Roadside Station Ogimi (道の駅 おおぎみ)
3.5
Roadside Station Ogimi is a roadside rest area on National Highway 58, located in Nerome, Ogimi Village. There is a range of Ogimi Village specialty products on sale, including Shekwasha (flat lemons) and Akatsuchi Daikon (Japanese radish), etc., when in season. There are restaurants on the First and Second Floors, including the Beautiful View Soba noodles restaurant on the Second Floor, where diners can enjoy not only Okinawan Soba noodles but also Japanese-style Soba noodles made using buckwheat flour from buckwheat grown locally in Ogimi. Immediately adjacent to Roadside Station Ogimi is the “Longevity Stele,” a stone monument celebrating the fact that Ogimi has the longest-lived inhabitants of any community in Japan.
Okinawa Pref. Kunigamigunogimison Nerome 1373 (Northern Okinawa / Nago / OnnaArea)
[Dining room] 11:00-23:00
[Japanese soba shop] 11:00-15:00
[Product building] 8:30-17:30
[Information corner] 8:30-17:30
Review of Michi no Eki Ogimi
TripAdvisor Traveler RatingNever Seen turnips and cabbages as giant as here before.
Sellers are very friendly especially old ladies that they cannot...
Details
- Address
- Okinawa Pref. Kunigamigunogimison Nerome 1373 [map]
- Phone
- 0980443048
- Hours
- [Dining room] 11:00-23:00
[Japanese soba shop] 11:00-15:00
[Product building] 8:30-17:30
[Information corner] 8:30-17:30 - Closed
- open everyday (dining room/soba shop:Irregular holidays Sunday)
- Parking Lot
- Available(32spaces)
- Credit Card
- Not available
Information Sources: NAVITIME JAPAN
Access
Okinawa Areas

Let go of your image of a busy, ordered Japan and replace it with crystal-clear waters, white sand beaches, and relaxing folk music: You’ve arrived in Okinawa. A world away from the high intensity of Tokyo, Okinawans appear to live a laid-back beach life on this paradisiacal tropical island that lies in the middle of the East China Sea almost 1,000 kilometers south of mainland Japan’s most southern tip. Home to a spattering of islands, prepare yourself to discover underwater caves, star-shaped sand, and an island culture sometimes unrecognizable from mainland Japan.