After the emperor's death in 1912, the
Japanese Diet passed a resolution to commemorate his role in the
Meiji Restoration. An iris garden in an area of Tokyo where Emperor Meiji and Empress Shōken had been known to visit was chosen as the building's location. Construction began in 1915 under
Itō Chūta, and the shrine was built in the traditional
nagare-zukuri style, using primarily Japanese cypress and copper. The building of the shrine was a national project, mobilizing youth groups and other civic associations from throughout Japan, who contributed labor and funding. The main timbers came from
Kiso in Nagano, and
Alishan in Taiwan, then a Japanese territory, with materials being utilized from every Japanese
prefecture, including
Karafuto,
Korea,
Kwantung, and
Taiwan. It was estimated that the cost of the construction was ¥5,219,00 in 1920 (approximately US$26 million today), about a quarter of the actual cost due to the donated materials and labor. It was formally dedicated on November 3, 1920, completed in 1921, and its grounds officially finished by 1926. The interior volume of the shrine complex when originally built was 650
tsubo. Until 1946, the Meiji Shrine was officially designated one of the
Kanpei-taisha (), meaning that it stood in the first rank of government-supported shrines. The original building was destroyed during the
Tokyo air raids of World War II. The present iteration of the shrine was funded through a public fund raising effort and completed in October 1958. Meiji Shrine has been visited by numerous foreign politicians, including United States President
George W. Bush, United States Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton, and German Foreign Minister
Guido Westerwelle. ==Shrine complex==