<p>The 1964 summer Olympic Games were Japan's great return to the world stage after its defeat and destruction two decades earlier in World War II.</p>.<p>The first Games ever held in Asia were also a chance to trumpet the rebuilding of post-war Tokyo and the country's emergence as a high-tech giant with the infrastructure to match.</p>.<p>That included the first of its high-speed shinkansen "bullet trains" that would come to epitomise modern Japan.</p>.<p>"An historic week is beginning for Japan," <em>AFP</em> wrote six days before the opening ceremony.</p>.<p>"Never before has it wanted to welcome so many foreigners."</p>.<p>That same desire has been frustrated this time round by the pandemic which first delayed the Games and will now rob them of foreign visitors.</p>.<p>In 1964, however, the country opened its arms to 20,000 spectators, 6,348 foreign athletes, 1,500 officials, 2,000 journalists and some 400 pickpockets, according to Interpol.</p>.<p>To prepare for the influx, Tokyo increased its hotel capacity by half, building a dozen new hotels, including four five-star establishments.</p>.<p>In keeping with the "just in time" industrial philosophy that the Japanese would later export to the world, the construction of the 36 major Olympic sites was finished a week before the opening ceremony.</p>.<p>They included the Nippon Budokan, built to host the judo competition -- the national sport making its first appearance at the Olympics.</p>.<p>The curved roof of the octagonal building, which stands near the Imperial Palace, was meant to resemble Mount Fuji, the country's most iconic landmark.</p>.<p>Among other emblematic sites built for the occasion were the Yoyogi National Gymnasium by the Japanese architect Kenzo Tange, who would go on to win the Pritzker Prize, architecture's Nobel.</p>.<p>In a poignant symbolic nod to post-war Japan's pacifist credo, the last carrier of the Olympic torch was Yoshinori Sakai, an athlete born on August 6, 1945, the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.</p>.<p>Beyond pure sport, the 1964 Olympics were a chance for the Japanese to show off their technological know-how via television.</p>.<p>The opening and closing ceremonies and several competitions were shown in colour, with events transmitted by satellite directly to the United States, and recorded for Europe.</p>.<p>Slow motion was also widely used for the first time, with ingenious new microphones cutting out background noise and the marathon broadcast live.</p>.<p>Nine days before the Games opened, Emperor Hirohito inaugurated Japan's first shinkansen train line, which had been under construction for five and a half years.</p>.<p>The world's fastest, it linked Tokyo and Osaka at speeds of up to 210 kilometres (130 miles) an hour and was heralded as the beginning of the "bullet train" era.</p>.<p>Tokyo, the biggest city in the world at the time with 10.6 million inhabitants, was completely rebuilt for the Games.</p>.<p>It was given a vast new road network, often raised or underground, passing under factories and new apartment blocks which had replaced old wooden village houses, <em>AFP </em>explained on October 9, the eve of the opening ceremony.</p>.<p>New metro lines were built, along with a 27-kilometre-long (17-mile) motorway linking the Olympic village and the Haneda airport via the neighbourhood of Ginza.</p>.<p>"It is the first time a country has made such an effort to organise an Olympics," <em>AFP</em> wrote.</p>.<p>"For a year now the face of Tokyo has been completely changed."</p>.<p>But while the country bathed in the reflected glory, on the sporting side it suffered a shocking humiliation when its judo champion Akio Kaminaga lost to Dutchman Anton Geesink.</p>.<p>Even so, Japan came third in the medals table behind the mighty Americans and Soviets.</p>.<p>Ethiopia's Abebe Bikila also entered the record books as the first athlete ever to win two Olympic marathons.</p>.<p>The Games also saw the third gold in a row for Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser in the 100 metres freestyle and three gold medals for the Czechoslovak gymnast Vera Caslavska.</p>
<p>The 1964 summer Olympic Games were Japan's great return to the world stage after its defeat and destruction two decades earlier in World War II.</p>.<p>The first Games ever held in Asia were also a chance to trumpet the rebuilding of post-war Tokyo and the country's emergence as a high-tech giant with the infrastructure to match.</p>.<p>That included the first of its high-speed shinkansen "bullet trains" that would come to epitomise modern Japan.</p>.<p>"An historic week is beginning for Japan," <em>AFP</em> wrote six days before the opening ceremony.</p>.<p>"Never before has it wanted to welcome so many foreigners."</p>.<p>That same desire has been frustrated this time round by the pandemic which first delayed the Games and will now rob them of foreign visitors.</p>.<p>In 1964, however, the country opened its arms to 20,000 spectators, 6,348 foreign athletes, 1,500 officials, 2,000 journalists and some 400 pickpockets, according to Interpol.</p>.<p>To prepare for the influx, Tokyo increased its hotel capacity by half, building a dozen new hotels, including four five-star establishments.</p>.<p>In keeping with the "just in time" industrial philosophy that the Japanese would later export to the world, the construction of the 36 major Olympic sites was finished a week before the opening ceremony.</p>.<p>They included the Nippon Budokan, built to host the judo competition -- the national sport making its first appearance at the Olympics.</p>.<p>The curved roof of the octagonal building, which stands near the Imperial Palace, was meant to resemble Mount Fuji, the country's most iconic landmark.</p>.<p>Among other emblematic sites built for the occasion were the Yoyogi National Gymnasium by the Japanese architect Kenzo Tange, who would go on to win the Pritzker Prize, architecture's Nobel.</p>.<p>In a poignant symbolic nod to post-war Japan's pacifist credo, the last carrier of the Olympic torch was Yoshinori Sakai, an athlete born on August 6, 1945, the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.</p>.<p>Beyond pure sport, the 1964 Olympics were a chance for the Japanese to show off their technological know-how via television.</p>.<p>The opening and closing ceremonies and several competitions were shown in colour, with events transmitted by satellite directly to the United States, and recorded for Europe.</p>.<p>Slow motion was also widely used for the first time, with ingenious new microphones cutting out background noise and the marathon broadcast live.</p>.<p>Nine days before the Games opened, Emperor Hirohito inaugurated Japan's first shinkansen train line, which had been under construction for five and a half years.</p>.<p>The world's fastest, it linked Tokyo and Osaka at speeds of up to 210 kilometres (130 miles) an hour and was heralded as the beginning of the "bullet train" era.</p>.<p>Tokyo, the biggest city in the world at the time with 10.6 million inhabitants, was completely rebuilt for the Games.</p>.<p>It was given a vast new road network, often raised or underground, passing under factories and new apartment blocks which had replaced old wooden village houses, <em>AFP </em>explained on October 9, the eve of the opening ceremony.</p>.<p>New metro lines were built, along with a 27-kilometre-long (17-mile) motorway linking the Olympic village and the Haneda airport via the neighbourhood of Ginza.</p>.<p>"It is the first time a country has made such an effort to organise an Olympics," <em>AFP</em> wrote.</p>.<p>"For a year now the face of Tokyo has been completely changed."</p>.<p>But while the country bathed in the reflected glory, on the sporting side it suffered a shocking humiliation when its judo champion Akio Kaminaga lost to Dutchman Anton Geesink.</p>.<p>Even so, Japan came third in the medals table behind the mighty Americans and Soviets.</p>.<p>Ethiopia's Abebe Bikila also entered the record books as the first athlete ever to win two Olympic marathons.</p>.<p>The Games also saw the third gold in a row for Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser in the 100 metres freestyle and three gold medals for the Czechoslovak gymnast Vera Caslavska.</p>