Harman Patil (Editor)

Nihombashi Station

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Tracks
  
6

Opened
  
24 December 1932

Structure type
  
Underground

Phone
  
+81 3-3271-2768

Nihombashi Station

Location
  
1 Nihonbashi, Chūō-ku, Tokyo Japan

Operated by
  
Tokyo Metro Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation

Line(s)
  
Tokyo Metro Ginza Line Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line Toei Asakusa Line

Platforms
  
1 island platform, 1 side platform (Ginza Line) 2 side platforms (Asakusa Line) 1 island platform (Tozai Line)

Address
  
Japan, Tokyo, 中央区 日本橋1-3-11先

Similar
  
Mitsukoshimae Station, Kayabachō Station, Shin‑Nihombashi Station, Ōtemachi Station, Kyōbashi Station

Nihombashi Station (日本橋駅, Nihonbashi-eki) is a subway station in the Nihonbashi district of Tokyo, Japan, jointly operated by Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation (Toei) and Tokyo Metro.

Contents

Lines

Nihombashi Station is served by the following lines.

Station layout

The Ginza Line station originally opened as an island platform serving two tracks, but overcrowding prompted the construction of a side platform serving Shibuya-bound trains in 1984. As of 2013, the island platform serves only Asakusa-bound trains, and the Shibuya side of the platform is fenced off.

The Tōzai Line station consists of an island platform serving two tracks, while the Asakusa Line station consists of two side platforms with two tracks between them. At the Asakusa line station, passengers must choose their direction before passing through the ticket gates.

History

The Tokyo Underground Railway (which built the Asakusa-Shimbashi section of the Ginza Line) opened a station here on December 24, 1932, when they extended the line south to Kyōbashi. On September 1, 1941, they merged with the Tokyo Rapid Railway to form the Teito Rapid Transit Authority (TRTA).

The next development was the opening of Edobashi Station on February 28, 1963, when Toei Line 1 was extended to Higashi-Ginza. Transfer was allowed between the two lines here, but the complex only became a true interchange when the Tōzai Line station opened on September 14, 1967.

Toei Line 1 only received its name – the Asakusa Line – on July 1, 1978, and Edobashi station was renamed on March 19, 1989 to avoid confusion with Edogawabashi Station on the Yūrakuchō Line, which opened in 1974.

References

Nihombashi Station Wikipedia