Azabu Nagasaka House for Sale in AzabuJuban

Written by sato. Posted in Hot Properties for Sale


This apartment is located in a very exclusive residential district of Tokyo – walking distance to AzabuJuban and convenient access to Akasaka, Roppongi and Hiroo.  The Azabu Nagasaka area used to be home to the Town Magistrate in the Edo period and in recent times has become a trendy area for celebrity estates – the Vice President of the House of Representatives, the president of one of the leading mobile communications companies in Japan, and the Bridgestone Museum are all located in Azabu Nagasaka.


View from Living and Dining Room at night.

Public Transportation: Roppongi-station 9min (Hibiya-line)

AzabuJuban-station 4min (Toei Oedo-line)

The asking price is 99.9million JPY.

Size: 137.26sqm (3 bedrooms, can be renovated to 4 bedrooms) The interior has been fully reformed

Land holding: 76.4sqm

 

Address: Minato-ku, Nagasaka-cho 1-54

Other: Excellent view of Tokyo Tower and vast tracts of green land from the Living and Dining space.

Although it was built in 1979, it had seismic retrofit in 2010!

http://www.housingjapan.com/real-estate-tokyo/sales-details/?bid=11938&pid=15619&webview=1

sato

Sato was born in Fukuoka in Western Japan. After high school he studied in the US and graduated from Interior Architecture and Design at the Academy of Arts University, in San Francisco. In his freetime, he enjoys traveling, architectural tours, art and museums, surfing and reading books. Work Experience Sato worked as an assistant project manager and graphic designer at Pyatok Architects office. At the same time he was also a member of the NPO, “Rebuilding Together Oakland”. He lived and worked in Pune, India and was in charge of Design and Communications at the office of Christopher Charles Benninger Architects. Sato now specializes in residential land for sale in Minato-ku and Shibuya-ku as well as resort properties in some of Japan’s more popular holiday destinations. With his international experience, passion for architecture, and city planning, he would like to see a future Japan which is more more international and accessible to foreigners.