Tokyo Big Sight
Tokyo Big Sight (Tokyo International Exhibition Center) | |
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Address | 3-11-1 Ariake, Koto-ku, Tokyo, 135-0063, Japan |
Coordinates | 35°37′49″N 139°47′37″E / 35.63028°N 139.79361°E |
Owner | Tokyo Big Sight Inc. owned ultimately by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government |
Operator | Tokyo Big Sight Inc. |
Inaugurated | 1 April 1996 |
Opened | 1 April 1996 |
Construction cost | ¥198.5 billion (¥206 billion in 2019 yen[1]) |
Classroom-style seating | 18-882 |
Banquet/ballroom | 882 |
Theatre seating | 20-1,100 |
Enclosed space | |
• Total space | 102,887 square metres (1,107,470 sq ft) |
• Exhibit hall floor | East Exhibition Hall: 51,380 m2 (553,000 sq ft) (6 halls) West Exhibition Hall: 29,280 m2 (315,200 sq ft) (4 halls) Atrium: 2,000 m2 (22,000 sq ft) Rooftop Exhibition Area: 6,000 m2 (65,000 sq ft) Outdoor Exhibition Area: 9,000 m2 (97,000 sq ft) |
• Breakout/meeting | Conference Tower: 5,137 square metres (55,290 sq ft) (2 halls and 22 rooms) East Exhibition Hall: 90 m2 (970 sq ft) (1 room) |
• Ballroom | 1,700 square metres (18,000 sq ft) (1 room) |
Parking | Permanent: About 1,448 units (2 underground and 2 outdoor areas) Temporary: maximum 1,932 units (1 outdoor) |
Public transit access | Tokyo Big Sight Station (Yurikamome) Kokusai-tenjijo Station (Rinkai Line) |
Website | |
www |
Tokyo Big Sight (東京ビッグサイト, Tōkyō biggu saito), officially known as Tokyo International Exhibition Center (東京国際展示場, Tōkyō kokusai tenjijō), is a convention and exhibition center in Tokyo, Japan, and the largest one in the country. Opened in April 1996, the center is located in the Ariake Minami district of Tokyo Waterfront City (臨海副都心, Rinkai fukutoshin) on the Tokyo Bay waterfront. Its most iconic feature is the visually distinctive Conference Tower. The name Tokyo Big Sight in Japanese eventually became the official name, and it also became the name of the operator in April 2003.
The center was a planned venue for the 2020 Summer Olympics hosting wrestling, fencing and taekwondo events, but cutting of public funds forced the organization committee to choose an alternative location for these events, instead serving as the main broadcasting center and press center for the Games.[2][failed verification]
Location and components
Located on the shore of Tokyo Bay, about 30 minutes by rail from Tokyo Station, Big Sight is Japan's largest international convention venue.[3] Its most distinctive feature is the unique architecture of its 58 m-high eight-storey Conference Tower. The site utilizes steel frame with reinforced concrete construction, boasting a total floor area of 230,873 m2 which outsizes Makuhari Messe's floor space by half,[4] and of which 35% is indoors. The convention center is divided into three main areas, each with their own restaurants and other supporting facilities: The East Exhibition Hall, the West Exhibition Hall and the Conference Tower.[5]
Conference Tower
The architectural element most associated with the Tokyo Big Sight name, the glass and titanium-panelled Conference Tower appears as a set of four inverted pyramids mounted upon large supports. The first floor comprises an 1100-seat reception hall and four conference rooms of varying size. The second floor comprises the Entrance Plaza which is the main access area, the glass-roofed Event Plaza, the Entrance Hall which leads to the exhibition halls proper, and the Exhibition Plaza.[6] There are no floors three through five due to the structure's above-ground stature.
Floors six and seven can be directly accessed via escalator from the second-floor Entrance Hall, and comprise the main convention facilities of the Tower. The sixth floor houses ten conference rooms of small to medium size, some of which can be merged into larger spaces by removing intervening partitions.[6] Floor seven houses the 1000-seat International Conference Room as well as three conference rooms of much smaller size. Floor eight houses five conference rooms.
