Kami-Nojiri Station

Kami-Nojiri Station (上野尻駅, Kami-Nojiri-eki) is a railway station on the Ban'etsu West Line in the town of Nishiaizu, Yama District, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).

Kami-Nojiri Station

上野尻駅
Kami-Nojiri Station, June 2010
LocationKaminojiri Ota 2805, Nishiaizu-machi, Yama-gun, Fukushima-ken 969-4512
Japan
Coordinates37.6252°N 139.6340°E / 37.6252; 139.6340
Operated by JR East
Line(s) Ban'etsu West Line
Distance111.3 km from Kōriyama
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks1
Other information
StatusStaffed
WebsiteOfficial website
History
OpenedNovember 1, 1914
Traffic
Passengers (FY 2017)16 daily
Services
Preceding station JR East Following station
Tokusawa
toward Niitsu
Ban'etsu West Line
Local
Nozawa
toward Kōriyama
Location
Kami-Nojiri Station
Location within Fukushima Prefecture
Kami-Nojiri Station
Kami-Nojiri Station (Japan)

Lines

Kami-Nojiri Station is served by the Ban'etsu West Line, and is located 111.3 rail kilometers from the official starting point of the line at Kōriyama.

Station layout

Kami-Nojiri Station has one side platform serving a single bi-directional track. The station is staffed.

History

Kami-Nojiri Station opened on November 1, 1914. The station was absorbed into the JR East network upon the privatization of the Japanese National Railways (JNR) on April 1, 1987.

Passenger statistics

In fiscal 2017, the station was used by an average of 16 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).[1]

Surrounding area

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gollark: Since basically all the JS I've seen uses the second one.
gollark: If I saw the top one (and it wasn't in an event like this where everyone will second-guess everything) I would assume that it was written by someone who used C(++) a lot.
gollark: e.g. if you have some JS code, and you see that the author used ```javascriptfunction deployBee(){}```brackets and not```javascriptfunction deployBee() {}```ones, you need to know a bit about what JS code normally looks like to infer anything like that.
gollark: I don't think so. Things like variable names and formatting are *fairly* obvious, although you may need to read a decent sample of code in language X to learn what people generally do there regarding those, but stuff like what constructs are generally used for tasks in language X are not.

See also

References

  1. 各駅の乗車人員 (2017年度) [Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2017)] (in Japanese). Japan: East Japan Railway Company. 2018. Retrieved 11 September 2018.


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