Institute for Social Vision Design

The Complete Park-PFI Process — A Four-Year Roadmap from Concept to Opening [2026 Edition]

ISVD編集部
About 11 min read

A detailed timeline covering all six phases of a Park-PFI project, from Phase 0 (initial consideration) through Phase 5 (opening and long-term operations). Covers deliverables, responsible parties, and timeline compression strategies for each phase, illustrated against the four-year real-world case of Kaiseizan Park in Koriyama City.

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TL;DR

  1. Park-PFI projects typically take three to five years from concept to opening. In the Kaiseizan Park case in Koriyama City, the process took exactly four years from the start of consideration to opening
  2. The full process consists of six phases (Phase 0–5), each with its own deliverables, procedures, and timeline requirements
  3. The keys to compressing the timeline are early market sounding, designing parallel workstreams, and engaging an advisory firm early

Overall Process Overview

Overview of the six phases (Phase 0–5) and their standard durations

The complete process consists of six phases: from concept (Phase 0) through opening and long-term operations (Phase 5). The standard timeline is three to five years, varying based on project scale, complexity of regulatory procedures, and the number of sounding rounds.

In the Kaiseizan Park project in Koriyama City, approximately four years elapsed between the start of the advisory services procurement process (March 2020) and the park opening (April 2024). This four-year case serves as the benchmark throughout this article.

Bird's-Eye View of the Full Process

PhaseNameStandard DurationPrimary Activities
Phase 0Concept and Internal Alignment3–6 monthsAssessing park condition; internal deliberation; executive decision
Phase 1Feasibility Study6–12 monthsEngaging advisory firm; Stage 1 sounding; designing business scheme
Phase 2Solicitation Preparation6–12 monthsStage 2 sounding; drafting guidelines, standards, and agreement templates
Phase 3Solicitation and Selection4–8 monthsSolicitation; application receipt; review; selection; certification
Phase 4Construction12–24 monthsDesign; building permits; construction; completion inspection
Phase 5Opening and OperationsUp to 20 years (certification period)Opening; daily management; monitoring; period renewal

Phase 0: Concept and Internal Alignment (3–6 months)

Primary Activities

Building shared problem awareness internally: Visualize the park's challenges — aging infrastructure, rising maintenance costs, declining visitation — using data and site photographs. Advance coordination with the finance, planning, and legal departments is necessary.

Briefing the mayor and council: Since Park-PFI may require ordinance amendments (such as usage fee ordinances), it is important to secure executive-level commitment early. Advance briefings for council members are also essential.

Establishing a basic improvement policy: Draft a policy for applying Park-PFI to the target park, confirming consistency with higher-level plans such as the Green Master Plan and Comprehensive Municipal Plan.

Deliverables at This Stage

  • Park condition analysis (aging status, visitor numbers, maintenance cost history)
  • Internal policy document on Park-PFI application
  • Advisory firm selection specifications (budget, scope of work)

Phase 1: Feasibility Study (6–12 months)

Selecting an Advisory Firm

Because the feasibility assessment requires specialized expertise, most municipalities at this stage engage an advisory firm (consultant) through a publicly announced proposal process.

Koriyama City launched its advisory firm procurement in March 2020 and selected Oriental Consultants in July 2020. The firm served as advisor from July 2020 through March 2022 — approximately two years.

Content of the Feasibility Study

With the advisory firm leading, the study addresses four areas:

  1. Analysis of the park's location and footfall potential: Research on surrounding population, transport access, tourism assets, and competitive environment
  2. Business scheme design: Business type, scale, application of building coverage ratio relaxation, and scope of designated park facility improvements
  3. Financial simulation: Projected usage fee levels, cost-sharing for improvements, and designated management fee estimates
  4. Schedule design: Draft timeline for all phases from Stage 2 onward

Stage 1 Market Sounding (Concept Development Stage)

Market sounding in Phase 1 is characterized as the "concept development stage." Its purpose is to confirm market viability and gather ideas from private-sector businesses.

Standard documentation package:

  • Overview of the park and its challenges
  • Conceptual business scheme (business types, floor area, building coverage ratio)
  • Indicative usage fee levels based on financial projections
  • Projected schedule

Koriyama City innovation: A trial sounding (October 2020, one-month trial business operation) was conducted, giving private-sector businesses the opportunity to actually operate in the park and validate profitability firsthand. Participants received a bonus of +5 points in the formal solicitation.

Deliverables at This Stage

  • Feasibility study report
  • Trial sounding implementation report (if conducted)
  • Stage 1 sounding implementation report
  • Draft business scheme (project overview and financial simulation)

Phase 2: Solicitation Preparation (6–12 months)

Stage 2 Market Sounding (Project Development Stage)

Phase 2 involves conducting the "project development stage" of sounding. Building on the basic scheme from Phase 1, draft solicitation conditions (proposed usage fees, scope of designated park facility improvements, project term, etc.) are disclosed and operator feedback is gathered.

