Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Zeze Station

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Location
  
Ōtsu, Shiga Japan

Address
  
Japan

Operated by
  
JR West

Opened
  
1880

Zeze Station

Connections
  
Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line (Keihan Zeze Station)

Previous names
  
Baba (until 1913); Ōtsu (until 1921)

Connection
  
Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line (Keihan Zeze Station)

Similar
  
Ishiyama Station, Seta Station, Ōtsu Station, Ishiba Station, Hamaōtsu Station

jr jr 201603 zeze station jr223 keihan 600


Zeze Station (膳所駅, Zeze-eki) is a railway station in Ōtsu, Shiga, Japan. The station is on the Biwako Line (Tōkaidō Main Line) of West Japan Railway Company (JR West). In front of Zeze Station is Keihan Zeze Station (京阪膳所駅, Keihan Zeze-eki) on the Ishiyama-Sakamoto Line of Keihan Electric Railway. This article covers both stations.

Contents

Lines

  • West Japan Railway Company (JR West)
  • Biwako Line - Zeze Station
  • Keihan Electric Railway
  • Ishiyama Sakamoto Line - Keihan Zeze Station
  • West Japan Railway Company Biwako Line (Zeze Station)

    1. Kusatsu Line for Kusatsu and Kibukawa
    2. Biwako Line for Kusatsu and Maibara
    3. Biwako Line for Kyoto and Osaka
    4. Biwako Line for Kyoto and Osaka (partly)

    Ishiyama Sakamoto Line (Keihan Zeze Station)

  • For Hamaōtsu, Sakamoto, Hieizan, Kyōto and Osaka
  • For Keihan Ishiyama and Ishiyamadera
  • History

    This JR station opened as Baba Station when the railway extended from Kyoto to the lakeside port of Ōtsu on July 15, 1880. At this time, the stations en route were (from Ōtsu) Ishiba, Baba, Yamashina, Ōtani and Inari. When the last section of the Tōkaidō railway completed on July 1, 1889, the railway from the east connected at Baba, leaving the branch between Baba and Ōtsu. On June 1, 1913, Ōtsu Station and Baba Station were renamed as Hamaōtsu and Ōtsu. On August 1, 1921, the new route between Ōtsu and Kyoto was opened. New Ōtsu Station and Yamashina Station opened en route and the former Ōtsu Station became a freight terminal named Zeze. Zeze Station resumed passenger services on September 15, 1934.

    References

    Zeze Station Wikipedia