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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Sumitomo Fudosan Roppongi Grand Tower

The Sumitomo Fudosan Roppongi Grand Tower (住友不動産六本木グランドタワー) is a 231 m (roughly 758 ft) commercial skyscraper located in Roppongi, Minato ward, Tokyo.

The 40-story tower is a result of the Roppongi 3-chome East Side Project (六本木三丁目東地区プロジェクト, Roppongi san-chome higashi chiku purojekuto). Completed in September 2016, it is the largest commercial office building in Sumitomo Realty & Development's (住友不動産) property portfolio, a real estate developer that owns and manages over 200 office properties in central Tokyo.

Construction

It is located in the Roppongi district of Tokyo adjacent to the Izumi Garden Tower, also owned by Sumitomo Realty, on a site that used to house the former IBM Japan Head Office Building (87.4m, 1991) and the former Roppongi Prince Hotel, closed in 2006.

The building was designed by Nikken Sekkei Ltd. and built by a joint venture between Obayashi Corporation and Taisei Corporation.

Facilities

Built on a sloping site with a car passenger entrance and main atrium on the 4th floor, the 1st floor of the main office tower will be directly connected to Roppongi-itchōme Station on the Tokyo Metro Namboku Line.

Office tenants

Floors 10 to 27 and 31 to 43 are designated as commercial office space. Publicly accessible retail and restaurants will occupy floors 2 and 3. The tower is the current headquarters of TV Tokyo Holdings Corporation, including TV Tokyo and the TX Network.

Residences

The main tower is joined by a 27-storey 109 meter residential building.

See also

References

  1. ^ Sumitomo Fudosan Roppongi Grand Tower Outline, Sumitomo Realty & Development
  2. ^ Sumitomo Fudosan Roppongi Grand Tower, Emporis
  3. ^ "Roppongi 3-chome East Side Project". Sumitomo Realty. Sumitomo Realty & Development Co. Ltd. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  4. ^ Kuwako, Katsuyo. "Tokyo building boom causes debt fatigue as Sumitomo yields rise". No. 18 August 2015. Japan Times. Bloomberg. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  5. ^ Roppongi 3-chome East District Redevelopment Archived 2016-03-22 at the Wayback Machine Tokyo Metropolitan Government (in Japanese)