Kurobe Dam — Japan's Tallest Dam & Thundering Spillway
Kurobe Dam (黒部ダム) is Japan's tallest dam at 186 meters, an engineering marvel completed in 1963 after a 7-year construction effort that claimed 171 lives. The dam spans 492 meters across the Kurobe Gorge, holding back the emerald waters of Kurobe Lake and generating hydroelectric power for central Japan. The arch-shaped concrete structure is accessible via the Alpine Route or Kansai Electric Railway tunnels.
From late June to mid-October, the dam releases 10+ tons of water per second through its spillway — a thundering cascade that creates rainbows in the mist on sunny days. Multiple observation decks offer perspectives: the dam crest (walking across the top), Shintenbo Observation Deck (elevated side view), and Garbe (base-level platform near the spray). The engineering museum details the dam's construction, including the dangerous tunneling through unstable rock and extreme weather conditions at 1,470m elevation.
The dam can be accessed year-round via the Alpine Route (mid-April to November) or from Nagano via Ogizawa year-round (though winter access is limited). Kurobe Lake offers sightseeing boats in summer (June–November).
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