Tokyo 2020; Ticket Prices announced

 

Press release by Tokyo 2020:

Tokyo 2020 Announces Outline of Olympic Games Ticket Prices
20 July 2018

The Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (Tokyo 2020) today announced an outline of ticket prices for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020. There are a wide range of prices aimed at allowing as many people as possible to enjoy Olympic events, including millions of tickets at affordable prices, with half of all tickets priced at JPY 8,000 or less.

Residents of Japan from today also have their first chance to register on Tokyo 2020’s online platform in order to receive information about ticketing and, from the spring of 2019, to be able to apply for tickets. The platform can be accessed at https://id.tokyo2020.jp/. Additional details of the ticket ordering and purchasing process for residents of Japan will be announced on the Tokyo 2020 website in due course. The basic outline of ticket prices for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 will be as follows (applicable to tickets purchased in Japan):

– a range of prices from JPY 12,000 up to JPY 300,000 for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies
– a range of prices for tickets to sports events from JPY 2,500 up to JPY 130,000
– half of all tickets to be priced at JPY 8,000 or less
– a symbolic ticket price of JPY 2,020 for families and groups resident in Japan whose members include children, senior citizens or individuals with impairments; this price will also be – available in conjunction with a school programme targeting over one million students across Japan
– concessionary tickets for wheelchair-dedicated areas
– Tokyo 2020 is additionally planning to offer a hospitality programme. Also there will be opportunities for spectators to watch large sections of the marathon, road cycling, triathlon and race walk competitions for free along the city streets. Ticket prices for surfing events will be announced at a later date.

A summary of proposed price ranges for each event type is shown at the end of this announcement. More detailed pricing will be announced later this year.

Those living outside of Japan will be able to order their tickets through the National Olympic Committee of their respective country or their authorised ticket reseller. A list of these organisations in each country will be published by next spring on the Tokyo 2020 official website. Ticket prices and the application process will vary from country to country, although the structure will be broadly in line with that for tickets purchased in Japan.

As the exclusive payment technology partner of the Olympic Games for 32 years, Visa will be the only payment brand accepted on the Tokyo 2020 ticket website and at the ticket box offices.

An outline of the ticket programme for the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games will be announced in August 2018.

Tickets may only be purchased via authorised channels, and Tokyo 2020 urges all prospective ticket purchasers to be aware of unauthorised or potentially fraudulent ticket offerings. No tickets are currently available.

Fans interested in finding out more about the sports schedule can access the latest version here.

Book recommendation; Japanese Creativity — Contemplations on Japanese Architecture

From the publisher:

Japanese Creativity—Contemplations on Japanese Architecture
Yuichiro Edagawa
Foreword by Kengo Kuma

What lies at the root of Japanese creativity and its architectural artifacts? In his new book, the Japanese architect Yuichiro Edagawa explores this question in detail. By analyzing a wide variety of unique exemplary buildings from the sixth century to the present, he determines twelve distinctive characteristics of Japanese architectural creativity and composition, including: intimacy with nature, importance of materials, bipolarity and diversity, asymmetry, devotion to small space, and organic form. The key understanding, which pervades all these characteristics, is that “parts precede the whole.” The Japanese process of creation begins with designing parts and details and ends with combining them to one edifice.

With Japanese Creativity—Contemplations on Japanese Architecture Edagawa provides a personal and comprehensive understanding of Japanese creativity and the architectural process. The book gives us an inspiring insight into Japanese culture and identity, which in its essence is deeply traditional and modern at the same time. With a preface by Kengo Kuma.

 

Hardcover
14.8 x 21 cm
192 pages, approx. 199 col.
English
ISBN 978-3-86859-508-6
05.2018

Tokyo 2020; 6th Coordination Commission meeting

The International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s Coordination Commission has wrapped up its sixth visit to Tokyo. You can read the full press release from the IOC below;

 


