|
Himeji Station
姫路駅
|
|
| North side of the station | |
| Location | |
| Prefecture | Hyōgo (See other stations in Hyōgo) |
| City | Himeji |
| History | |
| Year opened | 1888 |
| Rail services | |
| Operator(s) | West Japan Railway Company |
| Line(s) | Sanyo Shinkansen Sanyō Main Line (JR Kobe Line) Bantan Line Kishin Line |
Himeji Station (姫路駅 Himeji Eki) on the West Japan Railway Company (JR West) is located in the heart of Himeji, Japan. Himeji is a major stop on the Sanyō Main Line, and the western end of the JR Kobe Line. The station serves as a connection point between the main line and the Sanyō Shinkansen, the Kishin Line and the Bantan Line.
The station building is located close to the Sanyo Electric Railway Himeji Station and Himeji Castle.
Contents |
Platforms
The preparation for elevation of the conventional lines has been undertaken since 1989, and begun in earnest in 1994 after the relocation of Himeji's freight terminal and train yards. On March 26, 2006, platforms for the JR Kobe Line and Sanyo Main Line switched to the elevated railway, while the remainder of the platforms, for the Bantan and Kishin Lines, were elevated beginning on December 22, 2008. Removal of ground platforms and the remainder of reconstruction work is planned to conclude in 2010.
| Conventional railway platforms | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 | ■ Bantan Line | for Fukusaki, Teramae |
| 2 | □ Limited Express Hamakaze | for Ōsaka (JR Kobe Line) |
| ■ Bantan Line | for Fukusaki, Teramae | |
| 3, 4 | ■ Kishin Line | for Yobe, Hon-Tatsuno, Harima-Shingū, Sayo |
| 5 | □ Limited Express Super Hakuto (eastbound) | for Osaka, Shin-Ōsaka, Kyoto |
| □ Overnight limited express Sunrise Izumo/Sunrise Seto | for Shizuoka, Yokohama, Tokyo | |
| ■ JR Kobe Line (Sanyō Main Line) (eastbound) | for Sannomiya, Ōsaka, Kyoto, Maibara | |
| 6 | ■ JR Kobe Line (Sanyō Main Line) (eastbound) | for Sannomiya, Ōsaka, Kyoto, Maibara |
| 7 | □ Limited Express Super Hakuto (westbound) | for Tottori, Kurayoshi |
| □ Limited Express Hamakaze | for Kinosaki Onsen, Kasumi, Hamasaka | |
| ■ Sanyō Main Line (westbound) | for Aboshi, Aioi, Banshu-Ako, Okayama | |
| 8 | □ Limited Express Super Hakuto (westbound) | for Tottori, Kurayoshi |
| □ Overnight limited express Sunrise Izumo/Sunrise Seto | for Takamatsu, Yonago, Matsue, Izumoshi | |
| ■ Sanyō Main Line (westbound) | for Aboshi, Aioi, Banshu-Ako, Okayama | |
| (no platform) | ■ Freight trains (JR Freight, westbound) | |
| Shinkansen platforms | ||
| 11 | ■ Sanyo Shinkansen (eastbound) | for Shin-Ōsaka, Tokyo |
| 12, 13 | ■Sanyo Shinkansen (westbound) | for Okayama, Hiroshima, Hakata |
| ■ Sanyo Shinkansen (eastbound) | Nozomi starting for Shin-Ōsaka, Tokyo | |
History
Himeji Station was opened by Sanyo Railway, the present day Sanyō Main Line, in 1888. At the time, railway stations were usually built either outside or alongside urban areas,[1] but Himeji Station was built bordering the old city walls, at the end of the main street (Ootemae-dori). The current Sanyo Railway Station is actually constructed on top of part of the old city wall.[2] It is thought that the reason was that the army was based in Himeji Castle. This proximity to the city helped to contribute to urban development.[3]
Himeji Station was linked to Bantan Railway (播但鉄道 Bantan Tetsudō), the present day Bantan Line, in 1894. Kishin Line was linked to the station in 1930.
The station was expanded with the opening of the Sanyō Shinkansen in 1972, and today, travel to Tokyo takes less than three-and-a-half hours.
- December 23, 1888 The Sanyō Railway segment between Akashi Station and Himeji Station opens.
- July 26, 1894 The Bantan Railway segment between Himeji Station and Teramae Station opens.
- June 1, 1903 Sanyō Railway purchases Bantan Railway.
- December 1, 1906 Sanyō Railway is nationalized.
- September 1, 1930 Kishin Line is connected.
- March 15, 1972 The Sanyō Shinkansen segment between Okayama and Shin-Ōsaka opens.
- April 1, 1987 Japan National Railway is divided and privatized. The line is taken over by the West Japan Railway Company.
- January 17, 1995 There was a blockage of the segment of the Sanyō Shinkansen between Shin-Ōsaka and Himeji, caused by the Great Hanshin earthquake.
- April 8, 1995 The blocked section reopens.
- October 1, 2003 Nozomi service is added to the schedule.
Adjacent stations
| « | Service | » | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| West Japan Railway (JR West) | ||||
| Sanyo Shinkansen | ||||
| Shin-Kobe | Nozomi (Tōkaido-Sanyō Shinkansen through services to/from Hiroshima (except trains 108, 131, 134); trains 56, 102, 104, 106, 127, 133, 135) |
Okayama trains 102, 133: Terminus |
||
| Shin-Kobe | Hikari (some Sanyō Shinkansen-only Rail Star services) | Okayama | ||
| Nishi-Akashi | Hikari (Tōkaido-Sanyō Shinkansen through services) | Aioi train 387: Terminus |
||
| Nishi-Akashi | Kodama | Aioi | ||
| Nozomi services to/from Hakata (except trains 56) Some Hikari Rail Star services: no stop |
||||
| Sanyo Main Line, JR Kobe Line | ||||
| Gochaku | Local (Rapid Service) | Agaho | ||
| Kakogawa | Special Rapid Service | Agaho | ||
| Bantan Line | ||||
| Terminus | Local | Kyoguchi | ||
| Kishin Line | ||||
| Terminus | Local | Harima-Takaoka | ||
| Terminus | Rapid Service terminating at Himeji (only one train in the morning) |
Hon-Tatsuno | ||
References
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Himeji Station |
- ^ "A comparative study of the relation between the elevated railroad project and urban area development in western-part-of-Japan (Kochi University of Technorogy Library)" (PDF(Japanese)). http://www.kochi-tech.ac.jp/library/ron/2002/g5/infr/1055154.pdf. Retrieved February 22, 2007.[broken citation]
- ^ "(Japanese)Outline of Himeji castle (Himeji Information Web site)". http://www.himeji.jp/himeji_jyo/gaiyo.htm. Retrieved February 22, 2007.
- ^ "(Japanese)Master plan of Himeji city (Himeji city office)". http://www.city.himeji.hyogo.jp/tkeikaku/master/master.html. Retrieved February 22, 2007.
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
|||||
Coordinates: 34°49′40″N 134°41′27″E / 34.827659°N 134.690769°E
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




