Nagoyajo Station

Coordinates: 35°10′53.5259″N 136°54′19.36″E / 35.181534972°N 136.9053778°E / 35.181534972; 136.9053778
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

M07
Nagoyajo Station

名古屋城駅
Transportation Bureau City of Nagoya
Line(s)The logo of the Meijo Line of the Nagoya Municipal Subway. Meijō Line
Connections
  • Bus interchange Bus terminal
Other information
Station codeM07
History
Opened15 October 1965; 58 years ago (15 October 1965)
Passengers
20087,076,285[1]
Services
Preceding station The logo of the Nagoya Municipal Subway. Nagoya Municipal Subway Following station
Hisaya-ōdōri
M06
anticlockwise
Meijō Line Meijō Kōen
M08
clockwise

Nagoyajo Station (名古屋城駅, Nagoyajō-eki, lit. "

Nagoya Noh Theatre
.

History

The station was opened on 15 October 1965.[3]

The station was originally called Shiyakusho Station (市役所駅, Shiyakusho-eki, lit. "City Hall Station") and its name was changed on 4 January 2023.[4]

Lines

Layout

The station has one underground island platform.

Entrance No. 7 is built as a wooden traditional Kōrai-mon (高麗門 "Goryeo") gate.

At the end of the northern exits is a large painting of a bird-eye view of Nagoya Castle during the Edo period. This painting was produced by the Institute for Cultural Environment Planning Co., Ltd. by Naitō Akira (内藤昌) and Suzuki Norio (鈴木 規夫).[5]

Platforms

1  Meijō Line For
2  Meijō Line For
Motoyama

References

  1. ^ 平成21年版名古屋市統計年鑑 11.運輸・通信 [Nagoya Statistics for Year 21 of the Heisei Era, 11 Transportation and Communication] (in Japanese). Nagoya City. Retrieved 1 December 2010.
  2. ^ 市役所 [Shiyakusho] (in Japanese). Transportation Bureau City of Nagoya. Retrieved 19 November 2010.
  3. ^ "Subway Station Name Change" (PDF). Transportation Bureau, City of Nagoya. 4 January 2023.
  4. ^ "名古屋城のマップ – 名古屋城天守閣を木造で復元し、旧町名の復活を目指す会".

External links

Media related to Nagoyajo Station at Wikimedia Commons


35°10′53.5259″N 136°54′19.36″E / 35.181534972°N 136.9053778°E / 35.181534972; 136.9053778