Aeropolis 2001 Explained

Aeropolis 2001
Native Name:エアロポリス2001
Native Name Lang:jp
Status:Proposed
Building Type:Arcology Skyscraper
Architectural Style:Futurism
Height:2001m (6,565feet)
Location:Tokyo
Floor Count:500
Architecture Firm:Obayashi Corp.

The Aeropolis 2001 is a proposed 500-story high-rise building over Tokyo Bay in Japan, envisioned by Obayashi Corporation. With a height of 2001m (6,565feet), the mammoth structure would have been approximately five times as tall as the former World Trade Center in New York City.

The Aeropolis 2001 was proposed in 1989, amid a spate of similar projects for incredibly large buildings. All were proposed during the Japanese asset price bubble, which ended in the early 1990s. According to a 1995 article, the corporation still had plans for the structure, and gave a proposed height of 2079m (6,821feet).[1]

At the time it proposed Aeropolis 2001, Obayashi Corp. also proposed building a city on the moon by 2050.[2] Newspapers have reported little on either proposal since 1995.

Proposed details

Newspapers reported that plans called for the building to have 500 floors accommodating over 300,000 working inhabitants and 140,000 live-in residents. The structure was expected to be mixed-use, including restaurants, offices, apartments, cinemas, schools, hospitals, and post offices. It would have offered eleven square kilometers of floor space.[3]

A shuttle lift, with 300 seats, would have gone from the ground floor to the top floor in 15 minutes, and stopped at every 40th floor. The proposal called for the tower to be fully sustainable and air conditioned.

See also

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Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Nowhere to go but up; Huge skyscrapers only solution, supporters argue. Ottawa Citizen. 1995-02-20. GOEBEL, JOCHEN. 12C.
  2. Web site: 『月面都市2050』構想 . 26 November 2008 . Obayashi Corp. . Obayashi Corp. . https://web.archive.org/web/20090327034933/http://www.obayashi.co.jp/kikan_obayashi/tsuki/p01.html . 2009-03-27 . dead .
  3. News: Japan leaves the pavement 4km below. 1990-12-26. Herald Sun. Franklin, M.