TOKYO COORDINATION COMMISSION HEARS HOW THE POWER OF THE OLYMPIC GAMES WILL HELP BRING COMMUNITIES TOGETHER IN JAPAN

THE POWER OF SPORT TO UNITE WAS ON DISPLAY DURING THE VISIT OF THE INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE (IOC)’S COORDINATION COMMISSION TO TOKYO. ORGANISERS ANNOUNCED THAT THE TOKYO 2020 OLYMPIC TORCH RELAY WILL BEGIN IN FUKUSHIMA, BEFORE TRAVELLING ACROSS THE COUNTRY. FUKUSHIMA WAS HIT BY A DEVASTATING EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI IN 2011, AND GAMES ORGANISERS HAVE WORKED TO MAKE SURE THE LOCAL POPULATION CAN BENEFIT DIRECTLY FROM THE GAMES, WITH THE TORCH RELAY AND SOME SPORTS EVENTS TAKING PLACE IN THE REGION. THE IOC WAS ALSO IMPRESSED BY THE SIGNIFICANT ADVANCES THAT THE TOKYO 2020 ORGANISING COMMITTEE HAS MADE TOWARDS HOSTING THE OLYMPIC GAMES IN 2020.
“Tokyo 2020 comes a significant step closer to delivering Olympic Games that will bring Japan and the world together. The Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee has presented considerable progress since our previous Coordination Commission visit last year, especially as it relates to venue and operational readiness,” said IOC Coordination Commission Chair John Coates. “As we near the two-years-to-go mark, the Games are really coming to life, with the Olympic Torch Relay showing the power of sport, as it will begin in Fukushima, which was affected by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. Tokyo 2020 will also welcome media and National Olympic Committees later this year and host its first Test Event in September, while fans can also expect announcements around mascots, tickets, the session schedule and volunteering all in the next few months.”

“Following on from the last IOC Coordination Commission meeting, we were able to share details with the IOC about how hard the local governments are working on their preparations for the Games,” said Tokyo 2020 President Mori. “It is very meaningful that the Olympic Torch Relay will traverse the whole country, given our hope that the Olympic Games will leave their mark on future generations and provide legacies for the children of Japan. I believe these Olympic Games will help lift the spirits of all of the people in Japan, and provide a particular boost to the feelings of people in the affected areas.”

Venue preparation was a core topic throughout the three-day visit, with the Coordination Commission kicking off the first day with a tour of Tokyo Stadium, Musashino Forest Sport Plaza and Equestrian Park.

Tokyo Stadium, which will host football, rugby and modern pentathlon, is one of the 22 existing venues that will be used for the Olympic Games. Musashino Forest Sport Plaza, the first new permanent venue to be completed, has already begun hosting multipurpose events, representing the first tangible venue legacy of the Olympic Games 2020.

The multisport venue will host badminton, wheelchair basketball and parts of the modern pentathlon competition, and includes a swimming pool, a gym, a multi-use sports arena and two fitness studios, all of which will also be available for use by the general public before and after the Games.

The Coordination Commission capped off the venue tour with a stop at the Equestrian Park, also known as Baji Koen. A legacy of the Olympic Games 1964, the Equestrian Park, which is being revitalised with the assistance of the Japan Racing Association (JRA), will continue to benefit Tokyo citizens for decades to come, as it is will be reopened to the public following the 2020 Games. Just as the Tokyo 1964 Games served as a catalyst to transform Japan, so, too, does Tokyo 2020 aim to harness the power of sport to pass on a legacy for the future.

This combination of new, renovated and existing venues demonstrates how Tokyo 2020 has embraced Olympic Agenda 2020 to create a sustainable legacy for the city of Tokyo and Japan, while optimising construction costs.

On the final day of the Coordination Commission visit, Tokyo 2020 announced the order of prefectures for the Olympic Torch Relay, which reinforced the Organising Committee’s commitment to ensure that these Games are for all of Japan, with the Relay travelling to 47 Japanese prefectures.

Just as the Olympic Torch Relay will travel across Japan, the design of the Olympic and Paralympic mascots was also a national affair, with school children from 80% of all Japanese schools having voted on their favourite design. Those mascots will be named during Tokyo’s two-years-to-go countdown celebrations later this month.

Tokyo 2020 will also welcome broadcasters from around the world to the World Broadcaster Meeting in two weeks’ time, which is an essential event in the preparation for the Olympic Games, as provides details on the services and operations available to broadcasters as they transmit the Games around the world. This will be followed by the World Press Briefing in September.

Several members of the Olympic Movement joined the Coordination Commission for this visit, including several National Olympic Committees – Brazil, France, Qatar, Sweden and USA – and TOP partner representatives – Intel, Panasonic and Toyota. This participation originates in the recommendations of Olympic Agenda 2020’s the New Norm and reinforces the IOC’s and organisers’ commitment to enhancing the experience of athletes, stakeholders and fans.

The Paris 2024 Organising Committee was on-site to observe the meeting and learn from Tokyo 2020. The two Organising Committees further cemented their commitment to working together by signing an MOU underlining their cooperation with the aim of ensuring the successful delivery of their respective Games.

