Minami-Asagaya Station

Minami-Asagaya Station (南阿佐ケ谷駅, Minami-asayaga-eki) is a subway station on the Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line in Suginami, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the Tokyo subway operator Tokyo Metro.

M02
Minami-Asagaya Station

南阿佐ケ谷駅
Entrance 2a, December 2016
Location1-15-7 Asagaya-minami, Suginami, Tokyo
(東京都杉並区阿佐谷南1-15-7)
Japan
Operated by Tokyo Metro
Line(s)M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line
Connections
  • Bus stop
Other information
Station codeM-02
History
Opened1961
Traffic
Passengers (FY2011)21,611 daily
Services
Preceding station   Tokyo Metro   Following station
M01
Terminus
Marunouchi Line
Shin-Kōenji
M03
toward Ikebukuro

Lines

Minami-Asagaya Station is served by the Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line from Ogikubo to Ikebukuro, and is 22.7 km from the eastern terminus of the Line at Ikebukuro.[1] It is numbered "M-02".

Station layout

The station consists of two underground side platforms serving two tracks on the first basement level. The platforms are served by their own sets of ticket barriers, with access to the surface from Exits 1 and 2 (from platforms 1 and 2 respectively). The two platforms are also linked by an underground passageway.

Platforms

1 M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line for Ogikubo
2 M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line for Shinjuku, Ginza, and Ikebukuro

History

The station opened on 1 November 1961.[2]

Passenger statistics

In fiscal 2011, the station was used by an average of 21,611 passengers daily.[2]

Surrounding area

The street above Minami-Asagaya Station, June 2005
  • Suginami Ward Office
  • Suginami Police Station
  • Suginami Fire Station
  • Suginami Tax Office
  • Asagaya Shinmeigu Shrine
  • Suginami Higashita Elementary School[3]
gollark: Maybe you would be better off using quantum field theory. Except that doesn't have gravity/general relativity, only special relativity, so you should work out how to unify those?
gollark: We can just say in the technical and artistic merit video that "the robot's projectile trajectory handling maths has relativistic corrections in it and would thus be equipped to fire projectiles near the speed of light, if we actually needed that, had a way to accelerate things that fast, could do so without destroying everything, did not have interactions with the air to worry about, and could safely ignore quantum effects".
gollark: If you really want to you can apply special relativity, sure.
gollark: I don't *think* we need to consider air resistance significantly.
gollark: This is fine*.

References

  1. Kawashima, Ryozo (April 2010). 日本の鉄道 中部ライン 全線・全駅・全配線 第1巻 東京駅―三鷹エリア [Railways of Japan - Chubu Line - Lines/Stations/Track plans - Vol 1 Tokyo Station - Mitaka Area]. Japan: Kodansha. p. 77. ISBN 978-4-06-270061-0.
  2. Terada, Hirokazu (19 January 2013). データブック日本の私鉄 [Databook: Japan's Private Railways]. Japan: Neko Publishing. p. 215. ISBN 978-4-7770-1336-4.
  3. 杉並区立東田小学校 [Suginami Higashita Elementary School] (in Japanese). Japan: Suginami Education Board. Retrieved 19 November 2013.

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