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Akihabara Station

Railway and metro station in Tokyo, Japan


Summary

Railway and metro station in Tokyo, Japan

FieldValue
nameAkihabara Station
native_name秋葉原駅
native_name_langja
imageAkihabara Station - February 2015.jpg
captionThe Akihabara Electric Town entrance of Akihabara Station in February 2015
address1 Soto-Kanda (JR Station)
Kanda-Sakuma-chō (Tokyo Metro)
Kanda-Hanaoka-chō (Tsukuba Express)
boroughChiyoda City, Tokyo
countryJapan
operator{{Plainlist
* {{ricJR Eastnamey}}
* {{ricTokyo Metronamey}}
connections{{Plainlist
opened
map_typeJapan Tokyo Yamanote loop#Japan Tokyo wards#Japan
map_dot_labelAkihabara Station

Kanda-Sakuma-chō (Tokyo Metro) Kanda-Hanaoka-chō (Tsukuba Express)

  • [[File:Tsukuba Express mark.svg|18px]] Metropolitan Intercity Railway Company
  • Iwamotocho Station
  • Bus Terminal

Akihabara Station is an interchange railway station in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. It is at the center of the Akihabara shopping district specializing in electronic goods.

Lines

Akihabara Station is served by the following lines.

JR East:

  • Tōhoku Main Line
    • Keihin-Tohoku Line
    • Yamanote Line
  • Sōbu Main Line
    • Chūō-Sōbu Line

Tokyo Metro:

Metropolitan Intercity Railway Company:

  • Tsukuba Express

The above-ground section of the station is cross-shaped, with the Chūō-Sōbu Line tracks running from east to west, and the Yamanote and Keihin-Tohoku Line (and Tohoku Shinkansen and Ueno–Tokyo Line, which do not stop at Akihabara) from north to south.

Station layout

JR East

Akihabara Station Sōbu Main Line (Branch) Yamanote Line

  • 2 island platforms (Keihin-Tōhoku and Yamanote Lines)
  • 2 side platforms (Sōbu Line)
  • AKB (JR East)
  • JK28 (Keihin-Tōhoku Line)
  • JY03 (Yamanote Line)
  • JB19 (Sōbu Line) Local

There are two island platforms serving four tracks for the Yamanote Line and the Keihin-Tohoku Line on the 2nd level, and two side platforms serving two tracks for the Sobu Line Local service on the 4th level.

Chest-high platform edge doors were installed on the Yamanote Line platforms in May 2015, to be brought into operation from 20 June 2015. File:JRE Akihabara-STA Platform1-2.jpg|Platform 1 and 2 in June 2022 File:JRE Akihabara-STA Platform3-4.jpg|Platform 3 and 4 in June 2022 File:JRE Akihabara-STA Platform5-6.jpg|Platform 5 and 6 in June 2022

Tokyo Metro

Akihabara Station Chiyoda, Tokyo There are two underground side platforms serving two tracks.

The song "Koi Suru Fortune Cookie" by AKB48 is to be used as the departure melody on the Hibiya Line platforms from spring 2016. File:TokyoMetro-H16-Akihabara-station-platform-20211216-103648.jpg|Hibiya Line platforms in December 2021

Tsukuba Express

Chiyoda, Tokyo There is an underground island platform serving two tracks.

2TX Tsukuba Express towards Tsukuba (Shin-Okachimachi) →

File:TX_Akihabara-STA_Platform1-2.jpg|Tsukuba Express platforms in May 2023

History

Akihabara Station was opened in November 1890 as a freight terminal linked to Ueno Station via tracks following the course of the modern day Yamanote Line.

It was opened to passenger traffic in 1925 following the construction of the section of track linking Ueno with Shimbashi via Tokyo Station and the completion of the Yamanote Line. The upper level platforms were added in 1932 with the opening of an extension to the Sōbu Line from its old terminal at Ryōgoku to Ochanomizu, making Akihabara an important transfer station for passengers from the east of Tokyo and Chiba Prefecture.

The huge growth in commuter traffic following the Second World War caused considerable congestion and was only relieved with the construction of the Sōbu line tunnel linking Kinshichō with Tokyo, bypassing Akihabara.

The Hibiya Line subway station was opened on May 31, 1962, with the line's extension from Naka-Okachimachi to Ningyōchō.

The station facilities of the Hibiya Line were inherited by Tokyo Metro after the privatization of the Teito Rapid Transit Authority (TRTA) in 2004.

On August 24, 2005, the underground terminus of the new Tsukuba Express Line opened at Akihabara. The entire station complex, including the JR station, was also refurbished and enlarged in preparation for the opening of the Tsukuba Express.

Station numbering was introduced in 2016 with Akihabara being assigned station numbers JY03 for the Yamanote line, JK28 for the Keihin-Tōhoku line, and JB19 for the Chūō-Sōbu line. At the same time, JR East assigned a three-letter code to their major interchange stations; Akihabara was assigned the three-letter code "AKB".

TH Liner services on the Hibiya Line between and commenced on 6 June 2020.

Passenger statistics

In fiscal 2013, the JR East station was used by an average of 240,327 passengers daily (boarding passengers only), making it the ninth-busiest station operated by JR East. Over the same fiscal year, the Tokyo Metro station was used by an average of 122,576 passengers daily (both exiting and entering passengers), making it the 23rd busiest Tokyo Metro station. The passenger figures for previous years are as shown below. Note that JR East figures are for boarding passengers only.

