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Toyota City: symbol of Japan’s auto rise

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Toyota City stands as a testament to the meteoric rise of its namesake, now the world’s biggest carmaker with record profits and sales of more than 10 million cars globally last year.
But this sprawling city of 422,000 people, just east of the industrial centre Nagoya, was once a struggling textiles town called Koromo whose inhabitants depended on silk production to make a living.

Times got tough for the little community as the sector began to decline from the end of World War I, and it was further shaken by the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake, which took 140,000 lives across the country, as well as the Great Depression six years later.

By 1933, as Japan focused on bolstering its domestic industries and imperial ambitions, Kiichiro Toyoda decided to build automobiles with the same pioneering spirit as his father Sakichi, who invented the automatic loom.

But where could he build a factory big enough to roll out cars? A string of communities were interested. In a stroke of fate, Koromo got the nod for its cheap land and nearby transit links — and the enthusiasm of the town’s then mayor who faced off with sceptical local landowners.

“At that time, people didn’t really believe in the auto industry but he (the mayor) had the right intuition,” a municipal official told AFP, adding that the sector was “crucial for the city’s prosperity”.

And on August 28, 1937, “Toyota Jidosha Kogyo” (Toyota Automotive Industry) was born with a 495,000-square-metre (5.3-million-square-foot) factory big enough for 5,000 workers opened the following year.

- More than just cars -

While the Corolla and Prius hybrid maker now has plants in every corner of the globe, Toyota City still has a total of 10 factories building cars and parts in the city proper and surrounding area.

There are about 70,000 local people working for Toyota in the area, many whose parents or grandparents also relied on the giant company for a pay cheque, with about 40 percent of local employees working in the auto sector.

So it seemed appropriate that, in 1959, the town changed its name to Toyota-Shi, or Toyota City in English, although that was a controversial move at the time — and the current mayor says his community is about more than just one industry.

“It is true that this is the city of the car — the name speaks for itself — but that isn’t everything,” says Toshihiko Ota.

“We are the leading producer of rice in Aichi prefecture and we also grow grapes and pears. Toyota City has many faces, which is sometimes masked by cars.”

But the reality is, despite efforts to diversify the local economy, it is still heavily dependent on Toyota and local suppliers, with the company’s subsidiaries also involved in real estate, tourism, and insurance.

“When Toyota coughs, the whole city catches a cold” is a common phrase, a point underlined during the 2008 financial crisis that saw Toyota lay off thousands of temporary employees, while tax revenue from the company temporarily dipped.

“The atmosphere was morose, it depressed the entire region,” the mayor says.

Still, the city avoided the fate of another auto city, Detroit, whose declining fortunes saw it declare bankruptcy two years ago.

And with the recovery came a renewed optimism for Toyota City, beefed up by municipal projects including new schools and hospitals… sponsored by Toyota.


Toyota City: symbol of Japan’s auto rise | Pakistan Today
 
eGZycng2MTI=_o_toyota-city-feels-the-pain.jpg




img_2865.jpg


Toyota_Group_Pavilion.jpg


^________^


toyota-models.jpg
 
I had been to Karya last year , it is famous to Toyota loom production , is is the same city called Toyota ?
 
Toyota City stands as a testament to the meteoric rise of its namesake, now the world’s biggest carmaker with record profits and sales of more than 10 million cars globally last year.
But this sprawling city of 422,000 people, just east of the industrial centre Nagoya, was once a struggling textiles town called Koromo whose inhabitants depended on silk production to make a living.

Times got tough for the little community as the sector began to decline from the end of World War I, and it was further shaken by the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake, which took 140,000 lives across the country, as well as the Great Depression six years later.

By 1933, as Japan focused on bolstering its domestic industries and imperial ambitions, Kiichiro Toyoda decided to build automobiles with the same pioneering spirit as his father Sakichi, who invented the automatic loom.

But where could he build a factory big enough to roll out cars? A string of communities were interested. In a stroke of fate, Koromo got the nod for its cheap land and nearby transit links — and the enthusiasm of the town’s then mayor who faced off with sceptical local landowners.

“At that time, people didn’t really believe in the auto industry but he (the mayor) had the right intuition,” a municipal official told AFP, adding that the sector was “crucial for the city’s prosperity”.

And on August 28, 1937, “Toyota Jidosha Kogyo” (Toyota Automotive Industry) was born with a 495,000-square-metre (5.3-million-square-foot) factory big enough for 5,000 workers opened the following year.

- More than just cars -

While the Corolla and Prius hybrid maker now has plants in every corner of the globe, Toyota City still has a total of 10 factories building cars and parts in the city proper and surrounding area.

There are about 70,000 local people working for Toyota in the area, many whose parents or grandparents also relied on the giant company for a pay cheque, with about 40 percent of local employees working in the auto sector.

