쓰보/다다미 변환기 (坪畳平米変換)
일본 부동산용 쓰보(坪), 다다미(畳), 제곱미터 간 변환합니다.
변환 결과
| 쓰보 (坪) | |
| 제곱미터 (m²) (m²) | |
| 다다미 (畳) | |
| 제곱피트 (sqft) (sqft) | |
| 평 (평) |
지역별 다다미 크기 (地域別畳サイズ)
| 지역 | 크기 (m²) |
|---|---|
| 京間 Kyoma (Kyoto/Kansai) | 1.8241 m² |
| 中京間 Chūkyōma (Nagoya) | 1.6562 m² |
| 江戸間 Edoma (Tokyo/Kanto) | 1.5488 m² |
| 団地間 Danchima (Housing) | 1.4450 m² |
각 지역에서 1쓰보(坪) = 2다다미(畳). 1쓰보 = 1평 ≈ 3.3058 m².
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a tsubo and how big is it?
A tsubo (坤) is a Japanese unit of area equal to approximately 3.306 m² (about 35.58 ft²). It is nearly identical to the Korean pyeong. One tsubo equals 2 tatami mats in the Nagoya/standard (Chūkyō-ma) size.
What is the difference between tatami sizes across Japan?
Tatami mat sizes vary by region: Kyō-ma (Kyoto, 191×95.5 cm), Chūkyō-ma (Nagoya, 182×91 cm), Edoma/Kantō-ma (Tokyo, 176×88 cm), and Danchi-ma (public housing, 170×85 cm). When comparing apartments, knowing the tatami standard used is important.
Why are Japanese apartments measured in tatami mats?
Tatami (畳) has been the traditional flooring in Japanese homes for centuries, so room sizes are naturally expressed in mat count. A typical room might be 6-jō (6 mats, about 9.9 m²) or 8-jō (8 mats, about 13.2 m²). This convention persists even in modern apartments with non-tatami flooring.