The most successful metropolis in the history of the world has 39 million residents, 50%
more people than any other urban area.
It is the safest big city on the planet, and with a two trillion dollar GDP, its economy
is larger than all but eight entire countries.
This is Tokyo, Earth's model megacity.
Our story begins 561 years ago when a samurai warrior built a castle on the shore of a fishing
village called Edo.
Its rich soil was ideal for growing rice and attracted farmers from far and wide.
In 1600, the great commander Tokugawa Ieyasu won the Battle of Sekigahara, a pivotal moment
in history that secured Edo's status as the most important place in Japan.
Unfortunately, the buildings of the expanding city were made of wood and paper, a dangerous
combination to confront the warm winds of summer.
Legend has it that on one particularly dry afternoon in 1657, a priest made the deadly
mistake of burning an unlucky kimono.
The fire flared up, ignited his temple, and engulfed 70% of the city.
100,000 people lost their lives.
Despite the disaster, by the middle of the 19th century Edo's population was in the
millions.
That's when the military shogunate system that had ruled for almost 700 years ended.
A new government led by a young emperor finally made Edo the official capital of Japan, renamed
it Tokyo, and made the castle his imperial palace.
To celebrate his arrival, everyone toasted with rounds of sake on the house.
Around this time Japan opened up to foreign trade and influence, with Tokyo driving the
industrial revolution that was modernizing the country.
But rapid development had a cost: a strained natural environment.
Forests were razed, pollutants choked the air, and Tokyo's once pristine waterways
grew increasingly toxic.
It was time for a more conscientious approach.
The principle of Satoyama was born, promoting sustainable coexistence with nature, especially
in the rice paddy fields covering Japan's sprawling foothills.
Today, a century of conservation has resulted in parks covering 20% of the land in the Tokyo
metropolitan area.
But while the danger from pollution has been largely overcome, one natural phenomenon poses
an unavoidable threat: earthquakes.
In 1923, an 8.0 magnitude quake rocked Tokyo, devastating the geologically unstable eastern
wards of the city.
As firestorms engulfed whole neighborhoods, some took advantage of the chaos to target
political enemies and minority groups, like Koreans.
When the smoke finally cleared, 140,000 people had perished.
Just twenty-two years later, in 1944, Tokyo was hit again.
This time from above by allied air forces who waged a relentless nine month campaign
that lasted until Japan's surrender to end WWII following America's detonation of two
atomic weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
On the worst night of the onslaught, 279 Boeing B-29 Superfortress heavy bombers dropped more
than 1,600 tons of explosives on Eastern Tokyo.
It is regarded as the single most destructive bombing raid in human history, leaving more
than 100,000 dead and more than 1 million homeless.
It took generations for Tokyo to completely recover, but today - after more than seven
decades at peace - Tokyo is thriving.
Its dense metropolitan area now stretches an incredible 32 uninterrupted kilometers
all the way to Japan's second largest city, Yokohama.
While roads and highways are how many get around, the arteries that set Tokyo apart
from other megacities are its extensive rail lines.
After WWII, Japan didn't have access to the oil reserves an automobile-focused transport
system required, so the government wisely invested heavily in rail projects to connect
central Tokyo with surrounding towns and cities.
In October 1964, just in time for Tokyo to host the summer Olympics, Japan debuted the
world's first modern high-speed rail line to Osaka, the Tōkaidō Shinkansen, with trains
reaching speeds of 256 km/hr.
Today, Tokyo's urban rail network serves a world-leading 40 million passengers a day.
Compare that to America's car-dominated system where space for roads and parking can
take up to 60% of a city's available land.
Of course, Tokyo has innovative ways of storing the cars that it does have, and its bikes.
Congestion has also been eased by an $11 billion megaproject.
The Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line is one-thirds bridge, two-thirds tunnel.
It has turned what was a 90-minute drive through downtown and around the shore of the bay,
into a 15-minute sprint through it instead.
The project took 30 years to design and complete because it has to withstand the ever-present
danger of earthquakes.
That's also why buildings in Tokyo cost an extra 50 percent to construct and why they
tend to be shorter than the skyscrapers in other economic capitals, two factors that
drive up real estate prices and add to urban sprawl.
From above, Tokyo seems like an unnavigable maze.
But on the ground, life for many is lived locally within their own neighborhoods.
Shops and businesses to obtain day-to-day essentials can usually be reached within a
short walk, including many of the world's greatest sushi restaurants.
Japan runs on seafood.
Along Tokyo's harbor lies Tsukiji, the largest fish market on Earth.
Everyday, more than 50,000 people come to buy and sell 400 different types of seafood.
