Monday, March 11, 2013

Seventeenth Week

AEON MALL

This week I was still kinda sore from my fall so I took it easy. Just went to a really big mall near a subway station called Nagoya Dome-Mae Yada.
 So, when I went there was a rush of people trying to change trains and I forgot to take pictures of the switch.  It's not complicated. On the same train you always get to go to Nagoya Station, get off the train at the station called Motoyama.  That stations is a change to the purple line called Meijo Line.  Follow the signs that say to Meijo Line. This line is a circle, so it goes clockwise and counter-clockwise. To get to Nagoya Dome-Mae Yada, you need to get on the counter-clockwise train.  Look at the signs that point to the train going to Ozone, another station that is counter-clockwise.  It's four stations away and it's called Nagoya Dome-Mae Yada. You'll need to head to Exit #1.
 When you get off, go past the long line of ticket machines.  There are so many, because this leads to the Nagoya Dome, which is home of the Dragons, Nagoya's baseball team. So you can imagine how full it must get during games.
 Keep following the signs that say Exit 1.
 Now it's a long walkway, so just keep walking you'll get there eventually.
 Not quite there yet.
 Finally you come out into the outside, get on the escalator.
 You get off one, and get on the one right next to it.
 Once you get off that second set of escalators, there is another set to the front.  Get on that one.
 From there you can see the mall.
 Keep following the walkway, which is also bit of a walk
 Go past the library.
 Keep going.
 I can see it getting closer.
 That's the dome.
 Keep going.
 It looks so close.
 There will be another little walkway to the right that leads to the mall's entrance.
 And you're there.  It's pretty big with many kinds of stores and entertainment.  It has some interesting restaurants and they just remodeled quite a bit of it, including the food court, which has a nice variety.

FUN FACT
That has got to be the tiniest excavator I've ever seen.  Everything really is much smaller in Japan.

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