Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pacific Century Place Marunouchi (パシフィックセンチュリープレイス丸の内, Pashifikku Senchurī Pureisu Marunouchi) is a skyscraper in Marunouchi, Chiyoda, Tokyo. The Four Seasons Hotel Tokyo at Marunouchi is within the building. [1] The building also houses Aeroméxico's Japan offices. [2]
Four Seasons Hotels Limited, trading as Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, is a Canadian luxury hotel and resort company [3] headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [4] Four Seasons currently operates more than 100 hotels and resorts worldwide. [ 5 ]
Tokyo Otemachi 1-chome Redevelopment Bldgs 20100618-001. Ōtemachi (大手町) is a district of Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. It is located north of Tokyo Station and Marunouchi, east of the Imperial Palace, west of Nihonbashi and south of Kanda. It is the location of the former site of the village of Shibazaki, the most ancient part of Tokyo.
Marunouchi in the aftermath of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake; the NYK building (foreground), the Marunouchi Building (midground), Tokyo Station (background). In 1590, before shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu entered Edo Castle, the area now known as Marunouchi was an inlet of Tokyo Bay and had the name Hibiya.
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.
The two Keiyō Line platforms serving four tracks are four stories below ground some hundreds of meters to the south of the main station with moving walkways to serve connecting passengers. The whole complex is linked by an extensive system of underground passageways that merge with surrounding commercial buildings and shopping centers. Tokyo ...
1: M Marunouchi Line: for Ginza, Shinjuku, and Ogikubo: 2: M Marunouchi Line for Ochanomizu and Ikebukuro: 3: T Tozai Line: for Nishi-funabashi JB Sōbu Line (Local) for Tsudanuma TR Tōyō Rapid Railway Line for Toyo-Katsutadai: 4: for Takadanobaba and Nakano JB Chūō Line (Local) for Mitaka: 5: C Chiyoda Line: for Kasumigaseki and Yoyogi-uehara
Excepting two seasons in which they were in the second tier, Mitsubishi/Urawa has always competed in the top flight, thereby being the club with the most top flight seasons total. Mitsubishi (Amateur era) Division 1 (JSL and JSL Div.1): 1965–66, 1988–89; Division 2 (JSL Div.2): 1989–90; Division 1 (JSL Div.1): 1990–91, 1991–92