From the 531-metre summit, the whole grid of Sapporo spreads out below in a carpet of lights — one of Japan's "New Top 3 Night Views". You ride up by ropeway, then a little cable car nicknamed the Morris Car, to an observatory with a Lovers' Sanctuary, a planetarium, and a restaurant that looks straight out over the city. We'll walk you through what to see, the best time to go, and how to get there.
Picture standing at the edge of a viewing deck on a cold, clear evening, watching the sun slip behind the hills and the lights of a million-person city blink on one by one beneath your feet — that's Mount Moiwa, the green peak rising right at the southwest edge of Sapporo. At 531 metres it isn't tall as mountains go, but it sits in exactly the right spot, so the whole grid of the city fans out below, framed by the dark of the bay and the ring of mountains around it.
That view earns Mount Moiwa a real reputation: it's officially counted as one of Japan's "New Top 3 Night Views" alongside Nagasaki and Kitakyushu, and it carries the Japan Night View Heritage designation. Getting up there is half the fun — you ride a ropeway from the base to the mid-station, then change to a little cable car (everyone calls it the "Morris Car") for the final climb to the summit observatory. At the top you'll find the Lovers' Sanctuary with its bell and love padlocks, a small planetarium, and a restaurant with a wall of glass facing the city. This page walks you through it all — what to see, when to go, and how to get there.
From the foot of the mountain to the top, here's what's at each level — where to catch each ride, what you'll find at the summit, and the best time to be there. Use it to plan your evening so you arrive in time for sunset.
| Spot / stage | Level | What's there | Best time | How to reach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ropeway IriguchiTram stop | City level | City streetcar stop · free shuttle up to the base | On the way up | Tram |
| Sanroku StationRopeway base | Base | Ropeway base station · ticket counter · free parking | Late afternoon | Free shuttle |
| ChuufukuMid-station | Mid-mountain | Change from ropeway to the Morris Car cable car | On the way up | Ropeway |
| Summit ObservatorySancho | Summit 531 m | Main viewing deck · the night-view panorama | Sunset–night | Morris Car |
| Lovers' SanctuaryKoibito no Seichi | Summit | Bell to ring · railing for love padlocks | Sunset–night | Morris Car |
| STAR HALLPlanetarium | Summit | Small planetarium · short star shows | Evening | Morris Car |
| THE JEWELSRestaurant | Summit | Restaurant with a wall of glass over the city | Dinner | Morris Car |
The view is the headline, but the ride up and the summit building give you plenty to fill an hour or two. Everyone who's been agrees on one thing: time your visit for sunset and stay for the lights — that's the moment you came for.
🌃 Summit1
The main reason everyone rides up: a viewing deck at 531 metres where the whole grid of Sapporo opens out below in a carpet of lights, with the bay and surrounding hills as a frame. It's officially one of Japan's "New Top 3 Night Views". There's an open-air deck and a glassed-in level, so you can step out for photos and duck back in from the cold.
Sapporo Attractions →
🚠 Base–Mid2
The first stage of the climb: a cable-car ropeway that lifts you from the Sanroku base station up to the Chuufuku mid-station in a few minutes, gliding over the wooded slope. The cabin is big and the windows are wide, so even the ride up is part of the show as the city starts to drop away below you.
Sapporo Travel Guide →From the Chuufuku mid-station you change to a small, automated cable car — affectionately nicknamed the "Morris Car" — that crawls up the final stretch of track to the summit. It's a short, gentle ride and a fun little link in the chain, dropping you right at the observatory door so you don't have to walk the last hill.
Sapporo Travel Guide →The summit is officially designated a "Lovers' Sanctuary", part of a popular Japanese network of romantic viewpoints. There's a bell that couples ring together, and a railing where you fasten a love padlock — you buy the padlock at the summit shop. With the city lights behind it, it's a favourite for couples, but honestly it makes a fun photo stop for anyone.
Sapporo Attractions →Inside the summit building, STAR HALL is a small planetarium that runs short star shows under a domed ceiling. It's a nice way to warm up between the deck and dinner, especially on a cold night, and a hit with families. The shows are short, so they slot easily into a summit visit without eating up your whole evening.
Sapporo Travel Guide →
🍽️ Summit6
The summit's restaurant, THE JEWELS, has a wall of glass facing straight out over the city, so the night view becomes your dinner backdrop — fitting, given the name. It's a sit-down spot for a relaxed meal or a course menu rather than a quick bite. If you want to turn the visit into an evening rather than a flying photo stop, book a table here.
What to Eat in Sapporo →The mountain sits at the southwest edge of the city and isn't on the subway, but it's still simple to reach. The classic route is the city streetcar plus a free shuttle bus — here are the three ways most travellers get up to the base.
The classic route. Ride the Sapporo city streetcar (tram) and get off at the "Ropeway Iriguchi" stop — from central Susukino it's about 25–30 minutes. From the tram stop, a free shuttle bus runs up the hill to the Sanroku base station in a couple of minutes. Easy, cheap, and scenic.
You can go straight to the Sanroku base station by taxi or car — handy if you're in a group or short on time. From central Sapporo a taxi takes roughly 20 minutes. There's free parking at the base, so driving up yourself is a fine option, especially on a clear winter night.
In peak seasons there are night-view sightseeing buses and tours that bundle the ropeway in. They're the most hands-off way to do it — you skip working out the tram and shuttle — though they cost more than going independently. Worth a look if you'd rather not plan the legs yourself.
A little planning turns a good visit into a great one — timing, weather, and what to bring make all the difference up at 531 metres. Here are six things people who've been wish they'd known first.
Here's how the pieces fit together — the summit observatory and Lovers' Sanctuary at the top, the Sanroku ropeway base lower down, and the "Ropeway Iriguchi" tram stop at city level where the free shuttle picks you up.
Mount Moiwa is an evening trip, so it pays to base yourself in central Sapporo — Susukino or near Sapporo Station — so you can head up for sunset and come back down for dinner and drinks.
Our pick of well-placed hotels near Susukino and Odori — an easy streetcar ride from the Mount Moiwa ropeway.
See Recommended Hotels →An overview of where to stay, what to see, and how to get around the whole of Sapporo — pick the right area for your trip.
Open the Sapporo Guide →Search and compare Sapporo hotels on Agoda for your dates and budget before you decide to book.
Search on Agoda →A whole-city overview — sights, hotels, transport, and the districts around Mount Moiwa.
Open the Sapporo Guide →The best of Sapporo's sights, in the city and beyond, with how to get there and opening hours.
Sapporo Attractions →Miso ramen, soup curry, jingisukan, Hokkaido crab, and dairy desserts — a deep dive into the best places.
Sapporo Food Guide →The subway, streetcar, and buses explained — including the tram route out to the Mount Moiwa ropeway.
How to Get Around →Beyond Sapporo — the wider Hokkaido region, its cities, nature, and the best of the north.
Hokkaido Guide →Otaru, Noboribetsu, and more — easy escapes within reach of the city for a day out.
Sapporo Day Trips →Stay near Susukino or Sapporo Station, a short streetcar ride from the Mount Moiwa ropeway — up for sunset, down for ramen. Open our roundup of recommended hotels, or compare prices on Agoda for your dates and budget.