So it seemed appropriate that, in 1959, the town changed its name to Toyota-Shi, or Toyota City in English, although that was a controversial move at the time — and the current mayor says his community is about more than just one industry.

“It is true that this is the city of the car — the name speaks for itself — but that isn’t everything,” says Toshihiko Ota.

“We are the leading producer of rice in Aichi prefecture and we also grow grapes and pears. Toyota City has many faces, which is sometimes masked by cars.”

But the reality is, despite efforts to diversify the local economy, it is still heavily dependent on Toyota and local suppliers, with the company’s subsidiaries also involved in real estate, tourism, and insurance.

“When Toyota coughs, the whole city catches a cold” is a common phrase, a point underlined during the 2008 financial crisis that saw Toyota lay off thousands of temporary employees, while tax revenue from the company temporarily dipped.

“The atmosphere was morose, it depressed the entire region,” the mayor says.

Still, the city avoided the fate of another auto city, Detroit, whose declining fortunes saw it declare bankruptcy two years ago.

And with the recovery came a renewed optimism for Toyota City, beefed up by municipal projects including new schools and hospitals… sponsored by Toyota.


Toyota City: symbol of Japan’s auto rise | Pakistan Today


WOOOOW
 
Toyota City stands as a testament to the meteoric rise of its namesake, now the world’s biggest carmaker with record profits and sales of more than 10 million cars globally last year.
But this sprawling city of 422,000 people, just east of the industrial centre Nagoya, was once a struggling textiles town called Koromo whose inhabitants depended on silk production to make a living.

Times got tough for the little community as the sector began to decline from the end of World War I, and it was further shaken by the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake, which took 140,000 lives across the country, as well as the Great Depression six years later.

By 1933, as Japan focused on bolstering its domestic industries and imperial ambitions, Kiichiro Toyoda decided to build automobiles with the same pioneering spirit as his father Sakichi, who invented the automatic loom.

But where could he build a factory big enough to roll out cars? A string of communities were interested. In a stroke of fate, Koromo got the nod for its cheap land and nearby transit links — and the enthusiasm of the town’s then mayor who faced off with sceptical local landowners.

“At that time, people didn’t really believe in the auto industry but he (the mayor) had the right intuition,” a municipal official told AFP, adding that the sector was “crucial for the city’s prosperity”.

And on August 28, 1937, “Toyota Jidosha Kogyo” (Toyota Automotive Industry) was born with a 495,000-square-metre (5.3-million-square-foot) factory big enough for 5,000 workers opened the following year.

- More than just cars -

While the Corolla and Prius hybrid maker now has plants in every corner of the globe, Toyota City still has a total of 10 factories building cars and parts in the city proper and surrounding area.

There are about 70,000 local people working for Toyota in the area, many whose parents or grandparents also relied on the giant company for a pay cheque, with about 40 percent of local employees working in the auto sector.

So it seemed appropriate that, in 1959, the town changed its name to Toyota-Shi, or Toyota City in English, although that was a controversial move at the time — and the current mayor says his community is about more than just one industry.

“It is true that this is the city of the car — the name speaks for itself — but that isn’t everything,” says Toshihiko Ota.

“We are the leading producer of rice in Aichi prefecture and we also grow grapes and pears. Toyota City has many faces, which is sometimes masked by cars.”

But the reality is, despite efforts to diversify the local economy, it is still heavily dependent on Toyota and local suppliers, with the company’s subsidiaries also involved in real estate, tourism, and insurance.

“When Toyota coughs, the whole city catches a cold” is a common phrase, a point underlined during the 2008 financial crisis that saw Toyota lay off thousands of temporary employees, while tax revenue from the company temporarily dipped.

“The atmosphere was morose, it depressed the entire region,” the mayor says.

Still, the city avoided the fate of another auto city, Detroit, whose declining fortunes saw it declare bankruptcy two years ago.

And with the recovery came a renewed optimism for Toyota City, beefed up by municipal projects including new schools and hospitals… sponsored by Toyota.


Toyota City: symbol of Japan’s auto rise | Pakistan Today

Ah yes Toyota, the first car I drove was a Toyota Fortuner and the first car I crashed was the same one too....
 
Ah yes Toyota, the first car I drove was a Toyota Fortuner and the first car I crashed was the same one too....


That's a handsome SUV!!!

I'm sorry to hear you got into an accident !

Have you seen the new 2015 Toyota Fortuners?

:smitten::smitten:


SUV20150210.gif



2015-Toyota-Fortuner-Thailand.jpg
.


2013_toyota_fortuner_30v_06.jpg


Ah yes Toyota, the first car I drove was a Toyota Fortuner and the first car I crashed was the same one too....



