Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Skyscraper hotels in Tokyo" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total. ... Shinjuku Park Tower; Shiodome Media Tower; T.
Keio Plaza Hotel (京王プラザホテル, Keiō puraza hoteru) is a chain of hotels in Japan, the largest of which is its flagship hotel in the Nishi-Shinjuku district in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan. The Keio Plaza Hotel is featured in the 1984 film The Return of Godzilla and the 1991 film Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah , where it was partially destroyed.
The Park Hyatt Tokyo hotel on the top was the main setting of the Sofia Coppola film Lost In Translation. The building was depicted as being destroyed by a UFO in the film Godzilla 2000 . A version of the building was included as part of the Asian tileset in the city building simulation game Sim City 3000 and named as Futa-Ishii Plaza.
Tokyu Kabukicho Tower (東急歌舞伎町タワー, Tōkyū Kabukichō Tawā) is a 48-storey skyscraper located in the Kabukichō district of Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan. The 225 m (738 ft) tower was designed by Yuko Nagayama & Associates and developed by Shimizu Corporation. It was completed in 2023 as Japan's 19th tallest building. [1]
The Prince Hotels, Inc. (株式会社プリンスホテル, Kabushiki-gaisha Purinsu Hoteru) is the name of a hotel chain company headquartered in Toshima-ku, Tokyo, Japan. It is a subsidiary of Seibu Holdings, Inc. Together with Seibu Railway , Prince Hotels is the core company of Seibu Group .
The original proposal in 1993 [2] included one 77-story, 338 metres (1,109 ft) office tower; two 66-floor, 245 metres (804 ft) residential towers; and one 50 floor, 190 metres (623 ft) residential tower. [5] [6] The 77-story office tower would have been Japan's tallest building, taking the title from the Azabudai Hills Mori JP Tower. [7]
Tokyo Cross Park North Tower 230 (755) 46 2024 2030 Chiyoda: To be built on the site of the 129-metre (423-foot) Imperial Hotel Tower; A 145-metre (476-foot) Main Building will be built next to it, replacing the current 61-metre (200-foot) Imperial Hotel Tokyo Main Building (scheduled for completion in 2036) [154] Yaesu 2-Chōme
The company's first high-rise project was the Shinjuku Sumitomo Building, completed in 1974. This building became the company's head office. At the time of its completion, it was the tallest building in Tokyo (but was overtaken by the nearby Shinjuku Mitsui Building several months later), and its elevators were the fastest in the world. [5]