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Building: SCOP TOYAMA (TOYAMA PREFECTURAL BUSINESS CREATION SUPPORT CENTER,TOYAMA PREFECTURAL HOUSING FOR BUSINESS CREATION AND MIGRATION)

SCOP TOYAMA 富山県創業支援センター/創業・移住促進住宅

(AI-generated text / Claude Haiku 4.5)

SCOP TOYAMA is a mixed-use development completed in 2022 in Toyama City, designed by architects Shunji Naka and Yuri Uno of Naka Architectural Design Studio. This innovative project thoughtfully combines entrepreneurship support facilities with residential and commercial spaces. The development features traditional Japanese townhouse typologies adapted as modern terraced housing, alongside office spaces and retail areas. By integrating business incubation services with live-work residential units and public commercial facilities, SCOP TOYAMA creates a vibrant community hub that encourages startup ventures and attracts new residents to Toyama Prefecture. The design successfully demonstrates contemporary approaches to revitalizing regional economies through architecture.

SCOP TOYAMA is a mixed-use development completed in 2022 in Toyama City, designed by architects Shunji Naka and Yuri Uno of Naka Architectural Design Studio. This innovative project thoughtfully combines entrepreneurship support facilities with residential and commercial spaces. The development feat

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SCOP TOYAMA is a mixed-use development completed in 2022 in Toyama City, designed by architects Shunji Naka and Yuri Uno of Naka Architectural Design Studio. This innovative project thoughtfully combines entrepreneurship support facilities with residential and commercial spaces. The development features traditional Japanese townhouse typologies adapted as modern terraced housing, alongside office spaces and retail areas. By integrating business incubation services with live-work residential units and public commercial facilities, SCOP TOYAMA creates a vibrant community hub that encourages startup ventures and attracts new residents to Toyama Prefecture. The design successfully demonstrates contemporary approaches to revitalizing regional economies through architecture.