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AKIHABARA

Akihabara in 2007

, also known as , is a neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan. It is located less than five minutes by rail from Tokyo Station. Its name is frequently shortened to ''Akiba'' in Japan. While there is an official locality named Akihabara nearby, part of TaitÅ-ku, the area known to most people as ''Akihabara'' (including the railway station of the same name) is actually Soto-Kanda, a part of Chiyoda-ku.
Akihabara is best-known as one of the largest shopping areas on Earth for electronic, computer, anime, and otaku goods, including new and used items. New items are mostly to be found on the main street, ChÅ«ÅdÅri, with many kinds of used items found in the back streets of Soto Kanda 3-chÅme. First-hand parts for PC-building are readily available from a variety of stores. Tools, electrical parts, wires, microsized cameras and similar items are found in the cramped passageways of Soto Kanda 1-chÅme (near the station). Foreign tourists tend to visit the big name shops like Laox or other speciality shops near the station, though there is more variety and lower prices at locales a little further away. Akihabara gained some fame through being home to one of the first stores devoted to personal robots and robotics.

Contents
Otaku culture
Brief history
Access
See also
External links

Otaku culture


Maid in Akihabara

Otaku culture in Akihabara represents one aspect of the people who shop and 'hang out' there in the recent years. Some people there have unique lifestyles, centered on technological enterprises and an obsession for Anime/Manga, that have made them outsiders in other sections of Japanese society. These otaku are given the chance to gather here and to meet others who share their specific interests. Akihabara is currently seen as one of the shopping districts that represents a 'mecca' of sorts for otaku, as well as to the term Akiba-kei, or Akiba-type.
Recently, with increased exposure of "otaku" culture in the Japanese media, new buildings, and the opening of another new railway line, Akihabara has seen a boom in popularity and is a popular destination for many young people interested in its unique atmosphere.

Brief history


Between stores in Akihabara

Akihabara Dell Shop

Akihabara


★ The area was just out of Sujikai-gomon city gate (present Mansei bridge) which was one of the city gates (Mitsuke) of old Edo (Tokyo). It was the gateway from inner Edo to northern and northwestern Japan and Kan’ei-ji temple in Ueno. Many dealers, craftsmen and relatively lower class samurai lived there.

★ '1869': A major blaze destroyed the area. It brought about the decision to clear the 30,000 square metres of land in order to keep future fires into inner Tokyo city.

★ '1870': In this cleared land a small Shinto shrine once in old Edo Castle was built. The shrine’s name was 鎮ç«ç¤¾|Chinka-sha, which means "the extinguisher shrine").

★ But many downtown Tokyo residents misunderstood the shrine. They thought that the deity Akiba or Akiha (秋葉) which was the most popular fire-controlling deity in central and eastern Japan must have been enshrined in it. They also called the cleared land "Akiba ga hara" or "Akibappara" which means "the deity Akiba’s square".

★ '1888': The shrine moved to Matsugaya, near Asakusa.

★ '1890': Extension of the rail line (now the JR TÅhoku Main Line) from Ueno to Akihabara. At first there was no passenger service, for south of the station was the Akihabara cargo docks, where goods from all over the world would flow into Kanda by river and be hauled up the east bank of the canal to be ticketed at the central cargo transport window.

★ From the Meiji to the ShÅwa period, as the electric railway improved transport to Akihabara and the surrounds, and especially due to the growth in dealerships, the district was designated as Seika ShijÅ (é’æžœå¸‚å ´: vegetables and fruits market).

★ '1925': Akihabara-Tokyo station connection opened as the Tohoku line extended to Tokyo.

★ '1932': As the Green Line station opened with an interconnection, Akihabara became an important transfer point.

★ '1935': Official establishment of Seika ShijÅ. (Kanda Seika ShijÅ).

★ '1936': The site of Manseibashi Station was closed (later the Transportation Museum—now closed). Railway mania had reached its zenith. The area became the number one place for electrical supplies.

★ 'Circa 1945-1955' After World War II, a black market at Kanda developed around the first school of electrical manufacturing (now the Tokyo Technical College). Clustered around the Sobu underground line, what began as a host of electrical stores selling vacuum tubes, radio goods and electrical items to the students, has today come to be known as Electric Town. Called "musen" or "wireless" shops, they were the first to begin selling radios. With the advent of wireless and radio goods, people came to be much more connected.

★ '1960s': Thanks to advanced technology, the rival Nipponbashi district of Osaka took its position as an equally prominent Electric Town, selling vast volumes of household consumer durable goods such as televisions, refrigerators and washing machines.

★ '1980s': Accompanying the spread of the personal computer in family homes ("Famikon"), local shops increasingly began to deal in computer games, and major gaming chain stores appeared on the market.

★ '1989': Kanda Seika ShijÅ moved to ÅŒta-ku, south district of Tokyo.

★ '1990s': With the Yamada and Kojima household chain stores appearing throughout the suburban outskirts of Tokyo, the sale of consumer durables at Akihabara was greatly reduced, however the sale of computer goods increased in equal measure.

★ '1994': The PC boom and accompanying computer store growth began.

★ It was also during the 1990s that the anime craze grew out of computer games, and the youth group known as otaku began to pour into Akihabara.

★ 'Since 2000', with name-brand computer sales in decline, anime shops have arisen in their place, selling to the otaku crowd.

★ 'Since 2005', major redevelopment and modernization of the station and surrounding area. Tsukuba Express, Tokyo's fastest private railway, opens in Akihabara.

Access


Akihabara Station is served by JR East (Yamanote Line, Keihin-TÅhoku Line and ChÅ«Å-SÅbu Line), Tokyo Metro (Hibiya Line) and Tsukuba Express.
SuehirochÅ Station on the Ginza Line subway and IwamotochÅ Station on the Toei Shinjuku Line subway are also within walking distance from Akihabara.

See also



Nipponbashi, in Osaka

External links



Akihabara Official website

Akihabara Official website
;Articles:



In Tokyo, a Ghetto of Geeks from Washington Post

Top 10 Akihabara game stores

Akihabara Guide @ Picturetokyo.comAkihabara Information & Gallery

Akihabara - Tokyo
;Media:

Photos of Tokyo and Akihabara

★ Map of Akihabara's anime and manga related stores:
:Akiba Walker WEST
:Akiba Walker EAST

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