Puneet Varma (Editor)

Kyōbashi Station (Osaka)

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Connections
  
Bus stop

Opened
  
1895

Address
  
Osaka Prefecture, Japan

Kyōbashi Station (Osaka)

Location
  
Joto-ku, Miyakojima-ku, Osaka, Osaka (大阪市城東区・都島区) Japan

Operated by
  
JR West Keihan Railway Osaka Municipal Subway

Similar
  
Osaka Business Park, Yodoyabashi Station, Shin‑Ōsaka Station, Shinsaibashi Station, Bentenchō Station

Kyobashi Station (京橋駅, Kyōbashi-eki) is a railway station in the Kyōbashi district of Jōtō-ku and Miyakojima-ku Osaka, Japan.

Contents

Lines

  • JR West
  • Osaka Loop Line
  • Gakkentoshi Line (Katamachi Line)
  • JR Tōzai Line
  • Tōzai and Gakkentoshi Lines form a combined service line in practice.

  • Keihan Railway (KH04)
  • Keihan Line
  • Osaka Municipal Subway
  • Nagahori Tsurumi-ryokuchi Line (N22)
  • JR West

    As of 2010, Kyobashi was the fourth busiest station in the JR West network after Osaka Station, Kyoto Station and Tennoji Station.

    The station was built in 1895 as part of the Osaka Railway (now Osaka Loop Line) extension from Tennoji to Umeda (now Osaka Station). The Katamachi Line station was opened in 1912.

    During the bombing of Osaka on August 14, 1945, a one-ton bomb directly struck the Katamachi Line platform and killed 700 to 800 evacuees. Kyobashi was one of the last sites to be bombed in Japan during World War II, followed only by the bombing of Akita, later the same day. A memorial was erected on the site in 1947, and anniversary services have been held at the station every year since 1955.

    The JR Tozai Line opened in 1997, at which point Kyobashi became a terminal for both the Tozai Line and Katamachi Line.

    Layout

    Gakkentoshi Line (Katamachi Line) and JR Tōzai Line - There are an island platform and a side platform with two tracks on the ground.
    Osaka Loop Line - There are two side platforms with two tracks elevated.

    Keihan

    Kyobashi is the busiest station in the Keihan network. The Keihan terminal was originally built in 1910 and relocated twice in 1932 and 1969.

    This station is the transfer station between the Keihan Line and the Nakanoshima Line. The connections are follows:

    eastbound: trains from Nakanoshima ←→ trains from Yodoyabashi westbound: trains for Nakanoshima ←→ trains for Yodoyabashi

    Layout

    2 island platforms on the 4th level serve 4 tracks.

    Osaka Municipal Subway Nagahori Tsurumi-ryokuchi Line

    The Osaka Municipal Subway network was extended to Kyobashi in 1990 when the Tsurumi-Ryokuchi Line opened between Kyobashi and Tsurumi-ryokuchi Station to serve Expo '90 visitors.

    Layout

    An island platform on the 3rd basement fenced with platform gates serves 2 tracks.

    Surroundings

  • Keihan Mall
  • Daiei Kyobashi
  • KiKi Kyobashi
  • Kyobashi Guranshato Building
  • COMS Garden
  • Miyakojima Ward office
  • Osaka Business Park
  • Japan National Route 1
  • Buses

    Osaka Municipal Transportation Bureau
  • Kyobashi ekimae (north side of Keihan Kyobashi Station)
  • Route 57: for Kema-chuo Koen via Subway Miyakojima and Sakuranomiya Koko
  • Kyobashi-eki minamiguchi (south gates of JR Kyobashi Station)
  • Route 21: for Subway Fukaebashi / for Temmabashi
  • Kyobashi-kitaguchi (on Route 1)
  • Route 31: for Hanahaku-Kinen-Koen kitaguchi via Shimmori Koen-mae / for Temmabashi
  • Route 36: for Kadoma-minami / for Osaka ekimae via Minami-morimachi
  • Route 57: for Kema-chuo Koen via Subway Miyakojima and Sakuranomiya Koko
  • Kintetsu Bus Co., Ltd.
  • Kyobashi (on Route 1)
  • Route 10 for Umeda
  • Route 11 for JR Suminodo (only 1 bus service on Saturdays)
  • Route 17 for Inada Shako-mae via Hama-minamiguchi
  • References

    Kyōbashi Station (Osaka) Wikipedia