami Bypass) 80.7 Through to Hitotsuba Toll Road Lanes [ edit ] 4-lane References [ edit ] ^ Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, Kyushu Regional Development Bureau. "Road Timetable" . Retrieved 2008-08-31 . {{ cite web }} : CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link ) [REDACTED] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Miyazaki Expressway . v t e [REDACTED] West Nippon Expressway Company National Expressways E1 Meishin E1A Shin-Meishin E2 San'yō E2A Chūgoku E2A Kammon Bridge E3 Kyushu E9 San-in E10/E78 Higashikyushu E10 Miyazaki E11 Takamatsu E11/E56 Matsuyama E11/E32 Tokushima E25 Nishi-Meihan E26 Kinki E26/E42 Hanwa E27 Maizuru-Wakasa E29 Harima E29 Tottori E32/E56 Kōchi E34 Nagasaki E34 Ōita E54 Matsue E58 Okinawa E71 Kansai-Kūkō E73 Okayama E73 Yonago E74 Hiroshima E74 Hamada E77 Kyushu Chūō Toll Roads E2 Hiroshima-Iwakuni Road E3A Minamikyushu E9 Kyoto-Jūkan E10 Usa-Beppu Road E10 Nobeoka-Minami Road E24 Keinawa E31 Hiroshima-Kure Road E35 Nishi-Kyūshū E42 Yuasa Gobō Road E71 Sky Gate Bridge R E76 Imabari-Komatsu E78 Hayato Road E88 Keiji Bypass E89 Daini-Keihan Road E90 Sakai Senboku Road E91 Minami-Hanna Road E92 Daini Hanna E93 Daini-Shimmei E94 Kitasen Road E96 Nagasaki Bypass E97 Hiji Bypass Kanmon Roadway Tunnel v t e [REDACTED] Expressways of Japan East Nippon Expressway Company C3 Tokyo Gaikan C4/E66 Ken-Ō CA Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line E4 Tōhoku E4A Aomori E4A Hachinohe E5 Dō-Ō E5A Sasson E5A Shiribeshi E6 Jōban E7 Nihonkai-Tōhoku E7/E46 Akita E8 Hokuriku E13 Tōhoku-Chūō E14 Tateyama E17 Kan-etsu E18 Jōshin-etsu E19 Nagano E38/E61 Dōtō E45 Sanriku E46 Kamaishi E48 Yamagata E49 Ban-etsu E50 Kita-Kantō E51 Higashi-Kantō E65 Shin-Kūkō Central Nippon Expressway Company C2 Mei-Nikan C3 Tōkai-Kanjō C4 Ken-Ō E1 Tōmei E1 Meishin E1A/E52/E69 Shin-Tōmei E1A Isewangan E1A Shin-Meishin E8 Hokuriku E19/E20/E68 Chūō E19 Nagano E23 Higashi-Meihan E23 Ise E27 Maizuru-Wakasa E41 Tōkai-Hokuriku E42 Kisei E52 Chūbu-Ōdan West Nippon Expressway Company E1 Meishin E1A Shin-Meishin E2 San'yō E2A Chūgoku E2A Kanmon Bridge E3 Kyushu E3A Minamikyushu E9 San'in E10/E78 Higashikyushu E10 Miyazaki E11/E32 Tokushima E11 Takamatsu E11/E56 Matsuyama E24 Keinawa E25 Nishi-Meihan E26 Kinki E26/E42 Hanwa E27 Maizuru-Wakasa E29 Harima E32/E56 Kōchi E34 Ōita E34 Nagasaki E35 Nishi-Kyūshū E54 Matsue E58 Okinawa E71 Kansai-Kūkō E73 Okayama E73 Yonago E74 Hamada E74 Hiroshima Honshu-Shikoku Bridge Expressway Company E28 Kobe-Awaji-Naruto E30 Seto-Chūō E76 Nishiseto MLIT E4A Kamikita E5 Hakodate Shindō E5A Kuromatsunai Shindō E7 Akita E9 San'in Kinki E25 Meihan E29 Tottori E38 Dōtō E38/E44 Kushiro Sotokan E39 Asahikawa-Monbetsu E41 Nōetsu E41/E86 Noto-Satoyama E45 Hachinohe-Kuji E45 Sanriku E45 Sanriku-kita Jūkan E46 Kamaishi E54 Onomichi E55 Kōchi-Tōbu E55 Tokushima-Nanbu E58 Naha Airport E59 Hakodate-Esashi E60 Obihiro-Hiroo E61 Tokachi-Okhotsk E62 Fukagawa-Rumoi E63 Hidaka E64 Tsugaru E67 Chūbu-Jūkan E69 San-en Nanshin E70 Izu-Jūkan E72 Kitakinki-Toyooka E75 Higashihiroshima-Kure E77 Kyushu Chūō Urban Expressways Fukuoka & Kitakyushu Hanshin Hiroshima Nagoya Shuto Tokyo Prefecture Maintained Routes E4A Daini-Michinoku E4A Michinoku E80 Abukuma Kōgen E81 Nikkō Utsunomiya E87 Chitahantō E95 Bantan Renraku E97 Ōita Airport Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Miyazaki_Expressway&oldid=1259400634 " Categories : Expressways in Japan Kyushu region 1976 establishments in Japan Hidden categories: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Infobox road instances in Japan Articles containing Japanese-language text Misplaced Pages articles needing