The Coordination Commission also analysed important operational elements during its visit such as the competition schedule and ticket prices, which will be discussed next week at the IOC’s Executive Board meeting in Lausanne.

 

Source

Tokyo 2020; Promo Video Tokyo 2020 NIPPON Festival (Cultural Olympiad)

 

Scheduled to run from April to September 2020, the Tokyo 2020 NIPPON Festival will be aimed at promoting Japanese culture within Japan and globally, and at promoting the Olympic and Paralympic movements. Organised in cooperation with the national government, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, prefectural governments, Tokyo 2020 sponsors and cultural and art organisations, it will represent the culmination of the Tokyo 2020 Nationwide Participation Programme.

Tokyo 2020; Introduction to Tokyo (7)

In 2020, Tokyo will host the XXXII Olympic Summer Games. The city also hosted the 1964 Olympics. Over the next years we’ll explore this fascinating and hectic metropolis in a serie of blog posts. Topics include: urban sprawl, architecture and infrastucture.

 

Magazine: JA109 – SPRING, 2018 – Kengo Kuma: a LAB for materials

The latest edition of JA Magazine is dedicated to Kengo Kuma (architect Olympic Stadium Tokyo 2020).

 

JA109 SPRING, 2018
Kengo Kuma: a LAB for materials

MARCH 2018
218Pages / 297mm x 226mm / English / Japanese

Contents
Essay
Return to Materials
Kengo Kuma

BACKSTORY
Some notes on Kengo Kuma’s project to re-enchant Contemporary Architecture through Material Research
Jeffrey Kipnis

Particlized: The New Arts and Sciences of Particles
Mario Carpo

Connecting Beings And Things
Reflections On Kengo Kuma’s Architecture
Richard Scoffier

Projects
[bamboo]
Great (Bamboo) Wall
Pacific Flora 2004 Main Gate
Hamada Shoyu
Garden Terrace Miyazaki
Shizuku by Chef Naoko
Ginzan Onsen Fujiya
Bamboo / Fiber
Nangchang-Nangchang
Sensing Spaces

[wood]
Nakagawa-machi Bato Hiroshige Museum of Art
Cidori
GC Prostho Museum Research Center
Starbucks Coffee at Dazaifutenmangu Omotesando
Sunny Hills Japan
Yure
Yusuhara Wooden Bridge Museum
Kyushu Geibunkan Museum (Annex 2)
Asakusa Culture Tourist Information Center
KOMOREBI / Château La Coste
Nagaoka City Hall Aore
Daiwa Ubiquitous Computing Research Building
Camper Monte Napoleone
Whitestone Gallery Taipei
EPFL ArtLab
Mont-Blanc Base Camp
Japan House São Paulo
Neowa Dome
KODAMA (Arte Sella Pavilion)
Coeda House
Comico Art Museum Yufuin
The Darling Exchange

[paper]
Takayanagi Community Center
Paper Snake
Paper Brick
Paper Cocoon
Seigaiha
Archives Antoni Clavé

[earth]
Adobe Repository for Buddha Statue
Mesh / Earth
Mushizuka (Mound for Insects)
Novartis Shanghai Campus Multifunction Building
Museum of Indigenous Knowledge
Portland Japanese Garden Cultural Village

[stone]
Stone Museum
Lotus House
Chokkura Plaza
Stone Card Castle
Jeju Ball
V&A Dundee

[fire tile / glass / resin]
Waketokuyama
Kure City Ondo Civic Center
Casalgrande Ceramic Cloud
Xinjin Zhi Museum
China Academy of Art’s Folk Art Museum
Shipyard 1862
Tiffany Ginza
FRAC Marseille
Yakisugi Collection
Oribe Tea House
Water Branch House
Tetchan
Bubble Wrap
Beijing Tea House
Sogokagu Design Lab

[metal]
KXK
Polygonium
Green Cast
Darius Milhaud Conservatory of Music
Wuxi Vanke
Le Nuage d’Aluminium
Hongkou SOHO
Beijing Qianmen
Yangcheng Lake Tourist Transportation Center

[membrane / fiber]
Fukuzaki Hanging Garden
Tee Haus
Floating Tea House
Casa Umbrella
Air Brick
Memu Meadows
Shang Xia Shanghai
Komatsu Seiren Fabric Laboratory fa-bo
New Shinagawa Station

 

Source / Order