Minami-Hatogaya Station

Minami-Hatogaya Station (南鳩ヶ谷駅, Minami-Hatogaya-eki) is a railway station on the Saitama Rapid Railway Line in Kawaguchi, Saitama, Japan, operated by the third sector railway operator Saitama Railway Corporation.


Minami-Hatogaya Station

南鳩ヶ谷駅
Minami-Hatogaya Station No.1 entrance, November 2007
Location1-1-7 Minami-Hatogaya, Kawaguchi-shi, Saitama-ken
(埼玉県川口市南鳩ヶ谷5丁目1-7)
Japan
Operated by Saitama Railway Corporation
Line(s)Saitama Rapid Railway Line
Platforms1 island platform
Connections
  • Bus stop
Other information
Station code     SR21
History
Opened2001
Traffic
Passengers (FY2011)5,723 daily

Lines

Minami-Hatogaya Station is served by the 14.6 km Saitama Rapid Railway Line, which extends from Akabane-iwabuchi in Kita, Tokyo to Urawa-Misono in Midori-ku, Saitama, and lies 4.3 km from the starting point of the line at Akabane-iwabuchi.[1] The majority of services on the line continue southward onto the Tokyo Metro Namboku Line to Meguro and on the Tokyu Meguro Line to Hiyoshi in Kanagawa Prefecture.

Station layout

The station has an underground island platform serving two tracks. The platforms are equipped with waist-height platform edge doors.

Platforms

The platforms, November 2007
1  Saitama Rapid Railway Line for Higashi-Kawaguchi and Urawa-Misono
2  Saitama Rapid Railway Line for Akabane-iwabuchi
Tokyo Metro Namboku Line for Meguro
Tokyu Meguro Line for Hiyoshi

Facilities and accessibility

The station concourse and platforms have elevator access. Universal access toilets are available on the concourse level.

Adjacent stations

« Service »
Saitama Rapid Railway Line
Kawaguchi-Motogō - Hatogaya

History

Minami-Hatogaya Station opened on 28 March 2001 with the opening of the Saitama Rapid Railway Line.[1]

Passenger statistics

In fiscal 2011, the station was used by an average of 5,723 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).[1]

Surrounding area

gollark: Vinet led Arch Linux until 1 October 2007, when he stepped down due to lack of time, transferring control of the project to Aaron Griffin.
gollark: Originally only for 32-bit x86 CPUs, the first x86_64 installation ISO was released in April 2006.
gollark: Inspired by CRUX, another minimalist distribution, Judd Vinet started the Arch Linux project in March 2002. The name was chosen because Vinet liked the word's meaning of "the principal," as in "arch-enemy".
gollark: Arch Linux has comprehensive documentation, which consists of a community wiki known as the ArchWiki.
gollark: Pacman, a package manager written specifically for Arch Linux, is used to install, remove and update software packages. Arch Linux uses a rolling release model, meaning there are no "major releases" of completely new versions of the system; a regular system update is all that is needed to obtain the latest Arch software; the installation images released every month by the Arch team are simply up-to-date snapshots of the main system components.

See also

References

  1. 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. 216. ISBN 978-4-7770-1336-4.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.