Daiwa House

Daiwa House Industry Co., Ltd. (大和ハウス工業株式会社) is Japanese multinational construction company that specializing in prefabricated houses. The company is also engaged in the construction of factories, shopping centers, health care facilities, the management and operation of resort hotels, golf courses and fitness clubs. It is the one of the largest construction company in Japan.[6] Daiwa House also operates as a sales agency for HAL robot suits.[2]

Daiwa House is also one of Japan's largest owner and operator of freight logistics centers, with over 250 logistics properties under management, and further expansion planned in this business segment.[7]

The company was founded in 1955 in Osaka[8][9][10] and is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and Osaka Securities Exchange, being a constituent of the TOPIX[11] and Nikkei 225[12] stock indices.

In 2012, the Scout Association of Japan received a donation of a large forest of approximately 2.7 square kilometers in Takahagi, Ibaraki Prefecture from Daiwa. Permanent facilities include an Administrative Building with accommodations for 44 people, dining room/kitchen, meeting room, training room; an outdoor auditorium of 200 m² that seats about 100 people; a tent campsite with accommodations for about 800 people and about 50 campfire places available; a communal plaza (Hiroba 広場), and an outdoor arena stage.[13]

  • Wiki collection of bibliographic works on Daiwa House

References

  1. Daiwa House Industry | 2021 Global 500 retrieved 2020-04-20^
  2. Corporate Data retrieved March 22, 2014^
  3. Annual Report 2013 retrieved March 22, 2014^
  4. Company Profile Reuters, retrieved March 22, 2014^
  5. Daiwa House Industry Co., Ltd. Hoover's Profile, via Answers.com, retrieved March 22, 2014^
  6. 建設業業界 売上高ランキング(企業一覧) バフェット・コード, retrieved 2025-06-26^
  7. Blackstone to buy Daiwa House logistics centers for $523m Nikkei Asia Review, July 30, 2020^
  8. Louis Frédéric. Daiwa Hausu Kōgyō Japan encyclopedia, Harvard University Press, 2005, retrieved 2009-10-22^
  9. Naomi Brown. Demographic change and the family in Japan's aging society SUNY Press, 2003, retrieved 2009-10-23^
  10. Mary Alice Hines. Japan real estate investment Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001, retrieved 2009-10-23^
  11. TOPIX Large70 Components Japan Exchange Group, retrieved March 22, 2014^
  12. Components:Nikkei Stock Average Nikkei Inc., retrieved March 22, 2014^
  13. 「大和の森」高萩スカウトフィールド of 公益財団法人ボーイスカウト日本連盟 www.scout.or.jp^