Tokyo Midtown

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Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template other Script error: No such module "Nihongo". is a 569,000-square-meter (6.1 million sq ft) mixed-use development in Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan. Completed in March 2007, the $3 billion (¥370 billion) project includes office, residential, commercial, hotel, and leisure space, and the new quarters of the Suntory Museum of Art. When completed, the Midtown Tower was the tallest building in Tokyo. The main building complex is surrounded by Hinokicho Park, a 10-acre public park containing green areas along with works of art.[1][2]

The site takes up Script error: No such module "convert". previously occupied by the Japan Defense Agency in Akasaka area of Minato, along Gaien Higashi and close to Roppongi Station, and less than a kilometer (half a mile) from the similarly scaled Roppongi Hills complex.[1][2]

Development

The primary developer was Mitsui Fudosan, working in concert with several partners. The project was designed by architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill;[3] Nikken Sekkei is the local architect of record. Landscape architecture of the surrounding new Script error: No such module "convert". public park was designed by EDAW, the Suntory Museum of Art by Kengo Kuma, and the design of the retail Galleria handled by the Colorado-based CommArts.

Buildings

File:Midtown Garden View 201306.jpg
Midtown Garden Lawn
File:21 21 DESIGN SIGHT 2018-2.jpg
21_21 Design Sight. Design by Tadao Ando

Tenants

File:Tokyo Midtown Galleria Atrium 201306.jpg
Inside the Galleria of Tokyo Midtown
File:Coverway inside Tokyo Midtown 201306.jpg
Cover-way inside Tokyo Midtown

The 330,000 square meters (3.5 million square feet) of office space includes as its main tenants Fujifilm, Fuji Xerox, Yahoo! Japan, Cisco Japan, Uniqlo, Nikko Asset Management and Konami, as well as a medical clinic affiliated with the U.S.-based Johns Hopkins Hospital. The luxury 250-room Ritz-Carlton Hotel occupies the 47th through 53rd floors of Midtown Tower, their first hotel in Tokyo, under a long-term lease arrangement.[9] Other tenants include the international law firms Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy and Herbert Smith LLP.

The 5-floor retail Galleria, with Script error: No such module "convert". of stores, restaurants and shops includes the first Terence Conran restaurants in Japan, a wine bar (Coppola's Vinoteca) showcasing the wines of Francis Ford Coppola, and an outlet of high-end American food retailer Dean & DeLuca.

21_21 Design Sight

Tokyo Midtown is also the home of 21 21 Design Sight, a design gallery/workshop created by fashion designer Issey Miyake and architect Tadao Ando. "The idea was to create not only a museum that shows exhibits," says Ando, "but also a place for researching the potentiality of design as an element that enriches our daily life, a place that fosters the public's interest in design by arousing in them different sights and perspectives on how we can view the world and the objects surrounding us."[10] The building, designed by Ando, is on the edge of the park area, and features Script error: No such module "convert". of floor space, including two galleries and an attached cafe run by chef and restaurateur Takamasa Uetake. The split-level concrete structure includes a hand-sanded steel roof (whose design was inspired by Issey Miyake's A-POC ("A Piece of Cloth") concept) and Script error: No such module "convert". long glass panels.

History

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The site of Tokyo Midtown was the home of the Mōri clan during the Edo period. In 1873 the Imperial Japanese Army established a camp on the site, which became home to units of the 1st Division following the Russo-Japanese War. In 1946, the United States Army took over the site and it was re-purposed as officer housing. The site was returned to Japan in 1960 and became known as Camp Hinokicho (JGSDF parlance) and Hinokicho Air Base (JASDF parlance), housing the headquarters of the Japan Defense Agency and various other command and control functions for the Japan Self-Defense Forces for the next forty years.

In 1988, the Japanese government authorized a large-scale relocation of various government agencies in order to re-develop prime government land for commercial purposes. As part of this plan, it was decided in the 1990s to move the JDA headquarters and re-develop the site. The base was formally closed in May 2000 and its functions were relocated to Ichigaya. A consortium of developers including Mitsui Fudosan, Sekisui House, and several life insurance companies won a public tender to purchase the site, paving the way for its development as Tokyo Midtown. Construction began in 2004 and was completed in 2007.

See also

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References

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  5. "Corporate overview Template:Webarchive." Hudson Soft. Retrieved on July 12, 2010.
  6. "Head Office." Fujifilm. Retrieved on July 12, 2010.
  7. "FUJI XEROX Company Profile." Fuji Xerox. Retrieved on July 12, 2010.
  8. "FUJI XEROX Headquarters Map." Fuji Xerox. Retrieved on July 12, 2010.
  9. Statistics courtesy of Mitsui Fudosan Template:Webarchive
  10. From "Sight of the Times" by Gordon Kanki Knight, Wallpaper*, Issue #98 (April 2007)

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External links

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