Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Kasumigaseki Building

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Status
  
Complete

Completed
  
1968

Roof
  
156 meters (512 ft)

Floors
  
36

Opened
  
April 1968

Type
  
Mixed-use

Opening
  
April 1968

Height
  
147 m, 156 m to tip

Construction started
  
March 1965

Architect
  
Kiyoshi Mutō

Kasumigaseki Building httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons88

Location
  
3-2-5 Kasumigaseki Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan

Owners
  
Mitsui Fudosan, Kasumi Kaikan Incorporated Association

Similar
  
Toranomon Station, Kasumigaseki Station, Shinjuku Mitsui Building, World Trade Center, Kokkai‑gijidō‑mae Station

The Kasumigaseki Building (霞が関ビル, Kasumigaseki biru) is a 36-story skyscraper located in Kasumigaseki, Chiyoda, Tokyo. Completed in 1968, the building is widely regarded as the first modern office skyscraper in Japan. The reason high-rise buildings were not built in the country earlier was that Japan's Building Standard Law set an absolute height limit of 31 meters (102 ft) until 1963, when the limit was abolished in favor of a Floor Area Ratio limit.

Contents

Map of Kasumigaseki Building, 3 Chome-2-5 %E9%9C%9E%E3%82%B1%E9%96%A2 Chiyoda-ku, T%C5%8Dky%C5%8D-to 100-6001, Japan

Kasumigaseki building


Tenants

The Asian Development Bank Institute has its head office on the 8th floor of the Kasumigaseki Building. On the same floor, the Asian Development Bank has its Japan offices. PricewaterhouseCoopers has offices on the 15th floor of the building.

At one time All Nippon Airways had its headquarters in the building. At one time Mitsui Chemicals had its headquarters in the building. In July 1978, when Nippon Cargo Airlines first began, it operated within a single room inside All Nippon Airways's space in the Kasumigaseki Building.

Two airlines, Garuda Indonesia and Union des Transports Aériens, at one time had offices in the building.

The Kasumigaseki Building is the main subject of the film Chōkōsō no Akebono, which was backed by Kajima Construction, the company that built the Kasumigaseki Building.

References

Kasumigaseki Building Wikipedia