When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Kintetsu Nippombashi Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kintetsu_Nippombashi_Station

    This station has 2 side platforms serving a track each on the third basement. Two ticket gates on the second basement are opened from the first train until the last train. There is a ticket gate called "Niji Gate" on the first basement, connecting to Namba Walk.

  3. Hanshin Main Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanshin_Main_Line

    Trains are operated between Kōshien and Osaka-Umeda in weekday morning rush hours. In addition, 2 trains are operated from Ogi to Osaka-Umeda. In official route maps Hanshin shortens the name to "Express". Rapid Express (快速急行, Kaisoku Kyūkō) Trains are through trains to and from the Hanshin Namba Line and the Kintetsu Nara Line.

  4. Ōsaka Namba Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ōsaka_Namba_Station

    Ōsaka Namba Station (大阪難波駅, Ōsaka-Nanba-eki) is a major railway station on the Kintetsu Namba Line and Hanshin Namba Line in the Namba district of Chūō-ku, Osaka, Japan. It is adjacent to Namba Station and JR Namba Station. Trains of the Nara Line depart from and arrive at the station.

  5. Umeda Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umeda_Station

    The underground Umeda terminal of Hanshin Electric Railway (officially Osaka-Umeda Station, but commonly called Hanshin Osaka-Umeda Station) is located south of Ōsaka Station, next to underground of Hanshin Department Store. The Hanshin station first opened on December 21, 1906 as a ground level station and moved to the present underground ...

  6. Namba Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namba_Station

    Namba Station (難波駅, なんば駅, Nanba-eki) is a name shared by two physically separated railway stations in the Namba district of Chūō-ku, Osaka, Japan, operated by Nankai Electric Railway [1] and the Osaka Metro.

  7. Yotsubashi Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yotsubashi_Line

    At first, it was a branch of the Osaka Metro Midōsuji Line, branching off at Daikokuchō Station but was extended north to Nishi-Umeda Station and made a separate line. This new section of the Yotsubashi Line takes a more direct routing to Nishi-Umeda running only 300–400 m (0.19–0.25 mi) west of the Midosuji Line.

  8. Nankai Main Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nankai_Main_Line

    They also return to Namba at Hagurazaki, Tarui, Misakikōen or Kansai Airport in the rush hours and midnight. Only 1 northbound train is operated from Wakayamashi to Hagurazaki in the midnight. Trains pass Imamiyaebisu and Haginochaya stations due to absence of platforms on the tracks of the Nankai Line.

  9. Osaka Metro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osaka_Metro

    The network's first service, the Midōsuji Line from Umeda to Shinsaibashi, opened in 1933. [6] As a north–south trunk route , it is the oldest and busiest line in the whole network. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] [ 2 ] Both it and the main east–west route, the Chūō Line , were later extended to the north and east, respectively.