Grand Cube Osaka
| Osaka International Convention Center | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Address | 5-3-51, Nakanoshima, | 
| Location | Kita-ku, Osaka, Osaka, Japan | 
| Coordinates | 34°41′22″N 135°29′10″E / 34.6894°N 135.486°E | 
| Owner | Osaka Prefecture | 
| Operator | Osaka International Convention Center Corporation | 
| Built | 17 December 1996 - December 24, 1999 | 
| Inaugurated | December 24, 1999 | 
| Opened | April 1, 2000 | 
Construction cost  | ¥70 billion (¥71.6 billion in 2019 yen[1]) | 
Classroom-style seating  | 24-630 | 
| Banquet/ballroom | 440 | 
Theatre seating  | 40-2,754 | 
| Enclosed space | |
| • Total space | 6,078 m2 (65,420 sq ft) Ex. the Main Hall | 
| • Exhibit hall floor | 2,600 m2 (28,000 sq ft) | 
| • Breakout/meeting | 6,078 m2 (65,420 sq ft) Ex. the Main Hall | 
| • Ballroom | 2,600 m2 (28,000 sq ft) | 
| Parking | 304 units (underground area) | 
| Public transit access | Keihan Nakanoshima Line at Nakanoshima | 
| Website | |
| www | |
Osaka International Convention Center (大阪府立国際会議場, Ōsaka Furitsu Kokusai Kaigijō), also known as Grand Cube Osaka (グランキューブ大阪, Guran kyūbu Ōsaka), is a convention center in the city of Osaka, Japan.
Located adjacent to the convention center is underground Nakanoshima Station served by Keihan Electric Railway Nakanoshima Line as the terminus.
Past events
- 2001 World Tourism Organization Congress
 - 2004 Rotary International World Convention
 - 34th G8 summit Finance minister convention
 - Japanese High School Baseball Championship Draw (2009)
 - 26th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (2016)
 - Fanmeeting 2019: SONE Japan presents - Taeyeon's Atelier-
 
References
- ^ 1868 to 1938: Williamson J., Nominal Wage, Cost of Living, Real Wage and Land Rent Data for Japan 1831-1938, 1939 to 1945: Bank of Japan Historical Statistics Afterwards, Japanese Historical Consumer Price Index numbers based on data available from the Japanese Statistics Bureau. Japan Historical Consumer Price Index (CPI) – 1970 to 2014 Retrieved 30 July 2014. For between 1946 and 1970, from "昭和戦後史". Retrieved 2015-01-24.
 
External links
