I’ve been to Tokyo (and it’s awesome!) but I don’t live there.
I’ve only glanced at the headlines of the article you posted and most of the factors appear to be in the article. There are a few things that are missing though, afaiu, and it really is a bag of mixed blessings:
fairly relaxed building codes which means building gets cheaper
average houses, especially if they’re on the smaller side, are only a couple of decades old – the Japanese demolish and replace their relatively cheap housing fairly often
less space for motorized traffic
not a lot of greenery
Cursorily related to the final point: I was also really shocked at Japanese parks. On the plus side, they’re extremely neat. However, most of them have super-wide ways, so half the park is just paved over. And of course there are opening hours, usually they’re open until 6pm but they have all kinds of alarms and announcements going off in the 30 minutes prior.
Do you live in Tokyo? How is it over there? I heard that the mixed housing regulation helped a bit, is it the case for you?
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-09-01/four-unique-ways-tokyo-approaches-housing/102784020
I’ve been to Tokyo (and it’s awesome!) but I don’t live there.
I’ve only glanced at the headlines of the article you posted and most of the factors appear to be in the article. There are a few things that are missing though, afaiu, and it really is a bag of mixed blessings:
Cursorily related to the final point: I was also really shocked at Japanese parks. On the plus side, they’re extremely neat. However, most of them have super-wide ways, so half the park is just paved over. And of course there are opening hours, usually they’re open until 6pm but they have all kinds of alarms and announcements going off in the 30 minutes prior.
Interesting, thanks!