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Yoyogi Station (代々木駅, Yoyogi-eki) is a railway station in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) and the Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation (Toei). It is station E-26 under Toei's numbering system.
Yoyogi-Uehara Station (代々木上原駅, Yoyogi-Uehara-eki) is a railway station on the Odakyū Odawara Line and Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan. [1] The Tokyo Metro station number is C-01. Both lines share platforms at this station, as each line has through operation onto the other.
Yoyogi Station (代々木駅, -eki) is located in the easternmost part of Yoyogi only 700 meters south of Shinjuku Station. JR Yoyogi Station has two platforms for the Chūō-Sōbu and Yamanote lines. Platforms for the Toei Ōedo Line subway line are located underneath Tokyo Metropolitan Route 414 west of the JR station.
Yoyogi-Hachiman Station (代々木八幡駅, Yoyogi-Hachiman-eki) is a railway station on the Odakyu Odawara Line in Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Odakyu Electric Railway.
Yoyogi-koen Station (代々木公園駅, Yoyogi-kōen-eki) is a subway station on the Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the Tokyo subway operator Tokyo Metro. It is numbered "C-02".
G Ginza Line - terminus; Z Hanzōmon Line - through service with Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line; F Fukutoshin Line - through service with Tokyu Tōyoko Line; Note that while the Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line and Fukutoshin Line are directly connected to each other (and passengers can switch from one to another without passing through ticket gates), the Ginza Line station is a standalone terminal.
Line 9 was designed to pass through built-up areas in Chiyoda, and also intended to relieve the busy Ginza Line and Hibiya Line, which follow a roughly similar route through central Tokyo. Opening ceremony of through services at Yoyogi-Uehara Station, with an Odakyu 9000 series and TRTA 6000 series present, 31 March 1978
The full line began operation on 12 December 2000. An additional station (Shiodome Station) was opened on 2 November 2002 to connect to the Yurikamome guideway transit line. Following the addition of Shiodome, the automated announcements in the trains were changed to advertise businesses and facilities near each station, a first in Tokyo ...