Akihabara
a town known for being ahead of its time
Akihabara, usually called "Akiba," is famous all over the world as a place to purchase and try out electrical goods but the face of 'Akiba' is changing rapidly. In the near future a more balanced range of facilities including business premises, restaurants and shops with a scientific twist will start to appear.
The Cyber-town of today
The Tsukuba Express, a new train line connecting Akihabara with Tsukuba in Ibaraki Prefecture (north east of Tokyo) in just 45 minutes opened in August of 2005. Tsukuba City itself is well known for education opportunities, holding the Tsukuba Science Expo in 1985 as well as for its 'science town' - The Tsukuba Academic City. For these reasons, the Tsukuba Express is anticipated to be used by passengers with a high sensitivity to the ever changing world of information technology: ideal in that Akihabara is also undergoing a change in its base service sector
as it switches to focus on IT at the start of the 21st century.
When
building work in the area is completed, approximately 20 buildings will appear.
The Akihabara Daibiru (a whopping 31 stories in height) opened on a portion of
the Akihabara Crossfield, in front of JR Akihabara Station, in March, 2005 and
is a building embodying a plan to make Akihabara the center of the national IT
industry. Daibiru is aiming at securing for itself a business-academia collaboration
face as 18 institutes including a Tokyo University research facility and a private
institute for advanced applied research have already set up shop in the building
- employing just a few of the estimated 4000 businesspersons and academics the
building will host daily. In addition, academic meetings, symposiums and seminars
will be held in the facility's convention halls attracting participants from around
the globe.
The Akihabara UDX building also opened on another side of the Crossfield area
in March, 2005. Counting cafes, restaurants, show rooms, digital workshops, event
spaces and studios (1st to 4th floors) amongst its attractions, the majority of
the building is geared up for business as the 6th through 22nd floors is dedicated
office space and as a single floor covers about 1,400 tsubo, it is one of the
largest options for office floor space in the country.
Continuing with the building work, the Fujisoft ABC Akihabara Biru and the Orix
Akihabara Biru will be completed in the near future and, combined, are expected
to bring in approximately forty thousand further workers to the locale which,
when compared to other redeveloped areas such as Shiodome or Shinagawa, is said
to have an advantage due to its self administered concept as the "IT center" of
Japan.
A
Town at the Forefront of Industry
History
The modern day electrical district of Akihabara is, surprisingly, the former residential
area of minor warriors stationed here in the Japanese Edo period (1603-1867).
Since the start of the Meiji era (1868-1912) however, when electricity was slowly
made available in Japan, electric powered street lights lit up towns throughout
the nation. When the Japan Broadcasting Corporation started radio broadcasting
in 1926, radio usage rapidly spread as a means to both obtain information and
as a pastime. As a result, the wholesalers who dealt in electrical goods such
as electric wires, switchboards, switches and radio parts also developed their
businesses and grew in number. That said, during the war years it became almost
impossible to get hold of even the most basic of electrical materials as priority
on the war effort took its toll on the private sector. Even lamps were rationed.
When Tokyo was devastated in the March 1945 air raids Akihabara was reduced to
ashes.
The
Electrical Town
(that is and as was)
Approximately
250 electrics stores line the Chuo Dori Street to the west of JR Akihabara Station
and Kanda Myojin Dori Street and while the origins of the modern Akihabara dates
back to a 1951 black market, conducted in and around Surugadai and Ogawacho after
the war, the area as is was moved under the elevated railway tracks of JR Akihabara
Station by governmental law in later years when the boom in household appliances
was just around the corner.
One of symbols of wealth during Japan's period of high-growth and economic prosperity
was ownership of a home electric appliance and, as out dated as it sounds nowadays,
a black-and-white TV, an electric washing machine and an electric refrigerator
were "the three status symbols" of the age.
A little later, in the 1970s, some stores started to sell the then new fad item
of computers and the area focused to a large extent on the selling of electronic
parts. From this time, the sales of videos, telephone / answer phones, audio and
visual equipment and other more 'intelligent' home appliances has increased greatly.
On the other hand, the level of competition in Akihabara has decreased somewhat
as the electrical home appliance field was influenced by mass retailers developing
chains and discount stores.
Finally, when sales of personal computer related goods exceeded the sales of electrical
home appliances in 1994, Akihabara knew it had been once again reinvented - this
time as a cutting-edge multimedia town focusing on PCs, cellular phones and Internet
related items.
To demonstrate this fact fully, when Yodobashi Camera Multimedia AKIBA opens in
front of the east exit of JR Akihabara Station in September of 2005, its 27,000
square meters of retail space will write anther chapter in the history of 'Akiba'
as this, one of the largest home electronic appliance mass retailers in Japan
sets about attracting customers by the thousand, always with one eye on the future.
A
town for the 'otaku'
Maid
& Comics Cafes
As the Japanese game industry developed alongside the PC revolution of the 1980s
and 1990s, Akihabara started to attract many game playing 'maniacs' (otaku) and
in turn created "kosupure (cosplay) cafes," to reenact scenes from popular games
by having waitresses wear the same costumes as those in the actual games. As time
passed, some cafes had waitresses don maid uniforms and today sees around 10 or
so such places selling both drinks, the service by a 'maid' and the opportunity
to read comics to their visiting 'otaku.'
Attractions for Anime Fans
Anime fans oftentimes overlap with the other Akihabara 'geeks.' For that reason,
shops selling doujinshi (coterie magazines) by popular anime artists, often very
difficult to obtain, have been increasing in Akihabara in recent times. For collectors
though the fun does not stop there as a number of stores dedicate their premises
to the selling of trading cards, figure dolls, character goods and toys.
Statelessness
Space
According
to a 2003 survey by The Japan National Tourist Organization, 7% of visiting foreign
tourists visited Akihabara that year. For this reason, Akihabara Nishiguchi Shotengai
Shinko Kumiai established a special division dedicated to tourism and tourists
in November, 2004. Producing maps in English, Chinese and Korean, they distributed
these tourist friendly items to 120 places around Tokyo.
Probably because home appliances made in Japan have long been popular as the technical
capabilities of Japanese companies caught up with, and sometimes surpassed companies
in the same field from other nations, the "Made in Japan" stickers seen today
are very much a symbol of high quality meaning that many non-Japanese visiting
the capital, whether on business or for sightseeing, with the sole intention of
purchasing to take home radios, "walkmans" or stereos as souvenirs. Recognizing
this market, the number of duty-free shops and larger shops housing duty-free
floors have increased over the years making Akihabara a part of Tokyo with a 'stateless'
atmosphere.
Maps
Akihabara
PDF 187KB
Tokyo
Railway Map
PDF 812 KB
Tokyo
Subway Map
PDF 787 KB
Links
Tokyo Metoropolitan
Government
Tokyo Convention
& Visitors Bureau
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