
The view from below!
With Mount Fuji on one side, the Pacific Ocean on the other, and an endless medley
of skyscrapers, modern buildings, parks, and historical buildings like the Imperial
Palace everywhere you look, you feel like you’re on top of the world. You take in
this breathtaking view of a city which truly fuses technology with the natural world,
barely thinking of the fact that all the while, you’re standing atop a giant antenna!
Soaring above the skies of Tokyo at 1091 feet, the Tokyo Tower (official site)
is that Eiffel-Tower-like lattice tower seen in the backdrop of almost any Tokyo
photograph. Almost 30 feet taller yet 3000 tons lighter than its Eiffel Tower cousin,
the Tokyo Tower was built in 1958 to serve as a television station antenna support
structure. Basic Japanese TV stations such as NHK, TBS, TV Asashi, TV Tokyo, and
Fuji TV use this tower, the tallest self-supporting steel structure in the world,
to broadcast signals, as do radio stations like J-WAVE, NHK-FM, and Tokyo FM.
Despite its main function as a giant antenna, the Tokyo Tower is open to tourists
year-round and draws an average of three million visitors a year. The main attractions
are the two observatories, which include the two-floor Main Observatory located
492 feet off the ground and the Special Observatory located 820 feet into the sky.
At the bottom of the tower is FootTown, a four-story building housing an aquarium,
a reception hall, a Guinness World Records museum, a wax museum, an arcade, a 3D
art gallery, a small amusement park (on the roof), and a large assortment of shops
and restaurants.
The observatories host a variety of restaurants, shops, and other attractions, too,
such as Club 333, a café at which live musical acts perform and at which a Tokyo
Tower-exclusive radio station operates, broadcasting tunes to the rest of the Tower.
The Main Observatory is even home to the highest Shinto shrine in Tokyo!
You can see most of Tokyo from the Tower during the day, but you can only see Mount
Fuji on days when the sky is clear. Because nighttime in Tokyo is filled with millions
of lights peppering the skyline, the view at night from the Tower is as gorgeous
as the day view.
Despite becoming such an iconic part of Tokyo over the past fifty years, the Tokyo
Tower’s days may be numbered. In 2008, construction began on the Tokyo Sky Tree
(www.tokyo-skytree.jp/english), which, at 2003 feet tall, will greatly surpass the
Tokyo Tower as Japan’s tallest artificial structure. With two planned observatories
that start at far taller heights (1149 feet and 1476 feet off the ground) than the
Tokyo Tower’s observatories, the Tokyo Sky Tree is sure to supplant the Tokyo Tower
as the tourists’ sky view destination.
However, the Tokyo Sky Tree is actually being built for a more practical use. The
government plans to cease analog television and radio broadcasting nation-wide by
mid-2011, but the Tokyo Tower is not tall enough to support the digital broadcasting
signals that will be necessary after the switch. The Tokyo Sky Tree has been designed
to meet the appropriate height specifications.
Still, the Tokyo Tower plays too large of a role in modern Japanese history to be
forgotten completely. Come the public grand opening of the Tokyo Sky Tree in mid-2012,
the Tokyo Tower will likely continue to draw a large crowd of visitors each year.
After all, the Tokyo Tower offers so much more than just an antenna with a view!
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