Fiscal yearDaily averageJR EastTokyo Metro
2000url=http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2000.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗車人員 (2000年度)trans-title=Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2000)publisher=East Japan Railway Companylocation=Japanlanguage=jaarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141009023233/http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2000.htmlarchive-date=2014-10-09access-date=31 August 2014url-status=dead }}
2005url=http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2005.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗車人員 (2005年度)trans-title=Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2005)publisher=East Japan Railway Companylocation=Japanlanguage=jaarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141009222358/http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2005.htmlarchive-date=2014-10-09access-date=31 August 2014url-status=dead }}
2010url=http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2010.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗車人員 (2010年度)trans-title=Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2010)publisher=East Japan Railway Companylocation=Japanlanguage=jaarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006175258/http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2010.htmlarchive-date=2014-10-06access-date=31 August 2014url-status=dead }}
2011url=http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2011.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗車人員 (2011年度)trans-title=Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2011)publisher=East Japan Railway Companylocation=Japanlanguage=jaarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141008165126/http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2011.htmlarchive-date=2014-10-08access-date=31 August 2014url-status=dead }}url=http://www.tokyometro.jp/corporate/enterprise/passenger_rail/transportation/passengers/index03.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗降人員ランキングtrans-title=Station usage rankingpublisher= Tokyo Metroaccess-date=31 August 2014language=ja}}
2012url=http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2012.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗車人員 (2012年度)trans-title=Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2012)publisher=East Japan Railway Companylocation=Japanlanguage=jaarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141007220750/http://www.jreast.co.jp/passenger/2012.htmlarchive-date=2014-10-07access-date=31 August 2014url-status=dead }}url=http://www.tokyometro.jp/corporate/enterprise/passenger_rail/transportation/passengers/index02.htmlscript-title=ja:各駅の乗降人員ランキングtrans-title=Station usage rankingpublisher= Tokyo Metroaccess-date=31 August 2014language=ja}}
2013240,327122,576

Surrounding area

The main attraction is the Akihabara electronics retail district to the north and west of the station.

  • Iwamotocho Station ( Toei Shinjuku Line)
  • Suehirocho Station ( Tokyo Metro Ginza Line)

Bus terminal

Route buses

  • Cha 51(茶51); For Ochanomizu Station, Hongō-sanchōme Station, and Komagome Station
  • Aki 26(秋26); For Kanda Station, Iwamotochō Station, Kiyosumi-shirakawa Station, and Kasai Station
  • Kazaguruma Akihabara Route; For Ochanomizu Station, Chiyoda City Office
  • Kazaguruma Akihabara Route; For Ochanomizu Station, Chiyoda City Office

Highway buses

  • My Town Direct Bus; For Tokyo Disney Resort, Shin-Urayasu Area
  • Airport Limousine; For Haneda Airport
  • Kanto Yakimono Liner; For Kasama Station, Mashiko Station
  • For Takasaki Station, Shin-Maebashi Station, Maebashi Station, and Maebashi Bus Center
  • Tono Kamaishi; For Shin-Hanamaki Station, Tōno Station, Kamaishi Station, Kirikiri, and Yamada
  • Yuhi; For Tsuruoka Station, Amarume Station, and Sakata Station
  • Southern Cross; For Kyōto Station, Ōsaka Station, Namba Station, and Osaka City Air Terminal (JR Namba Station)
  • Tokyo Tokkyu New Star; For Kyōto Station, Ōsaka Station, Universal Studios Japan, Tennōji Station, Ōsaka Uehommachi Station, and Fuse Station
  • For Toyama Station, Kanazawa Station, and Kenroku-en

References

References

  1. link. (23 May 2015). Japan Railfan Magazine Online. Koyusha Co., Ltd.
  2. link. (20 January 2016). News release. Tokyo Metro
  3. (2006-07-08). "「営団地下鉄」から「東京メトロ」へ".
  4. "SeeJapan: August 2007".
  5. (6 April 2016). "⾸都圏エリアへ 「駅ナンバリング」を導⼊します".
  6. Kusamachi, Yoshikazu. (7 April 2016). "JA・JK・JT・AKB…JR東日本、首都圏で駅ナンバリングなど導入へ".
  7. (19 December 2019). "2020年6月6日(土)東武鉄道・東京メトロダイヤ改正 東武線・日比谷線相互直通列車に初の座席指定制列車「THライナー」が誕生!". 東武鉄道/東京地下鉄.
  8. link. East Japan Railway Company
  9. link. Tokyo Metro
  10. link. East Japan Railway Company
  11. link. East Japan Railway Company
  12. link. East Japan Railway Company
  13. link. East Japan Railway Company
  14. link. Tokyo Metro
  15. link. East Japan Railway Company
  16. link. Tokyo Metro
  17. link
  18. link. 千代田区
  19. link. 千代田区
  20. link
  21. "Mejiro, Kudan, Kourakuen, Akihabara – Haneda Airport {{!}} Scheduled Bus Services {{!}} Airport Limousine Bus".
  22. "関東やきものライナー : 益子・笠間 ─ 秋葉原駅 {{!}} 高速バスのご案内 - 茨城交通".
  23. "日本中央バス 毎日運行!!高速バス".
  24. "高速バス 気仙沼・陸前高田・大船渡/遠野・釜石・大槌・山田 〔けせんライナー/遠野・釜石号〕 {{!}} 高速バス {{!}} 国際興業バス".
  25. "高速バス 鶴岡・余目・酒田 [夕陽号] {{!}} 高速バス {{!}} 国際興業バス".
  26. "南海バス|大阪・京都⇔秋葉原・成田空港・銚子".
  27. "東京特急ニュースター号|路線案内|高速・貸切バス 大阪バス株式会社".
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