33-465: A junction list from November 2021 All pages needing cleanup Commons category link is on Wikidata Ebino, Miyazaki Ebio is in far southwestern Miyazaki Prefecture, bordered to the north by Kumamoto Prefecture and to the south by Kagoshima Prefecture. The southern part of the city is formed by the volcanoes and volcanic plateaus of Mount Kirishima and the Ebino Plateau, and
44-504: A wide range of food products, from shōchū to sweets, tea, honey, mushrooms, chicken and pork. Locally produced crafts include Ebino-yaki pottery and bamboo craftwork, among others. Ebino has four public elementary schools and three public junior high schools and one combined elementary/junior high school operated by the city, and one public high school operated by the Miyazaki Prefectural Board of Education. There
55-576: Is 15.8 °C (60.4 °F). The average annual rainfall is 2,832.7 mm (111.52 in) with June as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around 26.2 °C (79.2 °F), and lowest in January, at around 5.1 °C (41.2 °F). The highest temperature ever recorded in Ebino was 39.4 °C (102.9 °F) on 17 August 2020; the coldest temperature ever recorded
66-699: Is designated as Kirishima-Yaku National Park . The northern part consists of plateaus and mountain forests, forming the Yatake Plateau. The center of the city is the Kakuto Basin, with many hot springs . It is the 8th physically largest city in Miyazaki Prefecture. Kagoshima Prefecture Kumamoto Prefecture Miyazaki Prefecture Ebino has a humid subtropical climate ( Köppen climate classification Cfa ) with hot, humid summers and cool winters. The average annual temperature in Ebino
77-698: Is one of the Expressways of Japan from Ebino to Miyazaki linking with the Higashikyushu Expressway . It runs through the southern half of the Miyazaki prefecture. The expressway is 80.7 kilometres (50.1 mi) long. History [ edit ] March 4, 1976, the Ebino Junction with the Kyushu Expressway to Takaharu Interchange was opened. March 17, 1981, a section from Takaharu to Miyakonojō Interchanges
88-587: Was later transferred to Miyazaki Prefecture. The villages of Iino, Kakuto and Masayuki within Nishimorokata District, Miyazaki were established on May 1, 1889 with the creation of the modern municipalities system. Iino was raised to town status on April 3, 1940, followed by Masayuki on April 1, 1950 and Kakuto on February 11, 1955. The three towns merged to form the town of Ebino on November 3, 1966. The Ebino earthquake occurred on February 21, 1968, killing three inhabitants and injuring 42. Ebino
99-607: Was opened to traffic. October 29, 1981, a section from Miyakonojō to Miyazaki Interchanges was opened to traffic which made the Miyazaki Expressway from Ebino to Miyazaki fully accessible with no gaps. March 25, 2000, the Kiyotake Junction to the east was opened to traffic. October 1, 2005, Following privatisation of JH it came under the control of NEXCO West Japan . Interchanges [ edit ] [REDACTED] This article contains
110-564: Was raised to city status on December 1, 1970. Ebino has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city council of 15 members. Ebino contributes one member to the Miyazaki Prefectural Assembly. In terms of national politics, the city is part of the Miyazaki 1st district of the lower house of the Diet of Japan . The local economy is overwhelmingly agricultural. Ebino produces
121-474: Was −12.0 °C (10.4 °F) on 25 January 2016. Per Japanese census data, the population of Ebino in 2020 is 17,638 people. Ebino has been conducting censuses since 1920. The area of Ebino was part of ancient Hyūga Province , and during the Edo period was completely within the borders of Satsuma Domain . In 1871, with the abolition of the han system , the area was incorporated into Kagoshima Prefecture, but
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