Koriyama City conducted its Stage 2 market sounding in January 2022, disclosing draft solicitation conditions. Participants received a bonus of +3 points in the formal solicitation.

Drafting the Solicitation Guidelines and Requirements

The most significant deliverable of Phase 2 is the solicitation guidelines. Guidelines that satisfy the ten legally required items under Article 5-2, Paragraph 2 of the Urban Park Act while reflecting local priorities and challenges must be prepared.

Documents to be drafted simultaneously:

  • Requirements specification: Detailed specifications and standards for designated park facilities
  • Risk allocation table: Allocation of design, construction, operations, and force majeure risks
  • Draft agreement: Framework for the installation and management agreement and designated management agreement
  • Selection committee formation: Securing at least two academic experts

Preparing Ordinance Amendments (Where Required)

Where usage fee ordinance amendments are needed, council coordination must proceed at this stage. Ordinance amendments require council approval, so the council schedule must be confirmed well in advance.

→ For detailed guidance on drafting solicitation guidelines, see How to Write Park-PFI Solicitation Guidelines.

Deliverables at This Stage

  • Stage 2 sounding implementation report
  • Completed solicitation guidelines
  • Requirements specification
  • Risk allocation table
  • Draft agreements
  • Draft ordinance amendments (where required)

Phase 3: Solicitation and Selection (4–8 months)

Launching the Solicitation

The solicitation formally begins when the solicitation guidelines are publicly announced. Under Article 3-4 of the Urban Park Act Enforcement Rules, at least one month must elapse between the date of public announcement and the application submission deadline.

Koriyama City schedule:

  • April 2022: Solicitation launched (guidelines, requirements, and designated management specifications published)
  • July 2022: Intent-to-apply submission deadline
  • August 2022: Application submission deadline
  • October 2022: Stage 2 review (presentations)
  • November 2022: Selection of designated installer

Review and Selection Process

Stage 1 review (document screening): Objective confirmation of alignment with guidelines, financial soundness, and technical capacity. Binary pass/fail determination.

Stage 2 review (presentations and Q&A): Stage 1 passers present their proposals; the selection committee conducts quantitative scoring. In Koriyama City, proposals were scored on a 500-point scale.

→ For detailed guidance on evaluation criteria, see Designing Park-PFI Scoring Criteria.

Certification Procedures

Following selection, the following procedures are completed before the project formally begins:

  1. Submission of installation and management plan: The designated installer submits the certification application documents
  2. Certification: The park management authority certifies the plan (Article 5-4, Paragraph 1 of the Urban Park Act)
  3. Basic agreement execution: Execution of the agreement setting out basic project conditions
  4. Building Standards Act Article 48 permit: Building permit for park facilities (special permit for locations outside specified use zones)
  5. Designated manager council resolution: Council approval of the designated manager appointment (in integrated solicitation cases)
  6. Formal execution of agreements: Execution of the installation and management agreement and designated management agreement

Deliverables at This Stage

  • Selection notice and selection committee minutes
  • Installation and management plan certification
  • Basic agreement, installation and management agreement, designated management agreement

Phase 4: Construction (12–24 months)

Construction Overview

Phase 4 is the stage in which the selected private operator actually constructs the facilities. Two types of construction work proceed, often in parallel:

Type of ConstructionClientCost SharingApproximate Duration
Designated park facility constructionPrivate (to municipality's specifications)Municipality ≤90%, private ≥10%12–18 months
Revenue facility (publicly solicited park facility) constructionPrivateFully privately funded6–18 months

Importance of Schedule Coordination

Where the two types of construction overlap, phased scheduling is required. Plans must address the impact on park visitors, safety, and utility supply (electricity, water, drainage) well in advance.

In Koriyama City, large-scale construction commenced in July 2023, covering the western zone of Kaiseizan Park (approximately 119,900 m²) and three adjacent district parks (approximately 9,000 m²). Despite the scale, the construction phase lasted approximately nine months, with the park opening in April 2024.

The Municipality's Role During Construction

  • Supervision: Confirming that designated park facility construction proceeds in accordance with the requirements specification
  • Permit assistance: Internal coordination for the private sector's building permit applications and fire safety equipment inspections
  • Resident communication: Advance explanations regarding construction noise, vibration, and traffic restrictions

Deliverables at This Stage

  • Design documentation (prepared by the design firm)
  • Construction plan and schedule
  • Completion inspection certificate
  • Construction completion report

Phase 5: Opening and Operations (Certification period, up to 20 years)

Opening Preparation

After construction completion, preparation for the opening of revenue facilities proceeds:

  • Tenant recruitment: Where multiple outlets are to operate, securing an anchor tenant that will open first is critical
  • PR and marketing: Planning opening events, issuing press releases, and executing social media campaigns
  • Staff hiring and training: Securing local employment and pre-opening training programs

Day-to-Day Management and Monitoring

After opening, ongoing dialogue between the municipality and private operator is essential.

