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Keisei-Sakura Station was opened on 9 December 1926, slightly to the south of its present location. The station was rebuilt in its present location in 1962. Station numbering was introduced to all Keisei Line stations on 17 July 2010. Keisei-Sakura Station was assigned station number KS35. [2] [3]
The station is an underground station with the concourse and ticket barriers located on the first basement ("B1F") level. There are two side platforms located above each other, with the down (for Chuo-Rinkan) platform 1 on the second basement ("B2F") level, and the up (for Shibuya) platform 2 on the third basement ("B3F") level.
On February 1, 1964 the railway division of Sanco split off to form a separate company and the station came under the control of the Mie Electric Railway, which merged with Kintetsu on April 1, 1965. [2] In the meantime, on March 1, 1964 during renovations on the line, station is moved about 0.2 km to the northeast.
Sakura Station was opened on July 20, 1894 as a terminal station on the Sōbu Railway Company. A new station building was completed in December 1985. [ citation needed ] The station was absorbed into the JR East network upon the privatization of the Japanese National Railways (JNR) on April 1, 1987.
All stations accept manaca, a rechargeable contactless smart card, and other major Japanese IC cards. The first section of the line opened in 1989. Between Nagoya and Imaike, the line runs under Sakura-dōri Avenue, serving as a bypass to the Higashiyama Line. Until 2015, it was the only Nagoya Municipal Subway line to use automatic train operation
Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card white room. Cardcaptor Sakura has been a mainstay for anime fans for over 20 years, and everybody was excited when the next chapter in the series, Clear Card, was both ...
Tokorozawa Sakura Town is a pop cultural attraction complex in Tokorozawa, Saitama, Japan which opened in the fall of 2020. [1] It is a joint project of the Kadokawa Corporation and the city of Tokorozawa. The development has five main components; the Kadokawa Culture Center, the Da Vinci store, the EJ Anime hotel (closed down in 2022) Japan ...
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