Have you test drove the 2015 Toyota Landcruiser ?

2013-toyota-land-cruiser.jpg



oboi_toyota_land%20cruiser%20v8%202012_05.jpg
 
Interesting naming a city after the automobile maker, gives the place some character.
 
That's a handsome SUV!!!

I'm sorry to hear you got into an accident !

Have you seen the new 2015 Toyota Fortuners?

:smitten::smitten:


SUV20150210.gif



2015-Toyota-Fortuner-Thailand.jpg
.


2013_toyota_fortuner_30v_06.jpg






Have you test drove the 2015 Toyota Landcruiser ?

2013-toyota-land-cruiser.jpg



oboi_toyota_land%20cruiser%20v8%202012_05.jpg



Yup, I have seen a lot of 2015 Land Cruisers here in Karachi, honestly people here have a craze for that vehicle, but fortunately the Fortuner was my mom's and well I did what everyone should do if their mother is angry at them (Go to their father 8-)) and it was 2012 Fortuner. "Was".
 
Yup, I have seen a lot of 2015 Land Cruisers here in Karachi, honestly people here have a craze for that vehicle, but fortunately the Fortuner was my mom's and well I did what everyone should do if their mother is angry at them (Go to their father 8-)) and it was 2012 Fortuner. "Was".


ha ha ha ! you're a daddy's girl then eh? ^_^/)

Interesting naming a city after the automobile maker, gives the place some character.


Yes !

Well, to be honest, the Koreans also have a 삼성타운 (SAMSUNG TOWN) in the Seochu Gu district in Seoul.

;)


Its part of the Zaibatsu Culture of Japan and to an extent in Korea.


Btw, a picture of SAMSUNG TOWN,

482ee6eda0474&filename=20080516121090158706853000.jpg



171CEC504DF1683603F03D


@Shotgunner51 Bro, have you been to Samsung Town? Its by Seochu gu district. I've been here about 3 years ago, its like Seoul's fashion district as well. I'd compare it to NYC's Soho area....
 
Japan engineers the most reliable cars for sure.
 
ha ha ha ! you're a daddy's girl then eh? ^_^/)




Yes !

Well, to be honest, the Koreans also have a 삼성타운 (SAMSUNG TOWN) in the Seochu Gu district in Seoul.

;)


Its part of the Zaibatsu Culture of Japan and to an extent in Korea.


Btw, a picture of SAMSUNG TOWN,

482ee6eda0474&filename=20080516121090158706853000.jpg



171CEC504DF1683603F03D


@Shotgunner51 Bro, have you been to Samsung Town? Its by Seochu gu district. I've been here about 3 years ago, its like Seoul's fashion district as well. I'd compare it to NYC's Soho area....

I just move around, if there's an argument with mom I go to my dad, if there is an argument with dad I go to my mom, I wonder if I keep this up how quickly will my parents divorce each other?.... But lets not think about that.

Japan engineers the most reliable cars for sure.


Japan does but don't count out Germans, Japan's automotive industry went through an entire revolution during the 1980s to improve vehicle quality and rate of production which started competing with it's Western counterparts, this is a recent example that Toyota built vehicles like Mark X which gave technologies that even BMW or Mercedes didn't have.
 
I just move around, if there's an argument with mom I go to my dad, if there is an argument with dad I go to my mom, I wonder if I keep this up how quickly will my parents divorce each other?.... But lets not think about that.


Haaa! Cute !
 
ha ha ha ! you're a daddy's girl then eh? ^_^/)




Yes !

Well, to be honest, the Koreans also have a 삼성타운 (SAMSUNG TOWN) in the Seochu Gu district in Seoul.

;)


Its part of the Zaibatsu Culture of Japan and to an extent in Korea.


Btw, a picture of SAMSUNG TOWN,

482ee6eda0474&filename=20080516121090158706853000.jpg



171CEC504DF1683603F03D


@Shotgunner51 Bro, have you been to Samsung Town? Its by Seochu gu district. I've been here about 3 years ago, its like Seoul's fashion district as well. I'd compare it to NYC's Soho area....

Wow lovely towns! Is it in Gangnam or Gangbuk? Looks like in Gangnam I guess, wider streets, been there many time but not sure exactly which districts, the names are difficult for me LOL. Usually dwell with buddies at Myeong Dong of Gang Buk, my favorite place!
 
Wow lovely towns! Is it in Gangnam or Gangbuk? Looks like in Gangnam I guess, wider streets, been there many time but not sure exactly which districts, the names are difficult for me LOL. Usually dwell with buddies at Myeong Dong of Gang Buk, my favorite place!

hahaha, you're good ! Yes its by Gangnam ! I've not visited or explored by Gang Buk district , i hear there's lots of clubs there eh? ;)
 
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