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IBM Hakozaki Facility
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | IBM Hakozaki Facility |
| native_name | IBM箱崎ビル(三井倉庫箱崎ビル) |
| image | IBM-Japan-Hakozaki-Facility.jpg |
| image_alt | 25 story office tower |
| caption | IBM Hakozaki Facility |
| map_type | Tokyo city |
| map_alt | Location of the Hokozaki Building within Tokyo |
| map_caption | Location within Tokyo |
| location | Tokyo, Japan |
| client | IBM |
| owner | Mitsui-Soko |
| location_country | Japan |
| coordinates | |
| completion_date | 1989 |
| height | 108.32 m |
| floor_count | 25 |
| floor_area | 135601 m2 |
| architect | Takenaka Corporation |
IBM Hakozaki Facility (IBM箱崎ビル or 三井倉庫箱崎ビル) is IBM's largest building in Japan, in terms of the number of people working there. Located in Nihonbashi-Hakozaki-cho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, it mainly houses IBM's marketing and market support departments, and since October 2009 headquarters, which moved from Roppongi, Tokyo. It was built for IBM in 1989.
General description
IBM Hakozaki Facility is located at 19-21 Nihonbashi-Hakozaki-cho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, on the right bank of the Sumida River. It houses mainly IBM's marketing and systems engineering departments, and is IBM's largest facility in Japan, in terms of the number of people working there. Because of the seminars and demonstrations of the latest products and services frequently held there, it is also familiar to many users and potential users of IBM.
Its main building was completed in 1989, designed by Takenaka Corporation, and is owned and leased by Mitsui-Soko, Mitsui Group's warehousing & distribution company. The building complex also houses cafeterias, restaurants, a post office, a bookstore, a gym and a tea ceremony house.
Access
The facility can be accessed from Suitengūmae Station on the Tokyo Metro Hanzomon Line, Ningyōchō Station on the Toei Asakusa Line, Tokyo City Air Terminal, and from the Toei Bus bus stop.
References
References
- [https://www.eonet.ne.jp/~building-pc/tokyo/tokyo-109mitsui.htm Details of IBM Hakozaki Building] (in Japanese)
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