Municipality's role (monitoring):

  • Confirming revenue sharing (reviewing annual reports)
  • Confirming maintenance conditions (1–2 site visits per year)
  • Periodic review of operator financial condition (for early detection of financial deterioration)

Private operator obligations:

  • Submission of annual business reports
  • Revenue sharing payments
  • Day-to-day facility maintenance and repairs

Options Upon Period Expiry

Three options are available when the certification period (maximum 20 years) expires:

OptionContentBuilding Coverage Ratio Exemption
Re-solicitation (continued Park-PFI)Conduct a new solicitation and continue with a new or renewed business planExemption applicable
Negotiated extension with incumbent operatorBypass re-solicitation and negotiate continuation with the same operatorLegally tenuous — creates risk
Transition to standard permitSwitch to an ordinary installation and management permit under Article 5-1 of the Urban Park ActExemption lapses (maximum 10 years; building coverage ratio reverts to ordinance standard)

The Kaiseizan Park Four-Year Case

Comparison of the actual Koriyama City timeline against the standard model

The following table maps the actual Koriyama City timeline against the standard model:

DatePhaseActual Activity at Kaiseizan Park
March 2020Phase 0→1Advisory firm procurement launched via public proposal process
July 2020Phase 1 beginsOriental Consultants selected; engagement commences
October 2020Phase 1 (mid)Trial sounding conducted (1 month; +5 bonus points)
September 2021Phase 1 (late)Preliminary sounding (feasibility study stage)
January 2022Phase 2 (mid)Market sounding conducted (draft solicitation conditions disclosed; +3 bonus points)
April 2022Phase 3 beginsGuidelines, requirements specification, and designated management specifications published
July–August 2022Phase 3 (mid)Intent-to-apply and application submissions received
October 2022Phase 3 (mid)Stage 2 review (presentations)
November 2022Phase 3 completeKaiseizan Frontier Partners (led by Daiwa Lease Group) selected
July 2023 onwardPhase 4Full-scale construction commences
April 2024Phase 5 beginsWestern zone renewal opening

Comparison with the Standard Model

ItemStandard ModelKoriyama City Actual
Phase 0→13–6 monthsApprox. 4 months
Phase 1 (feasibility study)6–12 monthsApprox. 12 months (including trial sounding)
Phase 2 (solicitation preparation)6–12 monthsApprox. 4 months (January–April 2022)
Phase 3 (solicitation and selection)4–8 monthsApprox. 8 months (April–November 2022)
Phase 4 (construction)12–24 monthsApprox. 9 months (July 2023–March 2024)
Total (through opening)3–5 yearsApprox. 4 years

Timeline Compression Strategies

Engage an Advisory Firm Early

Delays in engaging an advisory firm during Phase 1 cascade directly into overall schedule delays. Securing budget and preparing the procurement process in parallel during Phase 0 is critical.

Conduct More Sounding, Earlier

The timing and quality of sounding rounds directly affects how smoothly Phases 2 and 3 proceed. Confirming early whether private-sector interest exists and whether proposed usage fee levels are viable significantly reduces the rework needed in guidelines drafting.

Form a Cross-Departmental Team Early

Park-PFI cannot be advanced by park management staff alone. Bringing in the finance department, legal department, urban planning department, and council liaison into the project team early minimizes inter-departmental coordination costs.

Use Parallel Workstreams

  • Guidelines drafting and ordinance amendment preparation in Phase 2 can run in parallel
  • Construction procurement preparation (e.g., selecting a design firm) can begin during the Phase 3 solicitation period
  • Designated park facility construction and revenue facility construction in Phase 4 can partially overlap

References

Guidelines for Improving the Quality of Urban Parks through Park-PFI (Revised May 30, 2025) (2025)

Koriyama City Park-PFI Project (Kaiseizan Park) (2024)

Kaiseizan Park Park-PFI Project Overview (58564.pdf) (2022)


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Questions to Reflect On

  1. Which phase in the schedule is the most time-intensive? What can be done to compress it?
  2. What tasks can run in parallel? Have you clearly distinguished them from tasks that must run sequentially?
  3. Four to five years before the project launches, how will you build internal alignment — with the mayor, the council, and across departments?

Key Terms in This Article

Park-PFI
A system under Japan's Urban Parks Act that publicly solicits private operators to develop and manage revenue-generating facilities (e.g., cafés) alongside park facilities. Established by 2017 law revision with up to 20-year permits.
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