Among the buyers are the chefs of the 227 restaurants with at least one Michelin star,
making Tokyo the city with the most of these prestigious marks of excellence.
In fact, when President Obama visited Tokyo, he ate handcrafted sushi prepared by the great
Jiro himself.
He also played football with a humanoid robot, just one example of how Japan is leading the
global transition to automation.
As a technology superpower, Tokyo is home to the most non-state-owned Fortune 500 companies
of any city in the world and - along with New York and London - is considered one of
three command centers of the global economy.
All of these factors make Tokyo the most advanced major city, and it's getting ready to put
on a show for the entire world.
In the summer of 2020 it will host the Olympic Games.
This is motivating Tokyo's metropolitan government to use its massive annual budget,
which is larger than the country of Saudi Arabia, to fast-track its progress.
Among the achievements that are already complete, or that officials are hoping to showcase to
the world, include:
A program to have functioning robots installed throughout the city to assist people regardless
of age, nationality, or disability.
The 920,000 expected daily visitors during the Olympics could ask nearby robots to help
with language translation, directions, or transportation.
Robots are just one example of how hosting the games could benefit Tokyo's citizens
long after the closing ceremony.
With an aging population projected to peak in 2020, and then decline, Tokyo is experiencing
a graying of its society on a scale that no city has experienced before.
And because there will be fewer workers paying taxes, and more elderly living on government
pensions requiring care, the government is heavily encouraging volunteerism.
This shouldn't be too hard for the citizens of Tokyo, some of the most considerate people
on Earth.
They routinely rank first in helpfulness, ease of local public transportation, and cleanliness
of streets.
Amid the turmoil following the March 2011 earthquake, visitors praised Tokyoites for
their orderliness.
This is part of Gaman, the Japanese spirit of self-control--a dedication to the greater
good through self-discipline.
Of course, well planned and maintained infrastructure is the main reason why Tokyo works so well.
Recent and soon-to-be-completed projects include:
A bold, $350 million plan to jump-start a hydrogen-powered transportation system by
increasing the number of hydrogen stations from eight to 35, while putting 6,000 fuel
cell cars and 100 fuel cell buses on the road by 2020.
A network of fuel cell vehicles - which can double as mobile electricity generators - could
be a gamechanger in an emergency.
Just two of these buses can power an entire hospital for a day.
Other transportation upgrades include the three-ring expressway that's cut many trips
throughout the region in half;
Repairing and reinforcing bridges, tunnels, and roads using advanced laser scanning technology
and carbon fiber with the aim of detecting problematic infrastructure before it fails,
while extending its life up to 100 years;
Installing more solar heat-blocking pavement that's up to 8°C cooler than asphalt to
help solve Tokyo's heat island problem—a challenge faced by many other cities around
the world;
Transferring as many power lines underground as possible, widening sidewalks, doubling
the amount of dedicated bike lanes, and opening outdoor cafes in an initiative dubbed the
Tokyo Champs Elysees project.
The city is aggressively reducing CO2 emissions through the first urban cap and trade system
covering factories and commercial facilities, like office buildings.
To reduce the danger of heavy flooding from rainfall, massive underground chambers and
tunnels have been installed to regulate and divert waters from rivers, channels, and sewers
that have traditionally overflowed;
These measures go hand-in-hand with an integrated series of floodwall gates, rain gauges, and
river level monitoring cameras that are watched 24/7 by engineers at two command centers that
can each operate the entire system remotely in case either one of them fails.
With so much historical damage from fire, officials are pushing to replace old wooden
houses with fireproof ones, creating entire zones where residents wouldn't have to evacuate
during a nearby blaze, and ensuring that major routes are lined with fire and earthquake
proof buildings so emergency vehicles can move freely.
Amplifying the appeal of hosting the Olympics is the opportunity to share these advancements
with their guests, who are encouraged to implement these best practices in their own cities.
Tokyo already does this by hosting and teaching foreign first responders the most advanced
search and rescue techniques, sharing infrastructure best practices with officials visiting from
abroad, and helping engineers from Kuala Lumpur update their wastewater management system.
Tokyo is also a pioneer in land reclamation.
With mountains hemming its growth, adding land to the bay is an increasingly attractive
option, particularly if that land is made of trash.
The Sea Forest area is a former landfill that is being converted to parkland and will even
host Olympic events.
In the coming years, population growth and rising seas will force the entire world to
do more with less.
And while Tokyo isn't perfect, by using its resources wisely, planning for the future,
and sharing what it learns with the rest of the world, it should be a model for cities
of all sizes, everywhere.
If you enjoyed this video, subscribe and check out my other examinations of mega-cities and
mega-projects.
Until next time, I'm Bryce Plank.
No comments:
Post a Comment