Lines
Arrows (→) indicate ships only go that direction. Dashes (—) indicate ships go both directions. Lines are operated everyday, unless noted otherwise.
■ Sumida River Line (隅田川ライン, Sumidagawa Rain?)
- Asakusa → Hamarikyū → Hinode Pier
- Hinode Pier → Asakusa
■ Asakusa-Odaiba Direct Line (浅草・お台場直通ライン, Asakusa-Odaiba Chokutsū Rain?)
- Asakusa → Odaiba Seaside Park → Toyosu → Asakusa
■ Happy Dog Cruise (ハッピードッグクルーズ, Happī Doggu Kurūzu?)
- Odaiba Seaside Park → (Cruising) → Odaiba Seaside Park
- A daily event cruise for dog people.
■ Odaiba Line (お台場ライン, Odaiba Rain?)
- Hinode Pier — Harumi — Odaiba Seaside Park
■ Tokyo Big Sight Palette Town Line (東京ビッグサイト・パレットタウンライン, Tōkyō Biggu Saito Paretto Taun Rain?)
- Hinode Pier — Tokyo Big Sight — Palette Town
- Closes on Monday and Tuesday.
■ Museum of Maritime Science, Shinagawa Aquarium Line (船の科学館・しながわ水族館ライン, Fune no Kagakukan Shinagawa Suizokukan Rain?)
- Hinode Pier — Museum of Maritime Science — Ooi Seashore Park — Shinagawa Aquarium
- Closes when Shinagawa Aquarium closes (basically on Tuesday). The line is called "Canal Cruise" (キャナルクルーズ, Kyanaru Kurūzu?) inside ships.
Read more about this topic: Tokyo Cruise Ship
Famous quotes containing the word lines:
“It is the Late city that first defies the land, contradicts Nature in the lines of its silhouette, denies all Nature. It wants to be something different from and higher than Nature. These high-pitched gables, these Baroque cupolas, spires, and pinnacles, neither are, nor desire to be, related with anything in Nature. And then begins the gigantic megalopolis, the city-as-world, which suffers nothing beside itself and sets about annihilating the country picture.”
—Oswald Spengler (18801936)
“I have a new method of poetry. All you got to do is look over your notebooks ... or lay down on a couch, and think of anything that comes into your head, especially the miseries.... Then arrange in lines of two, three or four words each, dont bother about sentences, in sections of two, three or four lines each.”
—Allen Ginsberg (b. 1926)
“GOETHE, raised oer joy and strife,
Drew the firm lines of Fate and Life,
And brought Olympian wisdom down
To court and mar, to gown and town,
Stooping, his finger wrote in clay
The open secret of to-day.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)