Kasumigaseki Common Gate

Mixed-use in Tokyo, Japan
Kasumigaseki Common Gate
霞が関コモンゲート
Map
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeMixed-use
Location3-2-1 Kasumigaseki
Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
Construction startedJanuary 2005
Completed2007
OpeningOctober 2007
Height
Roof176 meters (577 ft)
Technical details
Floor count38 above ground
3 below ground
Design and construction
Architect(s)Kume Kensetsu, Taisei Kensetsu, Shin Nihon Steel
Structural engineerTaisei Kensetsu, Shin Nihon Steel, Nihon Densetsu, Mitsubishi Heavy Industry

The Kasumigaseki Common Gate (霞が関コモンゲート, Kasumigaseki Komon Geito) are twin tower buildings located in Kasumigaseki, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. The buildings consist of East Tower and West Tower.[1] Together with the adjacent Kasumigaseki Building, the first modern office skyscraper in Japan, the twin towers are landmarks in the Toranomon and Kasumigaseki area. The buildings are directly connected to Toranomon Station of Tokyo Metro Ginza Line.

East Tower

East Tower is owned by the Japanese Government and is occupied by Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology and Board of Audit. The building is 33 stories or 156 meters high and the total floor area is 114,600 square meters.[1]

West Tower

The Japanese Government and private sectors co-own West Tower. The lower half of the building is a governmental floors and is occupied by Financial Services Agency. Major tenants of the upper half are Teijin, Daiwa SB Investment, Aichi University Tokyo Office, Toho Tenax, MODEC, Tokuyama Corporation,[2] K&L Gates Tokyo Office, Sugimura & Partners, and Kazan Kai (one of the co-owners). The building is 38 stories or 176 meters high and the total floor area is 118,700 square meters.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Kasumigaseki R7 Project" (PDF) (Press release). Tokyo Tatemono. June 29, 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2014.
  2. ^ "Business Sites in Japan." Tokuyama Corporation. Retrieved on February 13, 2015

External links

  • Official Web Site (in Japanese)

