109 (department store) explained

is a department store in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan. The store is operated by SHIBUYA109 Entertainment Corporation, a subsidiary of the Tokyu Group.

History and description

The building, located just across the street from Shibuya Station, opened in April 1979. The architect was Minoru Takeyama. Tokyu, the building's operator, designed the building as a "Fashion Community" containing small retail stores targeting the early-30s female consumer. Tokyu intended the store to compete with Seibu Department Stores, which was making inroads into the Shibuya area.[1]

The name of the building, 109, is a form of word play (goroawase, specifically numerical substitution) and is taken from the Japanese characters (meaning 10) and kyū (9) as in Tōkyū. The interior of the building is designed to move shoppers in a loop on each floor from the elevators past various shops. A movie theater was originally planned for the top floor, but the fire department would not grant approval due to emergency-evacuation routes not meeting appropriate standards. Although originally targeted at women in their 30s, the building later became more known as a sanctuary for young women from the gyaru subculture.[1] [2]

The original emoji set from SoftBank Mobile (as used by iOS prior to the Unicode emoji standardisation) included one for Shibuya 109, . As a corporate icon, it was not assigned a standard Unicode code point, but it continues to be supported by Twemoji at its location in SoftBank's Private Use Area.[3] Due to its prominent location in Shibuya, the building appears in various Japanese media like anime and video games; however, since 109 is a trademarked brand, the number is usually altered.

Collaboration with Ayumi Hamasaki

In April 2023, the 109 building was used for Ayumi Hamasaki's "25th Anniversary Shibuya109 Campaign", showcasing the artist both on the tower and through participating stores.[4] Famed for being an inspiration for gyaru culture in the 2000s, Hamasaki collaborated with numerous brands for limited edition clothing, merchandise, and confectionary, along with a playlist of her music being used across the building. A ViVi representative described the event as "a perfect envisioning of Ayu's world", and "a treat for visitors, regardless of whether they're a big fan or not".[5]

Stores

Opened as 109-2 in April 1979, renamed to 109Men's in March 2011 before being renamed once again to its current name.[6]

Created in March 2006 as Shibuya 109 Dreams, later recreated into the current 109.[7]

References

35.6595°N 139.699°W

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bull, Brett, "Decades as Tokyo's tower of girl power", Japan Times, January 22, 2009, p. 17.
  2. Nagata, Kazuaki, "Shibuya 109 eyes rebound: Fashion landmark wants to make last year's sales drop a mere blip", Japan Times, May 14, 2010, p. 7.
  3. Web site: Shibuya Emoji . Emojipedia . Emojipedia . Emojipedia.
  4. Web site: 2023-03-30 . デビュー25周年を迎える「浜崎あゆみ」とSHIBUYA109がコラボレーション!『ayumi hamasaki 25th Anniversary SHIBUYA109 Campaign』 - 株式会社SHIBUYA109エンタテイメント . 2023-07-15 . ja.
  5. Web site: 2023-04-17 . 浜崎あゆみデビュー25周年を記念しSHIBUYA109とのコラボレーションが実現!ayuの世界観満載の空間が広がっていました…♡ . 2023-07-15 . vivi . ja.
  6. Web site: April 28, 2018 . Shibuya's 109 Men's gets new look with 'scramble'-overseeing rooftop, dining floor and name . live . 2022-04-05 . Japan Today . en. https://web.archive.org/web/20180501161618/https://japantoday.com/category/features/lifestyle/shibuya%E2%80%99s-109-men%E2%80%99s-gets-new-look-with-scramble-overseeing-rooftop-food-floor-and-name . 2018-05-01 .
  7. Web site: 「SHIBUYA109ドリームス」静岡にオープン . 2008-01-24 . Japanese.