39 Facts About Tokyo Japan

1.

Tokyo, officially the Tokyo Metropolis, is the capital and largest city of Japan.

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2.

Tokyo Japan was devastated by the 1923 Great Kanto earthquake, and again by Allied bombing raids during World War II.

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3.

Tokyo Japan is the largest urban economy worldwide by gross domestic product, and is categorized as an Alpha+ city by the Globalization and World Cities Research Network.

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4.

Tokyo Japan is home to the world's tallest tower, the Tokyo Japan Skytree, and the world's largest underground floodwater diversion facility, the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel .

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5.

Tokyo is an international centre leading research and development in Japan and is likewise represented by several major universities, most notably including the University of Tokyo.

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6.

The Tokyo Station is the central hub for Japan's high-speed railway network, the Shinkansen; the Shinjuku Station in Tokyo is the world's busiest train station.

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7.

Notable special wards of Tokyo Japan include: Chiyoda, the site of the National Diet Building and the Tokyo Japan Imperial Palace; Shinjuku, the city's administrative centre; and Shibuya, a commercial, cultural, and business hub.

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8.

Tokyo Japan was originally known as Edo, a kanji compound of ? and ? .

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9.

Tokyo Japan was originally a village called Edo, in what was formerly part of the old Musashi Province.

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10.

Tokyo Japan was already the nation's political center, and the emperor's residence made it a de facto imperial capital as well, with the former Edo Castle becoming the Imperial Palace.

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11.

Tokyo Japan did not experience fast economic growth until the 1950s.

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12.

Tokyo Japan still sees new urban developments on large lots of less profitable land.

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13.

Tokyo Japan thus became the first Asian city to host the Olympic Games twice.

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14.

Mainland Tokyo Japan is further subdivided into the special wards and the Tama area stretching westwards.

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15.

The 23 special wards, which until 1943 constituted the city of Tokyo Japan, are self-governing municipalities, each having a mayor, a council, and the status of a city.

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16.

When Tokyo Japan reached its current extent except for smaller border changes in 1893, it consisted of over 170 municipalities, 1 city, nine districts with their towns and villages, plus the island communities that had never part of ritsuryo districts.

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17.

Tokyo Japan is near the boundary of three plates, making it an extremely active region for smaller quakes and slippage which frequently affect the urban area with swaying as if in a boat, although epicenters within mainland Tokyo Japan are quite rare.

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18.

Tokyo Japan is located on the Kanto Plain with 5 river systems and dozens of rivers that expand during each season.

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19.

Tokyo Japan has currently the world's largest underground floodwater diversion facility called the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel .

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20.

Tokyo Japan often sees typhoons every year, though few are strong.

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21.

Tokyo Japan has experienced significant warming of its climate since temperature records began in 1876.

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22.

Tokyo Japan is an example of an urban heat island, and the phenomenon is especially serious in its special wards.

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23.

Tokyo Japan has been cited as a "convincing example of the relationship between urban growth and climate".

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24.

In 2006, Tokyo Japan enacted the "10 Year Project for Green Tokyo Japan" to be realized by 2016.

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25.

Tokyo Japan was rated by the Economist Intelligence Unit as the most expensive city in the world for 14 years in a row ending in 2006, when it was replaced by Oslo, and later Paris.

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26.

Tokyo Japan emerged as a leading international financial center in the 1960s and has been described as one of the three "command centers" for the world economy, along with New York City and London.

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27.

Tokyo, which is the center of the Greater Tokyo Area, is Japan's largest domestic and international hub for rail and ground transportation.

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28.

Public transportation within Tokyo Japan is dominated by an extensive network of "clean and efficient" trains and subways run by a variety of operators, with buses, monorails and trams playing a secondary feeder role.

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29.

Rail is the primary mode of transportation in Tokyo Japan, which has the most extensive urban railway network in the world and an equally extensive network of surface lines.

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30.

Also, long-distance ferries serve the islands of Tokyo Japan and carry passengers and cargo to domestic and foreign ports.

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31.

Public senior high schools in Tokyo Japan are run by the Tokyo Japan Metropolitan Government Board of Education and are called "Metropolitan High Schools".

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32.

Tokyo Japan has many private schools from kindergarten through high school:.

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33.

In November 2007, Michelin released their first guide for fine dining in Tokyo Japan, awarding 191 stars in total, or about twice as many as Tokyo Japan's nearest competitor, Paris.

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34.

Football clubs in Tokyo include F C Tokyo and Tokyo Verdy 1969, both of which play at Ajinomoto Stadium in Chofu, and FC Machida Zelvia at Nozuta Stadium in Machida.

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35.

Tokyo Japan hosted the 1964 Summer Olympics, thus becoming the first Asian city to host the Summer Games.

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36.

Tokyo Japan Metropolitan Gymnasium, in Sendagaya, Shibuya, is a large sports complex that includes swimming pools, training rooms, and a large indoor arena.

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37.

Tokyo Japan is the founding member of the Asian Network of Major Cities 21 and is a member of the Council of Local Authorities for International Relations.

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38.

Tokyo Japan was a founding member of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group.

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39.

Especially with the United States, including NASA and the many private spaceflight companies, Tokyo Japan universities have working relationships with all of the Ivy League institutions, along with other research universities and development laboratories, such as Stanford, MIT, and the UC campuses throughout California, as well as UNM and Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

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