Shibakawa Tachu leaves Tsushima to establish a medical practice in Kyoto

His son-in-law, Shinroku, ran a kimono shop (Mukadeya) in Ukiyo-koji, Yodoyabashi, Osaka.

芝河多仲が対馬より持参したとされる芝川家伝来の槍
A spear passed down through the Shibakawa family said to have been brought from Tsushima by Shibakawa Tachu

Shinroku’s son-in-law, Shinsuke, starts a business selling foreign goods

Around this time, the kanji characters of the Shibakawa family name were changed from 芝河 to 芝川.
The trading shop’s name was also changed from Mukadeya Shinsuke to Hyakushin.

『大阪商工銘家集』(1846年)
“Famous Osaka Merchants Collection” (1846)

Shinsuke’s son-in-law, Mataemon, establishes a separate branch of the family business selling foreign goods in Fushimi-machi (Semba)

Mataemon, born into a family of maki-e (Japanese lacquer sprinkled with gold or silver powder) craftsman in Kyoto, established himself as an independent makie craftsman at the age of 18.
Upon the invitation of an acquaintance, he later started a business producing copperplate-decorated ceramics (Kaseyama Ware). As part of his efforts to expand distribution, he visited Hyakushin, where Shibakawa Shinsuke recognized his business acumen and brought him into the Shibakawa family as a son-in-law.

After marrying into the family, Mataemon established a separate branch of the family business selling foreign goods under the name Hyakumata (named after Mukadeya Mataemon).
During the turbulent Bakumatsu period, he expanded his business to Sakai, Nagasaki, and Edo, amassing considerable wealth. Following the opening of Japan, his expertise in foreign trade was recognized, and he was entrusted with national foreign exchange operations, playing a key role.

In the early Meiji period, when a financial panic occurred at Kofukuin, a temple in Nara with which he had connections, he rushed over with 2,000 ryo and promptly calmed the unrest, which even the governor had failed to do.

After his retirement, he helped establish and manage the Dojima Rice Exchange and the Osaka Chamber of Commerce. Additionally, he supported young painters and founded a maki-e school, fostering the development of the next generation in the arts.

Shibakawa Mataemon I
Shibakawa Mataemon I
Shibakawa Mataemon’s Fushimi-machi residence (Painted by Fukada Chokujo)
Shibakawa Mataemon’s Fushimi-machi residence (Painted by Fukada Chokujo)
“Fukujuzu,” a collaboration between the literati painter Tanomura Chokunyu and Shibakawa Dodo (Mataemon I)
“Fukujuzu,” a collaboration between the literati painter Tanomura Chokunyu and Shibakawa Dodo (Mataemon I)
Sansui maki-e two-tiered incense box A maki-e work produced by the Shibakawa maki-e business
Sansui maki-e two-tiered incense box
A maki-e work produced by shibakawa’s maki-e business

Educational Contributions

The Shibakawa family, including but not limited to Shibakawa Mataemon I who founded a maki-e school, has shown a long-standing commitment to education, offering support to various schools (not including donations to schools their children attend).

  • Osaka Commercial Training Institute (now Osaka Metropolitan University): Supported the institute in its early years through donations
  • Japan Women’s University: Promoter and initial donor
  • Sumaura Elementary School: founding member
  • Kwansei Gakuin University: Donated land for its relocation and made other contributions
  • Shiransha Home Economics School: Established the school
  • Tezukayama Gakuin: Made donations, provided suburban campus buildings at no cost

Mataemon’s eldest son, Matajiro, succeeds him becoming Mataemon II

Matajiro, Mataemon’s only son, started helping with the family business at the age of 14 or 15. He became independent in 1870, opening a Western goods store, but later used the assets he had accumulated to purchase land, closing his imported goods business.
He then shifted his focus to the real estate business to safeguard the family’s future.
With a keen eye for land, he gradually expanded their holdings, also venturing into afforestation and, in Nishinomiya, acquired a fruit farm called Kotoen through foreclosure, where he cultivated pears and grapes that were later presented to Emperor Showa.

In 1944, a villa designed by architect Takeda Goichi was built at Kotoen. Along with a tea room and garden, infrastructure such as roads was also developed, and it is said that this later became a key factor in Kwansei Gakuin University’s decision to relocate to Kotoen (Uegahara).

During the opening of the Hanshin Express Railway (now Hankyu Railway), he negotiated with Kobayashi Ichizo and donated land, leading to the establishment of the station (now Kotoen Station).
He was a tea ceremony enthusiast, he formed a tea ceremony group with Fujita Denzaburo, Sumitomo Kichizaemon, and Murayama Ryohei. He was well known as a tea ceremony master.

