Shibuya Scramble Square

Shibuya Scramble Square (Japanese: 渋谷スクランブルスクエア Shibuya Sukuranburu Sukuea) is a mixed-use skyscraper connected to Shibuya Station in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan. It is part of a redevelopment of the station area. Located at Shibuya Station, the complex consists of three buildings, including an eastern building, Shibuya Scramble Square, a central building with a height of 61 m and a western building with a height of 71 m. Construction of the complex began in 2014 and is due to end in 2027, with an area of 276,000 m². The eastern building of the complex, the Shibuya Scramble Square skyscraper, was completed in October 2019 and opened on November 1, 2019, with an area of 181,000 m².[1] Shibuya Scramble Square surpassed the Cerulean Tower in height and became the highest skyscraper in the district of Shibuya. The Shibuya Scramble Square underground floor is directly connected to Shibuya Station. An observation deck, “SHIBUYA SKY”, is located on the roof of the skyscraper. The complex includes shops, offices, an observation deck, and a parking area.

Shibuya Scramble Square
General information
TypeSubway station, mixed-use, observation deck
Location2-23 Shibuya Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan
Coordinates35°39′29″N 139°42′05″E
Construction started2014
Completed2019 (East Tower); 2027
OwnerTokyu Corporation , East Japan Railway Company , Tokyo Metro
Height
Antenna spireEastern building: 229.71 m

Central building: 61 m

Western building: 76 m
RoofEastern building: 228.3 m
Top floorEast building: 226 m
Technical details
Floor countEast building: 47 (7 underground)

Central building: 10 (2 underground)

Western building: 13 (5 underground)
Floor area276,000 m²
Design and construction
ArchitectNikken Sekkei, Tokyu Architects and Engineers Inc., JR East Design Corporation, East Japan Railway Company
DeveloperTokyu Architects & Engineers joint venture Nikken Sekkei
gollark: The first one is the actual data, the second one is metadata (currently just the hash of the data section).
gollark: You are wrong. Anyway, the manifests are effectively just two lines of deterministic JSON (i.e. JSON with all keys sorted and no whitespace, so it'll always hash the same way).
gollark: Eventually I could even start signing the manifests so that you could safely download potatOS from *anywhere* and verify that it's the right thing easily.
gollark: So if it detects a new manifest, it can check the hashes of all stored files, redownload the changed ones, and verify them against the manifest.
gollark: Instead of just having potatOS ping pastebin every five minutes to check for new versions of the main code, it will be able to look for a manifest containing SHA256 hashes of all the files and also cryptographic signatures.

References

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