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Yumenoshima (夢の島, lit. Dream Island or Island of Dreams ) is a district in Kōtō, Tokyo , Japan, consisting of an artificial island built using waste landfill in Tokyo Bay . It is not the first such island in the bay (see Umi-no-mori ja:海の森公園 ).
Yumeshima (夢洲) is an artificial island in Osaka Bay. It is part of Konohana-ku (此花区), one of the 24 wards of Osaka, Japan. It is near the mouth of the Yodo River. When all the landfill is completed the total area will be 390 hectares (960 acres). It will be the site of Expo 2025, a World's Fair to be held in 2025. [1]
Yumenoshima Park (夢の島公園, Yumenoshima Kōen) is a sports park in Yumenoshima, Kōtō Ward, Tokyo, Japan. It was made by improving a landfill site called Yumenoshima, which was the final disposal site for garbage from 1957 until 1967. Yumenoshima was the site of the archery event of the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2020.
The number of vacant residential properties in Japan has hit 8.99 million, an increase of 500,0000 from 2018 and an 80% surge from 20 years ago.
The reclaimed land now hosts Yumenoshima Park with numerous recreational facilities. Hakkei Island (0.24 km 2 (0.093 sq mi)), formerly Landfill Number 14, was constructed in 1985 and is home to Yokohama Hakkeijima Sea Paradise. [9] Other artificial islands include Heiwa, Katsushima, Shōwa, Keihin, and Higashiōgi islands.
Real estate companies based in Tokyo (3 C, 24 P) Pages in category "Real estate companies of Japan" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
As of 2018, Mitsubishi Estate has the most valuable portfolio in the Japanese real estate industry, with a total value of approx. 7.4 trillion yen, much of which is located in the Marunouchi district of Tokyo. [2] MEC owns Japan's third tallest building, the Yokohama Landmark Tower, as well as the Sanno Park Tower and Marunouchi Building in Tokyo.
Toyosu as seen from Harumi Ohashi. Toyosu (豊洲) is neighborhood in Kōtō, Tokyo.Toyosu has six numbered chome ("blocks"). It is the location of the wholesale Toyosu Market, which took the role of the Tsukiji fish market after it became solely a tourist attraction.