'' in use
Origin The land on which the fish market sat was created during the
Edo period by the
Tokugawa shogunate after the
Great fire of Meireki of 1657. It was created through
land reclamation on the Tokyo Bay, and the area was therefore named
Tsukiji (築地), meaning "constructed land" or "reclaimed land". The fish market however was not sited here until the 20th century. The first fish market in Tokyo was originally located in the
Nihonbashi district, next to the Nihonbashi bridge that gave the area its name. The area was one of the earliest places to be settled when
Edo (as Tokyo was known until the 1870s) was made the capital by
Tokugawa Ieyasu, and the market provided food for the
Edo Castle built on a nearby hill. Tokugawa Ieyasu took a number of fishermen from Tsukuda,
Osaka to Edo to provide fish for the castle in 1590. Fish not bought by the castle was then sold near the
Nihonbashi bridge, at a market called
uogashi (literally, "fish quay"). In August 1918, following the so-called
Rice Riots (
Kome Sōdō), which broke out in over 100 cities and towns in protest against food shortages and the speculative practices of wholesalers, the Japanese government was forced to create new institutions for the distribution of foodstuffs, especially in urban areas. A Central Wholesale Market Law was established in March 1923. The
Great Kantō earthquake on 1 September 1923 devastated much of central Tokyo, including the
Nihonbashi fish market. The Tokyo government, which already had plans to relocate the market due to its unsanitary conditions considered unsuitable for an area that had developed into a business center, then took the opportunity to move the market to the
Tsukiji district. The relocation of the market would be one of the biggest reconstruction projects in Tokyo after the earthquake, taking over six years involving 419,500 workers. On the same day, Tōkyō-Shijō station (
東京市場駅) was opened with tracks designed around the market area. in 1998, six industry groups participating to Tsukiji market submitted a request in their joint signature to the
Tokyo Metropolitan Government to conduct a study and hold discussion of an opportunity about relocating market functions to Tokyo Waterfront Area, four of them were for the relocation and the remaining two were against. Throughout 1999, related
municipal or urban engineering studies were conducted and discussing committees were held. In 2000, six industry groups and Tokyo Metropolitan Government reached an agreement to relocate. The Tsukiji fish market occupies valuable real estate close to the center of the city. Former Tokyo Governor
Shintaro Ishihara repeatedly called for moving the market to
Toyosu,
Koto. The long-anticipated move to the new
Toyosu Market (豊洲市場) was scheduled to take place in November 2016, in preparation for the
2020 Summer Olympics, but on August 31, 2016, the move was postponed. There had been concerns that new location was heavily polluted and needed to be cleaned up. The groundwater at the site contained contaminants that "far exceeded environmental limits", which was mitigated by installing additional water pumps. The remaining area of the market would be redeveloped. In June 2017, plans to move the fish market were restarted. but delayed in July to the autumn of 2018. On 3 August 2017, a fire broke out in some of the outer buildings. After the new site had been declared safe following a cleanup operation, the opening date of the new market was set for 11 October 2018. Tsukiji market closed on 6 October 2018, with the businesses of the inner market relocated to the new Toyosu Market between 6 and 11 October. Even though Tsukiji inner market has moved to Toyosu, the outer market remains, selling food and other goods. The former market was used temporarily as a hub for transport vehicles during the
2020 Tokyo Olympics. On April 19, 2024, it was announced that the area where the market was located will be redeveloped into a new economic and entertainment area centralized with a new stadium for the
Yomiuri Giants. ==Economics==