35°40′18″N 139°44′55″E / 35.6716°N 139.7485°E / 35.6716; 139.7485

  • v
  • t
  • e
Skyscrapers and towers in Tokyo
Completed
Over 300 m
200–300 m
180–200 m
160–180 m
  • Akasaka Biz Tower (179.3 m, 2008)
  • Sumitomo Fudosan Mita Twin Buildings (179.3 m, 2006)
  • Marunouchi Building (179 m, 2002)
  • W-Comfort Towers (178.5 m, 2004)
  • Marunouchi Trust Tower Main Building (178 m, 2008)
  • Toshiba Building (165.9 m, 1984)
  • Shiodome Media Tower (172.6 m, 2003)
  • Kasumigaseki Common Gate West Tower (175.8 m, 2007)
  • World Trade Center (Tokyo) (162.6 m, 1970)
  • Tokyo Shiodome Building (173.2 m, 2005)
  • Park Axis Aoyama 1-chome Tower (172.4 m, 2007)
  • Royal Park Shiodome Tower (172 m, 2003)
  • City Towers Toyosu The Twin (171.2 m, 2009)
  • Marunouchi Park Building (170.1 m, 2009)
  • JT Building (169.7 m, 1995)
  • Bay City Harumi Sky Link Tower (169 m m, 2009)
  • Central Park Tower La Tour Shinjuku (167.8 m, 2010)
  • Capital Mark Tower (167.3 m, 2007)
  • Sapia Tower (167.2 m, 2007)
  • Yebisu Garden Place Tower (167 m, 1994)
  • Kita-Shinjuku Area Redevelopment Plan Office Tower (166.5 m, 2011)
  • Naka-Meguro Atlas Tower (165 m, 2009)
  • Marunouchi Kitaguchi Building (147.4 m, 2004)
  • Tokyo Twin Parks (165 m, 2002)
  • Triton View Tower (165 m, 1998)
  • Toyosu Center Building (165 m, 1992)
  • Tokyo Building (164.1 m, 2005)
  • Akasaka Tower Residence (162 m, 2008)
  • Shinjuku Maynds Tower (161.1 m, 1995)
  • Shibaura Island Cape Tower (161 m, 2006)
  • Nippon Seimei Marunouchi Building (160 m, 2004)
150–160 m
  • Concieria Nishi-Shinjuku Tower's West (159.8 m, 2008)
  • Tornare Nihombashi-Hamacho (159.7 m, 2005)
  • Roppongi Hills Residences (159 m, 2003)
  • Brillia Tower Tokyo (158.9 m, 2006)
  • Prudential Tower (158.4 m, 2002)
  • Park Court Akasaka The Tower (157.3 m, 2009)
  • Atago Green Hills Forest Tower (157 m, 2001)
  • Kasumigaseki Common Gate East Tower (156 m, 2007)
  • Kasumigaseki Building (156 m, 1968)
  • Plaza Tower Kachidoki (155.2 m, 2004)
  • The Toyosu Tower (155 m, 2008)
  • Tokyo Dome Hotel (155 m, 2000)
  • Tokyo Gas Co. Headquarters (155.7 m, 1984)
  • KDDI Otemachi Building (155.4 m, 1990)
  • Takanawa The Residence (153.9 m, 2005)
  • Toranomon Towers Residence (153.5 m, 2006)
  • Ark Mori Building (153.3 m, 1986)
  • Toyosu 3-Chome Area 8-4 Plan (153 m, 2010)
  • Station Garden Tower (153 m, 2008)
  • Tokyo Sankei New Building (152.4 m, 2000)
  • JPower Headquarters (153 m, 1987)
  • Park Tower Gran Sky (152.9 m, 2010)
  • Garden Air Tower (152.6 m, 2003)
  • Shinagawa East One Tower (151.6 m, 2003)
  • Shiba-Koen First Building (151.2 m, 2000)
  • Futako-Tamagawa Rise Tower & Residence Tower East (151.1 m, 2010)
  • Odakyu Southern Tower (150.8 m m, 1998)
  • Air Rise Tower (150.5 m, 2007)
  • JR East Japan Building (150.2 m, 1997)
  • Nihon Keizai Shimbun Tokyo Headquarters Building (150 m, 2009)
  • Kudanshita 3rd Government Building - Chiyoda Ward Office (150 m, 2007)
  • Taiyo Seimei Shinagawa Building (150 m, 2003)
  • Granpark Tower (150 m, 1996)
140–150 m
  • Shinagawa Grand Central Tower (149.8 m, 2003)
  • Pacific Century Place (149.8 m, 2001)
  • Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Building (148.5 m, 2003)
  • Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corporation Head Office (148.4 m, 2003)
  • Canon S Tower (147.7 m, 2003)
  • Shiroyama JT Trust Tower (147.7 m, 1991)
  • Akihabara Dai Building (147.5 m, 2005)
  • Toyosu Center Building Annex (147.4 m, 2006
  • BEACON Tower Residence (147 m, 2009)
  • Meiji Yasuda Seimei Building (146.8 m, 2004)
  • Fujisoft Akihabara Building (146.7 m, 2007)
  • Bunkyo Civic Center (145.7 m, 1994)
  • Canal First Tower (145.5 m, 2008)
  • NTT DoCoMo Shinagawa Building (145.1 m, 2003)
  • River City 21 East Towers (144.9 m, 2000)
