Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Ebisu Station (Tokyo)

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Location
  
Shibuya, Tokyo Japan

Address
  
Japan

Operated by
  
JR East Tokyo Metro

Opened
  
1901

Ebisu Station (Tokyo)

Similar
  
Daikan‑yama Station, Yebisu Garden Place, Naka‑Meguro Station, Shinjuku Station, Meguro Station

Ebisu Station (恵比寿駅, Ebisu-eki) is a railway station in the Ebisu neighborhood of Tokyo's Shibuya ward, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East) and the Tokyo subway operator Tokyo Metro. The station is named after Yebisu Beer, which was once brewed in an adjacent brewery, and which is itself named for the Japanese deity Ebisu.

Contents

Lines

Ebisu is served by the following lines:

  • East Japan Railway Company (JR East)
  • Yamanote Line
  • Saikyō Line
  • Shōnan-Shinjuku Line
  • Tokyo Metro
  • Hibiya Line
  • Platforms

    The JR East station consists of two island platforms serving four tracks.

    Station melody

    The melody known as "The Third Man Theme" (or as the "Ebisu Theme" in Japan) is played at the platforms just prior to train departures. This melody was used in Ebisu beer TV commercials.

    Platforms

    The subway station has two side platforms serving two tracks.

    History

    The station first opened in 1901 as a freight terminal for the neighboring Yebisu Beer factory. Passenger trains began to stop at the station on 30 September 1906. The Tokyo Tamagawa tram line was extended to the station in 1927. In May 1945, the station building burned to the ground amid the bombing of Tokyo. The subway station opened on 25 March 1964 and the tram service was discontinued in 1967.

    The Sapporo Brewery at Ebisu and its accompanying rail freight terminal were closed in 1982. The space was used for a "car train" service for several years before being redeveloped as the Ebisu Garden Place high-rise complex.

    The Saikyo Line was extended to Ebisu in 1996. Through service to the Shonan-Shinjuku Line began in 2001, and to the Rinkai Line in 2002. Between 1996 and 2002, Ebisu served as the southern passenger terminus of the Saikyo Line, with Osaki Station being used as a turnaround point but not having passenger platforms connected to the line.

    Waist-height platform edge doors were introduced on the two Yamanote Line platforms from 26 June 2010, the first time that such doors were installed on a JR line other than the Shinkansen.

    Passenger statistics

    In fiscal 2013, the JR East station was used by 133,553 passengers daily (boarding passengers only), making it the 23rd-busiest station operated by JR East. In fiscal 2013, the Tokyo Metro station was used by an average of 104,738 passengers per day (exiting and entering passengers), making it the sixteenth-busiest station operated by Tokyo Metro.

    The daily passenger figures for each operator in previous years are as shown below.

  • Note that JR East figures are for boarding passengers only.
  • References

    Ebisu Station (Tokyo) Wikipedia