Campaigners say turning Meiji Jingu Gaien into a commercial hub will destroy 1,000 trees and area’s architectural heritage

It is a leafy oasis in a city smothered in paved streets and concrete high-rises; a mecca for sports fans who flock to baseball and rugby matches at its two historic stadiums; and a place of tranquility where, while attending a ballgame in 1978, Haruki Murakami decided to become a novelist.

But if developers and the Tokyo metropolitan government get their way, Meiji Jingu Gaien, a popular park in the centre of Tokyo, will be bulldozed and turned into a commercial hub dominated by two skyscrapers, a hotel and new sports venues.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

When my family in Sudan caught Covid, the sheer injustice of fate sank in | Nesrine Malik

Seeing loved ones turned away from hospitals while UK politicians wasted resources,…

Pupil arrested after teacher stabbed to death at school in France

Woman attacked in classroom at Saint-Thomas-d’Aquin school near Bordeaux Police have arrested…

Shielding UK families from fuel bills crisis ‘could cost £100bn’; Brent crude back over $100 – business live

Scottish Power chief proposes capping household energy costs at about £2,000 a…