Prospective buyers check the quality of fresh tuna at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in January.Eugene Hoshiko / Associated Press |
TOKYO - Tokyo's famed Tsukiji fish market - the world's biggest - won't be destroyed but will be closed for up to five years while it is modernized and turned into a "food theme park", the capital's governor said on Tuesday.
The market will move to a state-of-the-art 600 billion yen ($6 billion) facility in Toyosu on the eastern outskirts of Tokyo while Tsukiji is rebuilt. After that, Tokyo will have two wholesale fish markets, Governor Yuriko Koike said.
Koike had halted the planned move to Toyosu in August, just months before the new market's scheduled opening, after food safety concerns were raised. Toxins have been found in soil and groundwater at Toyosu, which was previously the site of a gas plant.
The initial plan was to sell the bayside Tsukiji property after the move, possibly for a shopping mall or casino.
But Koike said she is opposed to such a one-time cash gain for the capital.
Koike declined to give an exact timeline.
Toyosu will also need to be cleaned to ensure its water systems and soil meet safety standards. The city faces a challenge in calming public fears about the toxins at Toyosu, which have drawn widespread media coverage.
She believes Toyosu's high-tech distribution systems and its proximity to airports will help make it a bustling market that can coexist with Tsukiji.
Some were skeptical.
Hiroyuki Doko, proprietor of Doko Shoten, a wholesale seafood store in Tsukiji, questioned whether businesses will be able to make the same profit in Koike's theme-park plan.
But Yu Takahashi, manager of a sushi restaurant in Tsukiji, said he welcomes the decision to keep Tsukiji.
"This is where all the fish from Japan, the best fish, come together in one place. The decision will be a good thing for Japan and Tokyo," he said.
Ap - Afp