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Nijō Station (Kyoto)

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Nijō Station

二条駅
General information
LocationNishinokyo Toganoocho, Nakagyō, Kyoto, Kyoto
(京都市中京区西ノ京栂尾町)
Japan
Operated by
Connections
  • Bus terminal

Nijō Station (二条駅, Nijō-eki) is a train station in Nakagyō-ku, Kyoto, Japan.

Lines

Layout

JR West

Nijō Station

二条駅
JR West station
Nijō Station, May 2006
General information
Location3, Nishinokyo Toganoocho, Nakagyō, Kyoto, Kyoto
(京都市中京区西ノ京栂尾町3)
Japan
Coordinates35°0′39.51″N 135°44′30.1″E / 35.0109750°N 135.741694°E / 35.0109750; 135.741694
Operated byWest Japan Railway Company
Line(s)Sanin Main Line (Sagano Line)
History
Opened1897
Passengers
FY201526,415 daily[1]

The station has one elevated island platform between two tracks. The station building was designed by Urabesekkei, an architectural firm based in Osaka. Prior to the platform elevation, the station was only accessible from the east (Sembon Street side), but the station renovation made it accessible from both the east and west sides.

The design elements of the former station building were evocative of nearby Nijō Castle. The building was dismantled and rebuilt at the Kyoto Railway Museum (then called the Umekoji Steam Locomotive Museum) in 1996.


1  Sagano Line for Kyoto
2  Sagano Line for Kameoka, Sonobe and Fukuchiyama
Former Nijō Station building now at Kyoto Railway Museum

Kyoto Subway

Nijō Station

二条駅
Kyoto Municipal Subway station
General information
Location3, Nishinokyo Toganoocho, Nakagyō, Kyoto, Kyoto
(京都市中京区西ノ京栂尾町3)
Japan
Coordinates35°0′42.76″N 135°44′28.73″E / 35.0118778°N 135.7413139°E / 35.0118778; 135.7413139
Operated byKyoto Municipal Subway
Line(s)Tōzai Line
Other information
Station codeT15
History
Opened1997
Passengers
FYdaily[2]

Subway station has one underground island platform with two tracks, separated by platform screen doors.


1  Tōzai Line for Uzumasa Tenjingawa
2  Tōzai Line for Karasuma Oike, Rokujizo and Hamaotsu

History

Nijō Station opened on February 15, 1897 and was the terminus of the Kyoto Railway (present-day San'in Main Line) until April 27 of the same year.[3] The original station building was moved to its current location at the Kyoto Railway Museum on April 1, 1996.[4] The Tōzai Line subway opened on October 12, 1997. The Tōzai line was extended to the Uzumasa Tenjingawa Station on January 16, 2008.[5]

Ridership

Daily Average, Nijō Subway Station[6]
Year Boarding Passengers Arriving Passengers Total
2013 8,802 8,364 17,166
2014 9,202 8,745 17,947
2015 9,624 9,143 18,767
2016 9,985 9,486 19,471
2017 10,281 9,767 20,048

Surrounding area

East Side

The Shinsenen and the Nijō Castle are within walking distance, however in case of traveling via subway, the adjacent station of Nijōjō-mae is closer.

West Side

  • BiVi Nijō.

Buses

Nijo-eki-nishiguchi

Kyoto City Bus
Airport limousine

Nijo-ekimae

Kyoto City Bus
Kyoto Bus Co., Ltd.
  • Route 61 for Arashiyama and Daikaku-ji via Marutamachi Street and Kyoto Studio Park / for Sanjo Keihan via Shijo Kawaramachi
  • Route 62 for Arashiyama and Kiyotaki via Marutamachi Street and Kyoto Studio Park / for Sanjo Keihan via Horikawa Oike (Nijo Castle), Karasuma Oike and Shijo Kawaramachi
  • Route 63 for Arashiyama, Koke-dera and Suzumushi-dera via Marutamachi Street and Kyoto Studio Park / for Sanjo Keihan via Shijo Kawaramachi
  • Route 65 for Arashiyama and Arisugawa via Marutamachi Street and Kyoto Studio Park
West JR Bus Company
  • for Kyoto Station / for Toganoo and Shuzan

Adjacent stations

« Service »
West Japan Railway Company Sagano Line (Sanin Main Line)
Tambaguchi   Local   Emmachi
Kyoto   Rapid   Emmachi
Kyoto Municipal Subway Tōzai Line (T15)
Nijōjō-mae (T14) - Nishiōji Oike (T16)

References

  1. ^ "Archived copy" 鉄道乗車人員 (in Japanese). Kyoto Prefecture. Archived from the original on 2015-07-12. Retrieved 2017-12-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ 京都市交通事業白書 (in Japanese). Kyoto Municipal Transportation Bureau.
  3. ^ Ishino, Tetsu; et al., eds. (1998). 停車場変遷大事典 国鉄・JR編 [Station Transition Directory – JNR/JR] (in Japanese). Vol. II. Tokyo: JTB Corporation. p. 298. ISBN 4-533-02980-9.
  4. ^ "京都新聞|京都鉄道博物館 - (21)旧二条駅舎". www.kyoto-np.co.jp. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
  5. ^ "京都市交通局:地下鉄東西線二条~太秦天神川間が1月16日に延伸開業". www.city.kyoto.lg.jp. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
  6. ^ "京都市交通事業白書(事業概要)" (PDF). 京都市交通局. 2017.