Yoshito Hori Yoshito Hori Founder, Chairman and CEO at GLOBIS - TopicsExpress



          

Yoshito Hori Yoshito Hori Founder, Chairman and CEO at GLOBIS Corporation Tokyo: The Ultimate 21st-Century City? July 28, 2013 I’m often surprised by the negative views I hear about my hometown Tokyo when I travel overseas. Based only on Japan’s long economic malaise, many people who’ve never set foot in the place seem to have formed an image of Tokyo as an ugly, congested, polluted and boring city. The positive experiences of a South-African friend who recently visited me in Tokyo with his teenage daughter convinced me just how wrong-headed such preconceptions are. Father and daughter alike had nothing but good things to say about the city. In fact, their enthusiasm inspired me to make a list of the six things I like best about Tokyo. 1. Few traffic jams. Little pollution The Japanese built a network of elevated expressways crisscrossing Tokyo in preparation for the 1964 Olympics. This means most traffic passes above, rather than through, the city. A large and efficient network of subways and railways further reduces the number of cars at ground level. The result is clean air and a great environment for cyclists, pedestrians and joggers (always to be seen running around the Imperial Palace!). Who’d expect such a thing in the capital of the world’s greatest car-building nation? 2. Clean and safe Japanese people are very tidy. No one litters. Shopkeepers scrupulously scrub down the sidewalk outside their stores. Vandalism and graffiti are almost non-existent. There’s also zero street crime. Elementary school children commute to school unaccompanied. Women can walk anywhere at any time of day or night without fear. Indeed, one experience my South Africa friends really enjoyed was wandering the city streets late into the night. Tokyo isn’t just clean and tidy. It has no bad neighborhoods. 3. The most Michelin-starred restaurants There’s a huge range of eateries in Tokyo. As well as Japanese classics like sushi, tempura and sukiyaki, international cuisines from Thai and Korean to Italian and French are widely available. In the 2013 Michelin Guide, Tokyo had 14 three-star, 53 two-star and 175 one-star restaurants, making it the city with the most Michelin-starred restaurants in the world. Of course, no one can eat at Michelin-starred restaurants on a daily basis, but even Japanese fast food outlets like Tenya (tempura) or Yoshinoya (boiled beef on rice) offer healthy and tasty meals at reasonable prices. Let me go out on a limb here: In Tokyo, there’s no such thing as bad food. 4. Warm-hearted people Tokyo is a busy place, but people still have the time to be friendly. If you get lost in the subway, someone will always come up to help you find your way (though their English may not be the best). When it’s raining, restaurants will offer you a free umbrella when you leave. Forget something in a cab, shop or restaurant and it’ll be returned to you 99% of the time. In Tokyo, everyone gets made to feel thoroughly at home. 5. Exciting sub-cultures. Ancient traditions The favorite Tokyo neighborhoods of my South-African friend’s teenage daughter were Harajuku (a global center for teenage fashion); Akihabara (the world Mecca of manga and animation); and Tokyo Disneyland (the world’s most successful Disney theme park). For people less interested in funky new trends, traditional old Japan can be enjoyed in riverside Asakusa or temple-rich Yanaka. The city also has plenty of parks. Tokyo has something for everyone. 6. Constantly Changing City Big Japanese developers such as Mori Building and Mitsui Fudosan have created mixed-use developments like Roppongi Hills (2003) and Tokyo Midtown (2007). Combining offices, apartments, hotels and shops with restaurants, art galleries, movie theaters and green spaces, these developments constitute exciting new “cities within the city.” Mitsubishi Estate, another large developer, has spent a decade transforming Marunouchi, a formerly drab office district opposite Tokyo Station, into a European-style neighborhood of cafes, shops and tree-lined boulevards. The Tokyo Skytree—the world’s highest freestanding broadcasting tower at 634 meters (2,080 ft)—is a must-see. I guarantee it will blow your mind. Tokyo’s urban environment is getting better all the time! Ultimately, though, the most amazing thing about Tokyo must be its sheer size: At 37 million people, the metropolitan area has almost twice the population of Delhi, Mexico City, New York or Shanghai. Somehow Tokyo manages to fuse the teeming energy of a developing country capital where new things are always being created with the smooth running of a developed country capital. With more and more people around the world moving into megacities this century, I believe that Tokyo presents a fantastic example of an organic urban ecosystem that genuinely works. I’d encourage everyone on LinkedIn to come over and check out the biggest and—at least in my book—best city in the world. For me, Tokyo is the ultimate 21st-century city. How about you? What’s your favorite “most undervalued” city?
Posted on: Tue, 30 Jul 2013 00:50:05 +0000

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