The road stretches out across open water, connecting the Katsuren Peninsula to the island of Henza, with the sea visible on both sides through the windshield. That causeway — the Kaichu Doro — is perhaps the most direct way to understand Uruma: a city assembled from land and sea in roughly equal measure, its identity stitched together from former towns and villages that each carried their own histories into the 2005 merger.
On the peninsula itself, Katsuren Castle rises on a limestone ridge, its dry-stone walls still tracing the outline of a fifteenth-century aji's stronghold. Below, in the newer parts of the city, the Okinawa IT Ryukyu Park hosts data centers and tech offices — a quiet industrial logic that sits alongside fishing harbors at Hieshiya and Higa, where boats still work Kin Bay and Nakagusuku Bay. The Kurashiki Dam offers a long view over this patchwork from its observation tower, the reservoir below, the city spreading toward the coast.
What keeps the place from feeling merely administrative is something harder to pin down. At Kimitaka Hall, middle and high school students perform the contemporary kumiodori about Amawari — the very aji who once held Katsuren Castle — in a production that has now reached well over two hundred performances. On Ikeijima, the Ichinari Art Project uses an abandoned school as its stage. The Shimi season draws families to Agenabaru Park, gathering beside the old castle ruins in a rhythm that has little to do with tourism and everything to do with how people here mark time.
Stay in Uruma, Okinawa
On this island
- Nakahara Site
- Iha Shell Mound
- Katsuren Castle Ruins
- Agena Castle Ruins
- Okinawa Kaigan
- Nanbara Fishing Port
- Heshikiya Fishing Port
- Higa Fishing Port
- Ikemi Fishing Port
- Tsukен Fishing Port
- Hama Fishing Port
- Teruma Fishing Port