Newly built Tokyo units to be demolished for obscuring Mt Fuji view

Tokyo: A newly constructed residential building in suburban Tokyo will be pulled down before the apartments were due to be handed over to buyers,after incensed locals complained the structure blocked their views of Mt Fuji.

The 10-storey apartment building on Fujimi Street – which translates to “Fuji view” – in the suburb of Kunitachi comprises 18 housing units,which range in price from around ¥70 million to ¥100 million ($670,000 to nearly $1 million),according to the builder Sekisui House Ltd.

Mount Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline seen from an observation deck in Tokyo,Japan.

Mount Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline seen from an observation deck in Tokyo,Japan.Bloomberg

The firm has issued an apology saying the building has a “significant impact” on the landscape.

“We concluded that the view from Fujimi Street should take priority. We have voluntarily decided to cancel the project,” it said in a statement on its website.

The company will compensate buyers’ costs and help arrange other housing for them if necessary,a spokesperson told Bloomberg News. Any financial loss on the soon-to-be-demolished building wasn’t disclosed.

Views of Mt Fuji,a UNESCO World Heritage Site,are a real estate selling point in Japan. “Fujimi” is a common term that can be used to label anything from streets to apartment blocks to a whole city,usually advertising a view of the landmark. Kunitachi was selected in a government guide for the region’s 100 best Fuji viewing spots.

The building impeded the view of the mountain from the local train station,according to a post on X by Kan Takeuchi,an associate professor at Hitotsubashi University,which has a campus in Kunitachi.

While views of the iconic mountain are highly valued by Japanese people,the right of tourists to see them have recently been the subject of debate. The nation is experiencing a tourism boom due to the weak yen and post-pandemic urge to travel and locals have been complaining that visitors are causing disruption at popular Mt Fuji viewing sites.

In May,authorities in the holiday town ofFujikawaguchiko put up an opaque barrier at a remote convenience store with a backdrop of Mt Fuji. The site was being swarmed by photo-hungry tourists looking for the perfect Instagram shot. A second barrier was also installed recently at an overpass with a similarly photogenic view in Fuji City.

Sekisui House hasn’t released plans for the Kunitachi site.

Bloomberg

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