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Opened in 1993 by the
Tobu Railway Company, the park is extremely popular. Some
2.8 million visitors came in the first year alone,
generating revenues of 400 million yen (U.S. $4 million),
and as many as 38,000 tourists will visit the park on any
given summer day. School tours are encouraged, and a variety
of educational services are offered. All of the buildings
reproduced are still in existence, with the exception of the
Tokyo Imperial Hotel and Railway Station, replicas of which
greet the visitor on entering the exhibition.
Like the
buildings, the twelve hundred human figures that are used
throughout the park are built to scale. There are more than
a hundred types of model figures, in over three hundred
variations of costume and dress; they sit in the natural
setting created by the forty thousand bonsai trees used in
the park. For the most realistic effect, visitors should
crouch down to see the structures from a doll's-eye view.
But most people are content to wander about, as if viewing
the "world" from the vantage point of a giant 150 feet tall.
Godzilla-style stomping on the cityscapes below is not
encouraged, however.
The models are separated from spectators by only a rope
and the visitors' goodwill. There was a problem with petty
theft--the tiny figures must represent an uncommon
temptation for visiting children--in the park's early days,
but that has been virtually eliminated. Security would
appear to be minimal, but seven tour guides are available to
explain details of the many displays.
Each doll or its replacement costs around three thousand
yen to produce. Though designed in Japan, the figures are
manufactured overseas. The replica buildings each cost as
much as fifty million yen ("the price of a mansion," laughs
Mayahara). Japanese artists and model makers, many of whom
had previously worked for the Toho film company (famed for
its Godzilla movies), visited the original sites before
beginning work on the replicas. Each complex of scale
buildings took as long as six years to build.
The park has some notable omissions: There are no South
American structures, nor is there a reproduction of the
Temple Mount in Jerusalem, for example. The park's directors
would like to expand the project further but are constrained
by lack of available land. |
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Copyright 2003 THE
WORLD AND I Magazine. All rights reserved.
The World & I is published monthly by News World Communications,
Inc.
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