Arrrrg. Confess. You posted that just so I would have a stroke, didn't you Mulboyne?


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Captain Japan wrote:That mandate is so flawed and hopeless that it is tough to give any kind of commentary. But to start, the average park in Tokyo is a pit of ash and gravel. Is that going to change?
Mulboyne wrote:One of the triggers for this concept was a proposal by Tadao Ando, who is also the chief designer for the Olympic plans. There is currently a landfill site built of waste and surplus soil from construction excavations in Tokyo Bay near Odaiba, which could also be said to be the ocean gateway to Tokyo. The idea was to turn this entire island green. The island is roughly the size of the Imperial Palace and, with your cooperation, we are planning to turn it into a forest.
From April, residents of Shibuya Ward, Tokyo, will be able to grow their own vegetables and flowers on new garden plots the ward government is opening in the heart of the ward, where land prices can be astronomical.
Developers could not conceal their astonishment on hearing that the ward plans to turn about 2,330 square meters of ward-owned prime real estate close to the entertainment districts near JR Shibuya and Ebisu stations into "ward residents garden pots." The land is worth about 6.8 billion yen.
Three sites are to be turned into garden plots: An 820-square-meter site where a primary school once stood to the east of Shibuya Station; a 1,030-square-meter site on the grounds of an old primary school gymnasium north of Yebisu Garden Place; and a 480-square-meter vacant lot south of Odakyu Sangubashi Station.
Per square meter, the land east of Shibuya Station is valued at 4.45 million yen, the land in Ebisu at 1.69 million yen and the Sangubashi land at 2.9 million yen, according to the ward's fiscal 2005 table of assets.
Land prices in central Tokyo have further risen since then, leading a ward official to comment, "Market prices could be even higher."
The land will be divided into 110 plots of about 10 square meters, and the cost of farming each plot is expected to be about 1,000 yen per month, according to the ward.
The ward plans to begin accepting applicants in February, and will open the allotments on April 1, but applications will be limited to ward residents who must either be elderly or families with children. There is no agricultural land in the ward, according to the ward's parks department.
L S wrote:Are there are any signs that new property developments in Tokyo will keep moving towards more green space, more accessible skylines, eco-rooftops, etc.?
Captain Japan wrote:That mandate is so flawed and hopeless that it is tough to give any kind of commentary. But to start, the average park in Tokyo is a pit of ash and gravel. Is that going to change?
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Jack wrote:Tokyo is much greener than New York or London would be. Houses with even tiny gardens plant stuff. The Imperial Palace site and numerous parks (Hibiya and Yoyogi parks and others could name more) make Tokyo greener than many larger cities. But of course no one in here will agree with that.
New York, from downtown all the way up to 59th Street where Central park starts, show me any green space. I could say the same of London and Paris. You'll throuw Hyde park and Jardin de Luxembourg at me and then the Imperial Palace grounds beat them in size.
Jack wrote:Tokyo is much greener than New York or London would be. Houses with even tiny gardens plant stuff. The Imperial Palace site and numerous parks (Hibiya and Yoyogi parks and others could name more) make Tokyo greener than many larger cities. But of course no one in here will agree with that.
City park space totals one-ninth of that available to New Yorkers
New York, from downtown all the way up to 59th Street where Central park starts, show me any green space. I could say the same of London and Paris. You'll throuw Hyde park and Jardin de Luxembourg at me and then the Imperial Palace grounds beat them in size.
Jack wrote:Tokyo is much greener than New York or London would be. Houses with even tiny gardens plant stuff. The Imperial Palace site and numerous parks (Hibiya and Yoyogi parks and others could name more) make Tokyo greener than many larger cities. But of course no one in here will agree with that.
Mike Oxlong wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue-green_across_cultures#Japanese
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ao_(color)
Think Jack don't know shit, eh.
Behan wrote:If you think of NYC as only Manhattan that might be true to some degree, but the other four burroughs are greener.
The brownstones in Brooklyn have back yards, admittedly small. My father used to live in one.
Houses in the Bronx, Queens, and Staten Island have small yards, too.
gboothe wrote:They don't have Kentucky Blue Grass in Canada?
Bluegrass is not named for its leaves, which are always green without a hint of azure, anil or topaz, whether they grow on limestone, granite, sandstone or igneous substrata. The grass is named for the seed heads, which appear during the spring and summer when allowed to grow unshorn and unmolested to a natural height of two to three feet.
An unmown field of seeding poa pratensis waving in a June breeze is unmistakably blue. If it appears otherwise, something is wrong with the eye of the beholder, and he or she should consult an ophthalmologist.
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