- Shibuya Station
infobox japan station
caption=Shibuya Station viewed from the east.
name=渋谷
namerom=Shibuya
pref=Tokyo
district=
city=
ward=Shibuya
open=1885
close=
presentname=
line=JR Yamanote Line
JR Saikyō Line
JR Shōnan-Shinjuku LineKeiō Inokashira Line Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line Tōkyū Tōyoko Line Tokyo Metro Ginza Line Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line
operator=JR East, Keio, Tokyu,Tokyo Metro
bus=t4
station_number= G-01, Z-01, F-16nihongo|Shibuya Station|渋谷駅|Shibuya-eki is atrain station located inShibuya, Tokyo ,Japan . With 2.4 million passengers on an average weekday in 2004, it is the third-busiest commuter rail station in Tokyo (after Shinjuku and Ikebukuro), handling a large amount of commuter traffic between the center city and suburbs to the south and west.Lines
JR East
*
Saikyō Line /Shōnan-Shinjuku Line - also used by "Narita Express " trains
*Yamanote Line - unusual platform configuration, with both train lines on the same side (east) of platformPrivate railways
*
Keiō Inokashira Line - terminal station
*Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line - through service with Hanzōmon Line
*Tōkyū Tōyoko Line - terminal stationubways
*
Tokyo Metro Ginza Line - terminal station
*Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line - through service with Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line
*Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line - termina station (through service to Tōkyū Tōyoko Line beginning in 2012)Note that the Hanzōmon Line and the Fukutoshin Line are directly (without getting through ticket gates) connected, but they are not directly connected to the Ginza Line. There is no direct connection between the two Tōkyū lines either.
tation layout
The main station building is occupied by a
Tokyu department store. TheTokyo Metro Ginza Line , originally built and operated by a Tokyukeiretsu company, uses platforms on the third floor. The JR lines andTōkyū Tōyoko Line use parallel platforms on the second floor, while theTokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line andTōkyū Den-en-toshi Line share platforms underground, and theKeiō Inokashira Line uses platforms on the second floor of the Shibuya Mark City building to the west of the main station complex. TheTokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line , opened in 2008 is located on the fifth basement under Meiji Street, to the east of the Tōyoko Line station. The Tōyoko Line will be connected to the Fukutoshin Line station to allow through service between the two lines starting in 2012.There are six exits from the main JR/Tōkyū/Tōkyō Metro complex. The nihongo|Hachikō Exit|ハチ公口|Hachikō-guchi on the west side, named for the nearby statue of the dog
Hachikō and adjacent to Shibuya's famousscramble crossing , is a particularly popular meeting spot. The nihongo|Tamagawa Exit|玉川口|Tamagawa-guchi on the west side leads to the Keiō Inokashira Line station.JR East
*
Yamanote Line : 1island platform , 1 track for ja-stalink|Meguro, ja-stalink|Shinagawa and ja-stalink|Tokyo and 1side platform 1 track for ja-stalink|Shinjuku and ja-stalink|Ikebukuro.
*Saikyō Line andShōnan-Shinjuku Line : 1 island platform with 2 tracks.
###@@@KEYEND@@@###Tōkyū Tōyoko Line
*
Bay platform s: 4 platforms with 4 tracks.
###@@@KEYEND@@@###Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line and Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line
*1 island platform with 2 tracks.
###@@@KEYEND@@@###Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line
Two island platforms are connected by temporary structures to be used like a single island platform, serving two tracks.
###@@@KEYEND@@@###Tokyo Metro Ginza Line
*2 side platforms with 2 tracks.
###@@@KEYEND@@@###Keiō Inokashira Line
*Bay Platforms : 2 platforms with 2 tracks.
###@@@KEYEND@@@###History
Shibuya Station first opened on
March 1 ,1885 as a stop on the Shinagawa Line, a predecessor of the present-dayYamanote Line . The station was later expanded to accommodate the Tamagawa Railway (1907; closed 1969), the Tōkyō Line (1927), the Teito Shibuya Line (1933; now the Inokashira Line), the Tōkyō Rapid Railway (1938; began through service with the Ginza Line in 1939 and formally merged in 1941), the Den-en-toshi Line (1977) and the Hanzōmon Line (1978).Around the station
Around the station is the commercial center of Shibuya. The Tokyu Department Store is connected to the east gate of the station and several other department stores are within walking distance.
There is an underground river running under the station, to the east and parallel to the JR tracks. Unlike most other Japanese department stores, the east block of Tokyu Department Store does not have retail space in the basement because of this. An escalator in the east block built over the river stops a few steps above floor level to make space for machinery underneath without digging. Rivers are deemed public space by Japanese law, so building over one is normally illegal. It is not clear why this was allowed when it was first built in 1933.
Adjacent stations
External links
*
JR East Shibuya Station map [http://www.jreast.co.jp/e/stations/e808.html] - in English
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.