Hisai Station
Hisai Station (久居駅, Hisai-eki) is a railway station on the Nagoya Line in Tsu, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Kintetsu Railway. Hisai Station is 74.0 rail kilometers from the terminus of the line at Kintetsu Nagoya Station.[1]
Hisai Station 久居駅 | |
---|---|
Hisai Station | |
Location | 994-6 Hisai Shinmachi, Tsu, Mie (三重県津市久居新町994-6) Japan |
Operated by | Kintetsu Railway |
Line(s) | Nagoya Line |
History | |
Opened | 1908 |
Traffic | |
Passengers (FY 2016) | 11,826 daily |
Line
Station layout
Hisai Station has two opposed side platforms.
Platforms
1 | ■ Nagoya Line | for Ise-Nakagawa, Osaka, Kobe and Kashikojima |
2 | ■ Nagoya Line | for Tsu, Yokkaichi and Nagoya |
Passengers to Osaka must change trains at Ise-Nakagawa Station (also at Tsuruhashi for Kobe) as no through trains to and from Osaka stop at this station.
Time table
Local and express stop, and some Limited express stops in the morning and at night. The train connecting the Nagoya and Ise departing from 6 o'clock to 9:00. And the train connecting Nagoya and Ise departing from Kintetsu Nagoya Station stops after 6pm.[2][3]
But the limited express connecting Nagoya and Osaka does not stop the whole train. Although the express does not stop all during the day, only Express is three or stop.
Adjacent stations
« | Service | » | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Kintetsu Nagoya Line | ||||
Minamigaoka | Local | Momozono | ||
Minamigaoka | Express | Momozono | ||
Tsu | part of Limited express (Nagoya—Ise) (Nagoya-bound in the morning) (Ise-bound in the evening) |
Ise-Nakagawa |
History
Hisai Station opened on November 10, 1908 as a station on the Dai Nippon Kido’s Ise Line, which was renamed the Chusei Railway in 1920. The Sangu Express Electric Railway's Tsu Line connected to the station on May 18, 1930. The Tsu Line was renamed the Nagoya Line on December 7, 1938. On March 15, 1941, the Sangu Express Electric Railway merged with Osaka Electric Railway to become a station on Kansai Express Railway's Nagoya Line.[4] This line in turn was merged with the Nankai Electric Railway on June 1, 1944 to form Kintetsu.[4] The Chusei Railway went out of business on December 1, 1942. The station was rebuilt in November 1997.
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hisai Station. |
- (in Japanese) Kintetsu: Hisai Station