Tokyo Shines by Night: A VR Tour of Projection Mapping and Lighting Displays
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A Multicolored City
Contrary to its image as a bustling megalopolis, much of Tokyo winds down at night. In a bid to liven up nightlife in the capital and bolster nighttime tourism, authorities in February launched Tokyo Night & Light, a projection mapping display on the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Office building in Shinjuku.
On winter evenings, seasonal-themed illuminations draw crowds of spectators. Premier attractions include the Roppongi Hills Keyakizaka blue and white lights, the champagne gold illumination lining Marunouchi’s Nakadōri running between Tokyo Station and the Imperial Palace, and the Blue Grotto along Shibuya’s Kōendōri.
Other city landmarks like the orange-lit Tokyo Tower and the Tokyo Skytree, which features changing lighting schemes, are illuminated year-round.
In the daytime, Tokyo Skytree’s presents a white façade with bluish undertones, a traditional hue known in Japanese as aijiro, that helps it blend in with its surroundings. But things get colorful at night, with the tower’s lighting design repertoire consisting of the pale blue iki hue mirroring the waters of the Sumida River, miyabi, a pale lavender shade associated with the bluish-purple tint used in Edo period (1603–1868) days, and nobori, a color based on the auspicious orange tachibana color. These distinctive shades alternate with other lighting schemes used at different times of evening or on special occasions.
Most people think of Tokyo Tower as painted red and white. But a closer look reveals that the red shade is actually a yellow-red known as international orange, a standard color adopted to increase the tower’s visibility to aircraft. In the evening, this color shows as an even brighter orange that makes the tower look like a candle glowing in the night sky.
Seen from outer space, nighttime images of cities around the globe captured by circling satellites are said to be indicators of countries’ economic vitality. Looking at Tokyo, it is clear that Japan’s capital is still suffering the after-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Compared to 2019, satellite observations showed that nighttime brightness in 2023 had increased 3.2% in Paris and 1.4% in London. New York’s brightness was down 3.2%, but Tokyo had the largest decline, at 11.6%.
In Tokyo, there are fewer neon signs than in the past, and the metropolis has a comparative dearth of nighttime tourism. But cutting-edge lighting technology makes Tokyo an attractive leisure destination after dark, making an evening stroll a memorable experience.
(Originally published in Japanese. Text by Nippon.com. Banner photo: Tokyo Night & Light, a projection mapping display on the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Office building in Shinjuku. © Somese Naoto.)
Tokyo Roppongi Shibuya Nihonbashi Shinjuku Marunouchi virtual reality