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Posted: 2015-10-01T19:41:28Z | Updated: 2015-10-01T19:59:01Z This Is What The Tokyo Olympic Games Looked Like In 1964 | HuffPost

This Is What The Tokyo Olympic Games Looked Like In 1964

This Is What The Tokyo Olympic Games Looked Like In 1964
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Tokyo will host the Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games for the second time in 2020. The 1964 Tokyo Olympics, which took place only 19 years after the end of World War II, marked the first time the games were held in Asia.

Yoshinori Sakai, who carried the Olympic flame, was born on Aug. 6, 1945, the same day the bomb exploded in Hiroshima. He was chosen to pay tribute to the victims, and to indicate Japans recovery from the war .

The Olympics also spurred a major building program that dramatically transformed Tokyos urban landscape . These photos capture the city's 1960s development and the vigor with which the games infused Tokyo.

Jiji Press Co.
The National Stadium under construction, in preparation for the Tokyo Olympics, in Tokyo's Minato Ward. Photograph taken in August 1962.
Associated Press
A highway under construction in Tokyo. Accidents, some fatal, happened during the rapid building of the large-scale structure. Photograph taken on Dec. 12, 1963.
Jiji Press Co.
As the Tokyo Olympics approached, construction for event facilities continued at the Komazawa Olympic Park, in Tokyos Setagaya Ward. Photograph taken on Dec. 20, 1963.
Jiji Press Co.
A raffle for tickets to the opening and closing ceremonies of the Tokyo Olympics at the Hibiya Outdoor Theater, in Tokyos Chiyoda Ward. Photograph taken on Jan. 22, 1964.
Jiji Press Co.
Komazawa, located on the outer grounds of the Meiji Shrine, became the site for two Tokyo Olympics venues. Soccer matches were held at the athletic field to the upper right. To the lower left is a gymnasium that was used for wrestling matches. Photograph taken in March 1964.
Jiji Press Co.
The Enoshima yacht harbor, on which construction started in 1961, was paired with the town of Hayama to be the Tokyo Olympics yacht venue, at Kanagawa Prefecture, Fujisawa City. It could accommodate up to 350 boats. Photograph taken in March 1964.
Jiji Press Co.
The Budokan, the designated judo venue at the Olympics, nears completion at Kitanomaru Park, in Tokyos Chiyoda Ward. Photograph taken in May 1964.
Associated Press
A Japanese man flies a kite with a poster of the Tokyo Olympic Games made out of paper and bamboo, in Showa Town, Japan. Photograph taken on May 5, 1964.
Keystone-France via Getty Images
People in Tokyo put up Olympic Games posters. Photograph taken on June 1, 1964.
Jiji Press Co.
The Shuto Expressway Route 4 (the Shinjuku Route). On the right is the Benkei Bridge located in Tokyos Chiyoda Ward, near Akasaka-Mitsuke subway station. Photograph taken on July 25, 1964.
Dea/A. Dagli Orti via Getty Images
Tokyo Olympics commemorative stamp. Photograph taken on Sept. 6, 1964.
Jiji Press Co.
Relay runners carry the Olympic flame through Tokyo. Photograph taken on Oct. 7, 1964.
Associated Press
At the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics jets create vapor trails shaped like Olympic Rings. Photograph taken on Oct. 10, 1964.
Sankei Archive via Getty Images
Yoshinori Sakai carries the Olympic flame at the opening ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics at the National Stadium. Photograph taken on Oct. 10, 1964.
Associated Press
The Tokyo Olympics Games opening ceremony. Photograph taken on Oct. 10, 1964.

This post originally appeared on HuffPost Japan and was translated into English.

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