Scattered around the Tower's vicinity are public art pieces, most of which are works by international artists such as Claes Oldenburg and his wife Coosje Van Bruggen, Michael Craig-Martin and Lee U-Fan. These include a giant sculpture of a saw,[7] a large stylized pond and three marble beds.[8]
East Exhibition Hall
The East Exhibition Hall's main layout consists of a central 600 m-long two-tiered galleria, flanked on both sides by three mostly identical exhibition halls, and has underground parking available.[9] The overall height of the structure is three storeys, with the galleria reaching two storeys. The glass-roofed galleria is equipped with moving walkways for easier movement, food outlets, escalators, electronic signboards and a host of other relevant facilities.
Each hall has a mobile roof that enables exhibitors to control the amount of sunlight coming through, recessed electronic and control service pits at regular intervals (six meters), a show office, four meeting rooms and a dressing room. It is possible to merge a hall with adjacent halls on the same side, allowing for a maximum continuous floor space three times the capacity of a single hall, or a grand total of 26,010 m2.
Unlike its West counterpart, the East Exhibition Hall is not located next to the main Conference Tower area.
West Exhibition Hall
The West Exhibition Hall's layout consists of four internal halls surrounding a central two-tiered Atrium. Halls one and two occupy the first floor, and are each equipped with a single meeting room, two show offices and seven meeting rooms. If necessary, they can be merged with the glass-roofed atrium area to maximize all available exhibition space. Halls three and four are individually smaller than the first floor halls, as the rest of the space not taken up by the Atrium's upper area is largely the rooftop exhibition area.
Adjacent to the West Exhibition Hall is an outdoor exhibition area, which like the rooftop area overlooks the waterfront. Like the other exhibition areas in the Tokyo Big Sight, it is possible to combine both upper halls and both spaces together to create a single continuous floor area. All in all, the West Exhibition Hall boasts in total six show offices, twenty-three meeting rooms and three dressing rooms. The gross total floor area of the Hall stands at 46,280 m2.
Construction
Contracted by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government's Bureau of Finance, the construction of the entire site was handled by eight contractors in total, among them companies such as the Hazama and Shimizu Corporations. Construction began in October 1992 and was finished in October 1995. The total contract was worth 40,392 million yen.[4] Forty-five percent of that sum went to Hazama, the sole contractor of the Tower segment.
Then Governor of Tokyo Shunichi Suzuki was present at the 1994 lifting-up ceremony on June 30, which initiated the raising the Tower's 6500-ton main structure above ground,[4] a process which took three days to complete using a computer-guided system that precisely jacked the structure up into place.[10] A 250-ton aerial escalator was installed later to formally link the raised structure to the ground floors.
See also
References
- ^ 1868 to 1938: Williamson J., Nominal Wage, Cost of Living, Real Wage and Land Rent Data for Japan 1831-1938, 1939 to 1945: Bank of Japan Historical Statistics Afterwards, Japanese Historical Consumer Price Index numbers based on data available from the Japanese Statistics Bureau. Japan Historical Consumer Price Index (CPI) – 1970 to 2014 Retrieved 30 July 2014. For between 1946 and 1970, from "昭和戦後史". Retrieved 2015-01-24.
- ^ "Venue Plan". Tokyo 2020 Bid Committee. Archived from the original on July 27, 2013. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ^ 展示会産業概論 [Overview of exhibition industry] (PDF) (in Japanese). Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. March 2014. p. 98.
- ^ a b c "Tokyo International Exhibition Center Congress Tower". Hazama. Archived from the original on 2003-08-04.
- ^ "Tokyo Big Sight". Business Events Tokyo. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
- ^ a b "Conference Tower". Tokyo Big Sight. Archived from the original on 2004-11-07.
- ^ Oldenburg, Claes; Bruggen, Coosje van. "Saw, Sawing". oldenburgvanbruggen.com. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
- ^ "Works of Art". Tokyo Big Sight. Archived from the original on 2015-01-04. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
- ^ "Floor Map". Tokyo Big Sight. Archived from the original on 2015-01-04. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
- ^ "Offices, Industrial and Commercial Facilities". Hazama. Archived from the original on 2003-08-04.
External links
- Official website (in English)
- Tokyo Big Sight Map
- Odaiba
- Buildings and structures completed in 1996
- Buildings and structures completed in 1995
- Convention centers in Japan
- Buildings and structures in Koto, Tokyo
- Event venues established in 1996
- Venues of the 2020 Summer Olympics
- Inverted pyramids
- High-tech architecture
- Pyramids in Japan
- Olympic International Broadcast Centres