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Nine Developments Selected as Winners of the ULI Global Awards for Excellence
Nine impressive developments from around the world have been selected as winners of the 2021 ULI Global Awards for Excellence.
October 5, 2021
Tokyo study finds ancient institutions to be as important as massive investment in disaster-prevention infrastructure in protecting Japanese society from natural catastrophe
For more information, contact [email protected]
TOKYO ( 5 October 2021) – An urban resilience study by the Urban Land Institute (ULI) shows how culture can contribute to the resilience of a city by driving mutual cooperation among residents, supporting the high costs of infrastructure investment and inspiring private developers to accept and exceed some of the strictest building regulation in the world.
The study, In the Eye of the Storm, looks at the experience of Tokyo in responding to centuries of natural disasters – typhoons, floods, earthquakes, volcanos, tsunamis and droughts. The city’s active neighbourhoods – known as chonaikai – are shown to provide an enduring social nucleus around which disaster preparation and response can be organised. Their matsuri festivals reinforce community ties while the festivals’ disaster-prevention groups remain active all year round. Japan’s volunteer fire brigades, the shobodan, promote awareness of local hazards and act as local leaders in disaster prevention.
Tokyo’s investors and landlords respond to the need for resilient urban design with buildings that generally exceed already high official standards. Their emergency infrastructure tends to serve the wider neighbourhood, creating a self-contained bubble that allows the neighbourhood to continue to function even if utilities and communications links are cut during a disaster. The report highlights Mitsubishi Estate Group’s development of the Marunouchi, Otemachi, and Yurakucho areas, the city’s primary central business district; Mori Building Company’s Roppongi Neighbourhood and Mitsui Fudosan Co.’s modernisation of the historic Nihonbashi business district.
Improvements in resilience recoup their construction costs and create opportunities. Completion of the Greater Tokyo Outer Area Discharge Channel allowed Kasukabe City to evolve as a successful logistics centre, while the Yokohama International Stadium was made possible through the Tsurumi River Detention Basin.
ULI Asia Pacific President David Faulkner says, “Japan has responded to its geographical vulnerability to natural disasters with a cultural dynamic that has all parts of society pulling together for the common good. That includes its major developers, inspired to act as good corporate citizens and setting high standards for others to follow. Their flagship projects are showcases of resilient design.”
The Japanese capital is Asia’s largest urban area, with 37 million inhabitants, but also the third most threatened in the world by natural disaster. Tokyo’s vulnerability is due to geologic fault lines, its exposure to extreme weather and its proximity to inland mountain ranges and their fast-flowing rivers. Tokyo has responded to its vulnerability with:
Tokyo’s success in managing natural disasters can be seen in the limited levels of damage caused by the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011 and 2019’s Super Typhoon Hagibis. The report notes that 2017’s Typhoon Lan flooded just 202 homes compared with a similar level of rainfall from a typhoon in 1991 that flooded more than 31,000.
More information about the report is available at knowledge.uli.org/reports/research-reports/2021/in-the-eye-of-the-storm-how-centuries-of-disaster-make-tokyo-a-case-study-in-urban-resilience.
ENDS
Notes to Editors
Journalists are invited to listen to a discussion of the issues raised by the report on Tuesday 5th October, 4:00pm – 5:00pm HKT. Click here for further details. Contact [email protected] in advance to ensure complimentary registration, or a recording can be made available upon request.
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