Park Court Akasaka Hinokicho The Tower
A high-rise residence adjoining Hinokicho Park and sharing its district with Tokyo Midtown.
- Use
- Residential tower
- Area
- Minato City
- Completed
- 2018
- Floors
- 44 above ground
- Height
- 170 m
- Developer
- Mitsui Fudosan Residential
A Tower That Defines Its Corner of Minato
Standing 170 metres above the streets of Minato City, Park Court Akasaka Hinokicho The Tower is one of the more commanding residential high-rises in this quietly prestigious part of Tokyo. Completed in 2018, the building rises 44 floors above ground — a scale that places it firmly among the taller purely residential structures in the city. For visitors walking through Akasaka, its silhouette is hard to miss: a clean, vertical mass that asserts itself without the flashiness sometimes associated with newer Tokyo towers.
The building was developed by Mitsui Fudosan Residential, one of Japan’s most prominent residential developers. The address sits within Minato City, a ward that stretches from the waterfront districts near Tokyo Bay all the way north through Akasaka and Roppongi — a varied urban landscape that blends embassies, offices, hotels, and residential towers in a way few other parts of the city manage. A residential tower of this height landing in Akasaka feels entirely in keeping with that layered, mixed-use character.
Architecture and Streetscape
At 170 metres, Park Court Akasaka Hinokicho The Tower clears most of its immediate neighbours by a considerable margin, which means it reads differently depending on where you encounter it. From a distance — say, looking across from one of the area’s mid-rise streets — it presents as a sleek, predominantly glazed slab, its upper floors catching the light in the early morning or at dusk in ways that make it appear almost weightless. Up close, the podium level is where the building meets the street in a more human register, with the landscaping and entrance sequence giving the building a considered ground-level presence that many tower developments overlook.
The name itself is worth pausing on. “Akasaka” anchors it geographically in one of central Tokyo’s most recognisable districts, while “Hinokicho” refers to the specific locality within Akasaka. The full name — with “The Tower” appended — signals the building’s ambition to be read as an architectural statement rather than simply another address. Whether that ambition is fully realised is, of course, a matter of personal taste, but as a piece of urban furniture the tower is a genuine presence.
Minato City has seen considerable residential high-rise development over the past two decades, and towers of this scale are not unusual here. What gives Park Court Akasaka Hinokicho The Tower a degree of distinctiveness is its specific location within Akasaka, a neighbourhood that retains more of a traditional Tokyo street grain than, for instance, the large reclaimed-land developments further south. A 44-storey tower rising from that grain creates an interesting tension — the kind of juxtaposition that makes Tokyo streetscapes so rewarding to explore on foot.
The building’s completion in 2018 places it in a period when residential tower design in Tokyo was reportedly moving toward more refined exterior treatments and greater attention to the interface between tower and street. Whether Park Court Akasaka Hinokicho The Tower fully embodies that shift, visitors can judge for themselves by making the walk through the surrounding blocks.
Summary
Park Court Akasaka Hinokicho The Tower is a 44-floor, 170-metre residential building in Minato City, completed in 2018 and developed by Mitsui Fudosan Residential. It occupies a notable position in the Akasaka district, where its height and massing create a genuine landmark amid a neighbourhood of finer urban grain. For anyone touring Tokyo’s residential high-rises, it is a worthwhile stop — not just for the tower itself, but for the way it sits within and against the streets around it, illustrating the contrasts of scale and texture that make this part of the city so architecturally interesting.
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References
- Wikipedia『東京都の超高層建築物・構築物の一覧』(要最終確認)