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#mitaka — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #mitaka, aggregated by home.social.

  1. A #photo of a four-way intersection in #Mitaka, #Tokyo that I took ten years ago today. The yellow bus is covered in Studio #Ghibli livery and acts as a paid shuttle transporting patrons between Ghibli Museum in the neighborhood and the subway station.

  2. The Reversible Destiny Lofts in Mitaka, #Japan.

    They were the first multi-residential works of ‘procedural architecture’ built by #Arakawa and #MadelineGins.

    #Mitaka is a suburb of #Tokyo and also where you will find the brilliant #StudioGhibli museum, so worth a visit!

    #architecture #JapaneseArchitecture #HelenKeller

  3. The Reversible Destiny Lofts in Mitaka, #Japan.

    They were the first multi-residential works of ‘procedural architecture’ built by #Arakawa and #MadelineGins.

    #Mitaka is a suburb of #Tokyo and also where you will find the brilliant #StudioGhibli museum, so worth a visit!

    #architecture #JapaneseArchitecture #HelenKeller

  4. The Reversible Destiny Lofts in Mitaka, #Japan.

    They were the first multi-residential works of ‘procedural architecture’ built by #Arakawa and #MadelineGins.

    #Mitaka is a suburb of #Tokyo and also where you will find the brilliant #StudioGhibli museum, so worth a visit!

    #architecture #JapaneseArchitecture #HelenKeller

  5. The Reversible Destiny Lofts in Mitaka, #Japan.

    They were the first multi-residential works of ‘procedural architecture’ built by #Arakawa and #MadelineGins.

    #Mitaka is a suburb of #Tokyo and also where you will find the brilliant #StudioGhibli museum, so worth a visit!

    #architecture #JapaneseArchitecture #HelenKeller

  6. The Reversible Destiny Lofts in Mitaka, #Japan.

    They were the first multi-residential works of ‘procedural architecture’ built by #Arakawa and #MadelineGins.

    #Mitaka is a suburb of #Tokyo and also where you will find the brilliant #StudioGhibli museum, so worth a visit!

    #architecture #JapaneseArchitecture #HelenKeller