Shibakawa Mataemon II
Shibakawa Mataemon II
Shibakawa Mataemon’s residence at Kotoen
Shibakawa Mataemon’s residence at Kotoen
Fruit orchard
Fruit orchard
Listed as a general guardian alongside Mitsui, Sumitomo, and others in the “Wealthy Families of the Empire of Japan” from 1907
Listed as a general guardian alongside Mitsui, Sumitomo, and others in the “Wealthy Families of the Empire of Japan” from 1907
Grapes presented to Emperor Showa
Grapes presented to Emperor Showa

Mataemon II purchases land in the coastal and river mouth areas of Osaka Bay (reclaimed land)

He purchased Chitose Shinden (1878), Kagaya Shinden (1879), and Chishima Shinden (1886), totaling approximately 1.8 million square meters of reclaimed land. To ensure more stable asset inheritance, he transitioned the business from small goods trading (import-export business) to land management.

Map of reclaimed land purchased
Map of reclaimed land purchased
Illustrated map of Kitakagaya Shinden
Illustrated map of Kitakagaya Shinden

Resolution of the Onawachi Incident

This incident involves the Onawachi (a water surface area with official reclamation permission) owned by the Shibakawa family near Chitose Shinden. The city of Osaka moved forward with plans to reclaim and sell the land without prior consultation.
As a result of mediation, the family’s claims were acknowledged, and the issue was resolved by selling the Onawachi land to the city of Osaka. However, the family contested the disregard for their rights, stating they had no intention of profiting and donated the entire sale amount, minus legal fees, to the city of Osaka to cover port construction expenses.

Establishment of Chishima Real Estate Co., Ltd.

The company successively acquired the newly reclaimed land that the Shibakawa family owned, negotiated with tenant farmers, and converted agricultural land into industrial land, contributing to the development of modern Osaka.
To avoid using the Shibakawa name publicly, the company was named after the reclaimed land they owned (Chitose and Chishima).

Completion of the Taisho Canal

In collaboration with neighboring landowners, a canal was excavated on their property, connecting the Shirinashi River and the Kizu River.
A waterway and a timber yard were also developed, laying the foundation for the area to prosper as a timber district.
(The timber yard was later relocated to Hirabayashi in Suminoe Ward after World War II as part of an Osaka City urban planning project.)

Taisho Canal location map
Taisho Canal location map
Taisho Canal (under construction)
Taisho Canal (under construction)
Taisho Canal (upon completion)
Taisho Canal (upon completion)

Contributions to Infrastructure Development

While projects on the scale of the Taisho Canal were rare, the Shibakawa family had been actively involved in infrastructure development to revitalize the land they owned even before the establishment of Chishima Real Estate. They were involved as key figures in the construction of railroads such as the Hankai Railway (now the Nankai Main Line) and the Hankai Electric Railway (later the Osaka City Tram Hankai Line). Along with other business leaders and neighboring landowners, they directly undertook road and railway construction, canal excavation, and bridge building, and also generously donated land for roads and railways as needed.

Establishment of Chishima Real Estate Farm

In 1928, land was purchased in Kawanishi City, Hyogo Prefecture, with the intention of developing housing, but these plans changed due to the impact of the war.
During World War II, the farm shifted its focus to the cultivation and sale of tree seedlings as well as livestock farming.

Some land holdings become subject to farmland acquisition

After the war, some of the land owned in Tsumori and Kitakagaya, where land readjustment projects had yet to be completed, was designated as farmland and became subject to acquisition.
The company argued that the land was residential and fought the case up to the Supreme Court, but their claim was rejected (final ruling in 1977), resulting in the loss of approximately 28,000 tsubo (92,500 square meters) of land.

Yellow: Farmland acquired from Chishima Real Estate in the purchase Red: Current Chishima Real Estate land holdings
Yellow: Farmland acquired from Chishima Real Estate in the purchase
Red: Current Chishima Real Estate land holdings

Commencement of land reclamation work on the Kitakagaya property

Reclamation work was carried out on the Kitakagaya property, which had been a marshy area overgrown with reeds and was unsuitable for use. By 1960, 42,000 tsubo (approx. 138,800 square meters) had been converted into land for residential use.

Before reclamation work
Before reclamation work
After reclamation work
After reclamation work

Start of the building leasing business

Beginning with the completion of the Kyomachibori-Chishima Building in this year, the company actively pursued the construction and acquisition of buildings and apartments until around the year 2000, adding building leasing to their traditional land leasing business.

Completion of the Kyomachibori-Chishima Building
Completion of the Kyomachibori-Chishima Building

Acquisition of real estate in Fukuoka

The company’s real estate, which had been concentrated in the Hanshin area, was expanded to Fukuoka.
Until around 1987, they continued to purchase new real estate, with the land in Fukuoka owned reaching a maximum of approximately 30,000 tsubo (about 99,000 square meters).

Start of aircraft leasing business

The company took part in leveraged lease deals for aircraft.
Following the discontinuation of leveraged leases, we shifted to operating leases from 1998 onward.

