place

Setagaya Art Museum

1986 establishments in JapanArt museums and galleries in TokyoArt museums established in 1986Buildings and structures in SetagayaJapanese art stubs
Japanese museum stubsPostmodern architecture in Japan
Setagaya Art Museum
Setagaya Art Museum

The Setagaya Art Museum (世田谷美術館, Setagaya Bijutsukan) is an art museum in Yōga, Setagaya, Tokyo. The museum, which opened March 30, 1986, houses a permanent gallery and mounts seasonal exhibitions.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Setagaya Art Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Setagaya Art Museum
美術館通り, Setagaya

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Setagaya Art MuseumContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 35.631589 ° E 139.621896 °
placeShow on map

Address

世田谷美術館

美術館通り 世田谷区砧公園1-2
157-8510 Setagaya
Japan
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q3892314)
linkOpenStreetMap (1420766113)

Setagaya Art Museum
Setagaya Art Museum
Share experience

Nearby Places

Futako-Tamagawa Rise
Futako-Tamagawa Rise

The Futako-Tamagawa Rise (二子玉川ライズ) complex comprises an upscale retail shopping series, high-rise apartment towers, and cultural space near the Futako-Tamagawa Station/transportation hub. Located to the east of the FT station on the Tama River marking the southern metropolitan boundary of Tokyo, Futako-Tamagawa is the second major crossing upstream from the mouth of where the Tama River empties into Tokyo Bay. This immediate area was the location of the first then-"suburban" location of Takashimaya in the 1970s. It has had continued growth, development, and even strategic-level planning since its launching of a garden city project (see: Tama New Town) since the 1920s launching. It is near the Den-en-chōfu upscale residential area. Futako-Tamagawa Rise currently has two of its three development projects complete, including 151m tall towers, making them among the top 150 tallest buildings in Tokyo. Futako-Tamagawa, meanwhile, is listed in travel literature as being "core" or "central" Tokyo. The FT Rise retail area, across a street from the Takashimaya-complex, is connected to it by underground and carries its own list of prestige tenants, including Oshman's, MUJI, Uniqlo, H&M, Tokyu Food Show, as well as more middle-zone businesses. The architectural style is marked by an international style evoking Piet Mondrian and its lighting/LED received English-language coverage despite the complex launch was scheduled a few days after the Fukushima incident; there were some last-minute modifications. FT Rise Towers will remain under construction until 2015. Apartment prices have been reported in media at $1.8 million for purchase or $11,000+/month in rent but only several hundred meters away more normal Tokyo prices of a few hundred/month for small efficiencies prevail.