  • Sumitomo Fudosan Aobadai Tower (144.5 m, 2009)
  • Shinagawa Intercity Towers (144.5 m, 1998)
  • Hotel New Otani Tokyo Tower (144.5 m, 1974)
  • Toyosu Ciel Tower (144.4 m, 2006)
  • Apple Tower (143 m, 2007)
  • Shinagawa V-Tower (143 m, 2003)
  • Shinagawa Prince Hotel New Tower (143 m, 1994)
  • Mizuho Bank Headquarters (142.5 m, 1980)
  • Regale Nihombashi-Ningyocho (142.2 m, 2007)
  • Shirokane Tower (141.9 m, 2005)
  • Hikifune Station Front Area 1 Redevelopment (141.6 m, 2009)
  • Akasaka Park Building (141 m, 1993)
  • City Tower Shinagawa (140.9 m, 2008)
  • ThinkPark Tower (140.5 m, 2007)
  • Shinjuku Kokusai Building - Hilton Tokyo (141 m, 1984)
  • NHK Broadcasting Center (140.1 m, 1973)
130–140 m
  • Station Plaza Tower (139.9 m, 2009)
  • Sumitomo Fudosan Nishi-Shinjuku Building (139.9 m, 2009)
  • World City Towers (139.9 m, 2007)
  • Olinas Tower (139.3 m, 2006)
  • Kokusai Shin-Akasaka East Building (139.3 m, 1980)
  • Toyosu ON Building (139 m, 1992)
  • River City 21 Skylight Tower (139 m, 1990)
  • Shibuya Cross Tower (134.1 m, 1975)
  • World City Towers Aqua Tower (138.7 m, 2006)
  • The Tower Grandia (138.7 m, 2004)
  • Tokyo Times Tower (138.5 m, 2004)
  • Roppongi T-CUBE (138.5 m, 2003)
  • Venasis Kanamachi Tower Residence (138.2 m, 2009)
  • Royal Parks Tower Minami-Senju (138 m, 2008)
  • Kawadacho Comfo Garden (138 m, 2003)
  • Otemachi Nomura Building (138 m, 1997)
  • Proud Tower Chiyoda Fujimi (137 m, 2009)
  • Cosmopolis Shinagawa (137 m, 2005)
  • Bay Crest Tower (136.6 m, 2005)
  • Renaissance Tower Ueno-Ikenohata (136.5 m, 2005)
  • Nippon Express Headquarters (136.5 m, 2003)
  • Crest Prime Tower Shiba (136.4 m, 2007)
  • Century Tower (136 m, 1991)
  • Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department Headquarters (135.6 m, 1973)
  • Chiyoda First Building West (135 m, 2004)
  • NTT DoCoMo Sumida Building (135 m, 2003)
  • Akasaka Intercity (134.8 m, 2005)
  • Hotel New Otani Garden Court (134.7 m, 1991)
  • Vanguard Tower (134.6 m, 2007)
  • Riverside Sumida Center (134.4 m, 1994)
  • The Garden Towers (134.3 m, 1998)
  • Yoyogi Seminar Tower Obelisk (134 m, 2008)
  • Nakano-Sakaue Sun Bright Twin (134 m, 1996)
  • Moon Island Tower (133.8 m, 2002)
  • Shinjuku NS Building (133.7 m, 1982)
  • Shiodome Building (133.5 m, 2007)
  • Tokyo ANA Tower (133 m, 1986)
  • Kogakuin University Shinjuku Building (132.9 m, 1989)
  • Sumitomo Realty Shiba-Koen Tower (132.6 m, 2001)
  • NTT Data Shinagawa Building (132.3 m, 2003)
  • River City 21 River Point Tower (132 m, 1989)
  • Shin-Gofukubashi Building (132 m, 1979)
  • City Tower Shinjuku Shintoshin (130.6 m, 2005)
  • The Center Tokyo (130 m, 2007)
  • River Harp Tower Building 2 (130 m, 2000)
  • Tomin Tower Shinonome (130 m, 1996)
  • Sunshine City Prince Hotel (130 m, 1980)
Under
construction
  • Nihonbashi 1-Chōme Central District Redevelopment (284 m, 2026)
  • Azabudai Hills Residence B (263 m, 2025)
  • Shinjuku Station West Gate Redevelopment (260 m, 2029)
  • Tokyo Ekimae Yaesu 1-Chōme East District Redevelopment (250 m, 2025)
  • Azabudai Hills Residence A (237 m, 2023)
  • World Trade Center North (235 m, 2027)
  • Shibaura 1-Chōme South Tower (229 m, 2024)
  • Mita 3-4 Chōme Redevelopment (215 m, 2023)
  • Tokyo World Gate Akasaka (210 m, 2024)
  • Grand City Tower Tsukishima (199 m, 2026)
  • Park Tower Kachidoki South (195 m, 2023)
  • World Tower Residence (190 m, 2026)
  • Minami-Ikebukuro 2-Chōme District Redevelopment (190 m, 2025)
Demolished
  • Buildings listed in order of height and with year of completion
  • Category
  • Commons
  • v
  • t
  • e
Districts
Kanda Area
Kōjimachi Area
Location of Chiyoda in Tokyo
Major stations
Landmarks
Education
History
K - districts that start with the prefix "Kanda-"