First leveraged lease aircraft: Aircraft viewing event
First leveraged lease aircraft: Aircraft viewing event
First leveraged lease aircraft
First leveraged lease aircraft
First operating lease aircraft
First operating lease aircraft

Completion of Chishima Garden Mall

A shopping mall was planned and constructed as part of the community development efforts in Taisho Ward.

Chishima Garden Mall
Chishima Garden Mall

Start of artist support initiative

We started an initiative to support artists by making use of our properties, including providing long-term venues for art events.

The Shibakawa Family and the Arts

The heads of the Shibakawa family have supported young artists for generations by purchasing their works in their unknown periods.
Particularly, Mataemon I, who himself was a painter and part of the Kyoto art circle, was well-versed in painting. He supported many artists who later made a name for themselves, such as Nishiyama Kanei, Konoshima Okoku, and Fukada Chokujo. At the family’s villa in Suma, Tanomura Chokunyu often stayed as a guest, and the two enjoyed collaborating on artworks, forming a friendship that lasted for 50 years.
(It is said that Mataemon I acquired hundreds of Nishiyama Kanei’s works, had them mounted, and presented them as gifts. When Kanei later gained fame and people flocked to buy his works, Mataemon I reportedly secluded himself in a room, pretending not to be home to avoid them.)

Opening of Creative Center Osaka (CCO)

The Former Namura Shipbuilding Osaka Site was returned to us in 1988 and designated as one of the 33 Heritage Constellations of Industrial Modernization by the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry in 2007. It was renovated and is now utilized as a hub for the arts.
In 2009, the Kitakagaya Creative Village (KCV) Project was proposed, and various creative spaces were established around CCO, promoting the transformation of Kitakagaya into an art-centered community. (This project won the Grand Mécénat Award at the MECENAT Awards in 2011.)

Creative Center Osaka (CCO)
Creative Center Osaka (CCO)
Creative Center Osaka (CCO)
Creative Center Osaka (CCO)

Shibakawa Building recognized as a Registered Tangible Cultural Property

Since 2005, efforts have been made to revitalize and repurpose the Shibakawa Building, constructed in 1927 on part of the Shibakawa family’s main estate, to take advantage of its historical and cultural value.
In collaboration with the owners of other historical buildings in the area, efforts have been made to enhance the appeal of the district.

The fourth floor's Shibakawa Building Modern Terrace is utilized as a rental space.
The fourth floor’s Shibakawa Building Modern Terrace is utilized as a rental space.

Shibakawa Mataemon Residence relocated to Museum Meiji-Mura

The Shibakawa Mataemon Residence in Kotoen, Nishinomiya (completed in 1911), which had been damaged in the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake, was relocated to Museum Meiji-Mura.

Exterior of the Shibakawa Mataemon Residence at Meiji Mura
Exterior of the Shibakawa Mataemon Residence at Meiji Mura
The hall at the time of completion
The hall at the time of completion

Rubber Duck exhibited at Aqua Metropolis Osaka 2009

The work “Rubber Duck” by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman was exhibited at Okawa (Hachikenyahama Pier) during Aqua Metropolis Osaka 2009, generating significant attention.
Since then, it has been exhibited in various locations, primarily around Osaka, with merchandise sold during its exhibition also being popular.

Exhibited at Hachikenyahama Pier (2009)
Exhibited at Hachikenyahama Pier (2009)

Commencement of land reclamation work on Hirabayashi timber ponds (east section of Pond No. 4)

Reclamation work was done to make effective use of privately owned water surfaces that were previously being leased as timber ponds, repurposing them as rental real estate (completed in 2015).
Subsequently, reclamation of the west section of Pond No. 4 was carried out (from 2015 to 2019), and the land is now being leased out as commercial real estate for industrial and logistics purposes.

During reclamation work
During reclamation work

Establishment of the Chishima Foundation for Creative Osaka

The foundation was established in 2011 as a project to commemorate the 100th anniversary of our company.
It is committed to improving Osaka’s creative scene and proactively supports artistic and cultural initiatives.

Start of investment in startup companies

Funding is provided to both Japanese and international startup companies.

Involvement in investment ventures

Since before World War II, the Shibakawa family has been involved in the establishment and support of a variety of new businesses, with their investment in Dai Nippon Kaju Co., Ltd. (now Nikka Whisky Distilling Co., Ltd.) being particularly well-known.
Shibakawa Matashiro, who had a personal relationship with Nikka founder Taketsuru Masataka, invited his friend Kaga Shotaro to invest in the establishment of Dai Nippon Kaju Co., Ltd.
When the business struggled initially, and although Kaga wanted to withdraw his investment, Shibakawa convinced him to continue supporting Nikka’s production of domestic whisky.

Start of overseas real estate business

We started engaging in overseas real estate investment as part of a risk hedging strategy through geographic and currency diversification.

Overseas real estate
Overseas real estate
Kitakagaya Creative Village Spaces