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Abeno Harukas

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(Redirected from Abenobashi Terminal Building) Mixed-use in Osaka, Japan
Abeno Harukas
あべのハルカス
Abeno Harukas, May 2014
Record height
Tallest in Japan from 2014 to 2023
Preceded byYokohama Landmark Tower
Surpassed byAzabudai Hills Mori JP Tower
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeMixed-use
LocationAbenosuji Itchome, Abeno-ku, Osaka, Japan
Coordinates34°38′45.6″N 135°30′48.2″E / 34.646000°N 135.513389°E / 34.646000; 135.513389
Construction startedNew Building: March 1983
Abeno Harukas: January 9, 2010
CompletedNew Building: November 11, 1988
Eastern Building: September 13, 1992
OpeningNew Building: November 11, 1988
Eastern Building: September 13, 1992 (Tennoji Miyako Hotel)
Abeno Harukas: March 7, 2014
Cost¥76 billion
OwnerKintetsu
Height
RoofNew Building: 54 m (177 ft)
Eastern Building: 30 m (98 ft)
Abeno Harukas: 300 m (984 ft)
Technical details
Floor countNew Building: 10 above ground, 4 underground

Eastern Building: 17 above ground, 1 underground

Abeno Harukas: 60 above ground, 5 underground
Floor areaNew Building and Eastern Building: 94,000 m (1,011,800 sq ft)
Abeno Harukas: 211,900.97 m (2,280,900 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)César Pelli & Associates (supervising architect for exterior design)
Takenaka Corporation
Main contractorTakenaka Corporation,
Okumura Corporation,
Obayashi Corp.,
Dai Nippon Construction,
The Zenitaka Corporation JV
Japanese name
Kanji阿部野橋ターミナルビル
Hiraganaあべのばしたーみなるびる

Abeno Harukas (あべのハルカス) is a multi-purpose commercial facility in Abenosuji Itchome, Abeno-ku, Osaka, Japan. It consists of the New Annex, Eastern Annex and a supertall skyscraper, Abeno Harukas. The building is 300 m (984 ft) tall and has 62 floors; it was the tallest building in Japan from 2014 to 2023, until Azabudai Hills Mori JP Tower seized the title.

The facility is the planned alternative station building of Ōsaka Abenobashi Station, the terminal of Kintetsu Minami Osaka Line. It contains Kintetsu Department Store Main Store Abeno Harukas, Marriott International hotel, university campuses and Sharp Corporation sales office. Its floor space is around 100,000 m (1,100,000 sq ft), making it one of the biggest department stores in Japan. Construction was completed on March 7, 2014.

Name meaning

The name of the skyscraper "Abeno Harukas" comes from the old Japanese word "晴るかす" (harukasu). It means "to brighten, to clear up".

Floors

Abeno Harukas
  • 58th-60th floors: Observatory "Harukas 300"
  • 38th-55th floors and 57th floor: Osaka Marriott Miyako Hotel
    • 57th floor: Restaurants
    • 38th-55th floors: Guest rooms
  • 21st-36th floors: offices
  • 19th and 20th floors: Osaka Marriott Miyako Hotel (lobby)
  • 17th and 18th floors: offices
  • 16th floor: Abeno Harukas Museum, rooftop garden
  • 2nd basement-14th floors: Kintetsu Department Store Main Store Abeno Harukas Tower Building
  • 1st basement and 1st floor: Osaka Abenobashi Station
  • 4th and 3rd basements: parking lot
New Building
  • 2nd basement-9th floors and rooftop: Kintetsu Department Store Main Store Abeno Harukass Wing Building
  • 1st basement and 1st floor: Osaka Abenobashi Station
  • 2nd basement: Osaka Abenobashi Station Entrance
Eastern Building
  • 1st basement-16th floors: Miyako City Osaka Tennoji

Shopping facilities around Abenobashi Terminal Building

Abeno-ku

  • Shinjuku Building
  • Shinjuku Gochiso Building
  • Abeno Appolo
  • Abeno Center Building (Abeno Festa)
  • Echo Across Building
  • Abeno Urban Development Project
    • Abeno Lucias (A1-1)
    • Abeno nini (A1-2)
    • Abeno Cues Town (A2)
    • Abeno Gran Tour (A3)

Tennoji-ku

Gallery

  • Abeno Harukas seen from Nakanoshima Festival Tower Abeno Harukas seen from Nakanoshima Festival Tower
  • Abeno Harukas and Osaka-Abenobashi Station Abeno Harukas and Osaka-Abenobashi Station
  • Abeno Harukas Sky Garden Abeno Harukas Sky Garden
  • View of Osaka from Abeno Harukas View of Osaka from Abeno Harukas

See also

References

  1. "Tallest high-rise nears completion". The Japan Times. 23 October 2013. Archived from the original on 28 April 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  2. Nagata, Takeshi & Takahashi, Kentaro (5 November 2013). "Osaka dept stores locked in scrap for survival". The Japan News. The Yomiuri Shimbun. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Abeno Harukas Project website in English". Kintetsu Corporation (Abeno Harukas Project Website). Archived from the original on January 4, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  4. ^ 6月13日(木)「あべのハルカス近鉄本店」 タワー館オープン! [New Main Store of "Kintetsu Department Store" will open in Abeno Harukas on Thursday, June 13, 2013] (PDF) (in Japanese). Kintetsu Department Store Co., Ltd. May 1, 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 20, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2013.

External links

Records
Preceded byYokohama Landmark Tower Tallest building in Japan
2012–2023
Succeeded byAzabudai Hills Mori JP Tower
Supertall skyscrapers (300 m/984 ft and taller)
Completed
Africa
Egypt
Americas
Chile
Mexico
United States
Asia
China
Hong Kong
Japan
Kazakhstan
Kuwait
Malaysia
Philippines
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Taiwan
Thailand
Turkey
United Arab
Emirates
Vietnam
Europe
Poland
Russia
United Kingdom
Oceania
Australia
  • No longer standing.
Under construction
Africa
Ethiopia
Côte d'Ivoire
Asia
China
Other
North America
South America
On hold
See also
Proposed supertall skyscrapers
List of architects of supertall buildings
Sharp Corporation
Divisions
and subsidiaries
Current
Defunct
Joint ventures
and shareholdings
Calculators
Computers
Laptops
and portables
Pocket
computers
Home
computers
Mobile phones
Televisions
and displays
Other
products
People
Places
  • Now integrated into other Sharp divisions or business groupings
Categories: