Saku-Uminokuchi Station

Saku-Uminokuchi Station (佐久海ノ口駅, Saku-Uminokuchi-eki) is a train station in Uminokuchi in the village of Minamimaki, Minamisaku District, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).[1]

Saku-Uminokuchi Station

佐久海ノ口駅
Saku-Uminokuchi Station, March 2013
Location975 Uminokuchi, Minamimaki-mura, Minamisaku-gun, Nagano-ken 384-1302
Japan
Coordinates36.0212°N 138.4908°E / 36.0212; 138.4908
Elevation1064 meters[1]
Operated by JR East
Line(s) Koumi Line
Distance39.7 km from Kobuchizawa
Platforms2 side platforms
Other information
StatusUnstaffed
WebsiteOfficial website
History
Opened27 December 1932
Location
Saku-Uminokuchi Station
Location within Nagano Prefecture
Saku-Uminokuchi Station
Saku-Uminokuchi Station (Japan)
Station building, April 2013

Lines

Saku-Uminokuchi Station is served by the Koumi Line and is 39.7 kilometers from the terminus of the line at Kobuchizawa Station.[1]

Station layout

The station consists of two opposed ground-level side platforms serving two tracks, connected to the wooden station building by a level crossing. The station is unattended.[1]

Platforms

station side  Koumi Line for Kiyosato and Kobuchizawa
opp side  Koumi Line for Koumi and Komoro

Adjacent stations

« Service »
Koumi Line
Saku-Hirose - Umijiri

History

Saku-Uminokuchi Station opened on 27 December 1932. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR East. The current station building was completed in 2012.[1]

Surrounding area

gollark: Removing sickness is probably *easier* than keeping it, but it goes against the Grand TJ09 Vision.
gollark: As long as DC has sickness and a system of view-an-image-to-hatch/sicken-stuff, it will not be possible to prevent viewbombing, outside of weird edge cases.
gollark: I mean, it'd be *possible* to stick logins on hatcheries; that wouldn't actually fix it all though.
gollark: Possibly faster since you could safely shove them in early.
gollark: It probably just exists to drive up ad revenue.

See also

References

  1. Shinano Mainichi Shimbun (2011). Nagano Prefecture All Railway Stations, revised edition (長野県鉄道全駅 増補改訂版) (in Japanese). Shinano Mainichi Shinbun Publishing. p. 156. ISBN 9784784071647.
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