Why Japan's Cities Keep Adding Green Space as Population Shrinks
City green zones in Japan expanded from just 336.6 hectares in 1975 to 17,324 ha in 2023, an increase of more than 50 times, even as the national popu
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Portal Site of Official Statistics of Japan website (https://www.e-stat.go.jp/).
ASIA · DAILY · POST
from Japan At a time when Japan's shrinking population forces entire neighbourhoods to consolidate, one feature of urban life is quietly expanding: green zones. In 1975, just 336.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
6 hectares of Japanese urban land fell under the city green zone designation. By 2023, that number had swelled to 17,324 hectares , a fifty-fold expansion, according to Statistics Bureau of Japan data.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Urban planners kept carving out green space through every cycle The trajectory is almost linear. After a slow start — only 626 ha in 1977 — the area crossed 1,000 ha in the early 1980s.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
By 1990, it reached 5,283 ha , then kept climbing even as the post-bubble economy stalled. From 1990 to 2010, the tally more than doubled to 14,039 ha. The green footprint was remarkably insulated from economic shocks.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
During the 2008 financial crisis and the pandemic, annual additions never reversed; the only question was how fast it grew. The slowest growth years still added over 100 ha, while bumper years added 700–800 ha.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Shrinking population didn't reverse the trend—it may have accelerated it Between 2020 and 2023, as Japan's total population fell by about 1.5 million, city green zones expanded by 840 hectares .
ASIA · DAILY · POST
That's one of the largest three-year jumps in the 49-year series.
ASIA · DAILY · POST
Read the full story
Continue on AsiaDailyPost.com
Continue reading on AsiaDailyPost
City green zones in Japan expanded from just 336.6 hectares in 1975 to 17,324 ha in 2023, an increase of more than 50 times, even as the national population declined.