When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tokyo subway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_subway

    The Yokohama Subway and the Minatomirai Line also operate in the Greater Tokyo Area, but they are not directly connected to the Tokyo subway network. However, direct through services from the Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line regularly run into Yokohama's Minatomirai Line via the Tōkyū Tōyoko Line .

  3. Transport in Greater Tokyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Greater_Tokyo

    Most lines in Tokyo are privately owned, funded, and operated, though some, like the Toei Subway and the Tokyo Metro, are supported by the Government either directly or indirectly. Each of the region's rail companies tends to display only its own maps, with key transfer points highlighted, ignoring the rest of the metro area's network.

  4. Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Metropolitan_Bureau...

    The Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation (東京都交通局, Tōkyō-to Kōtsū-kyoku), also known as Toei (都営), [a] is a bureau of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government which operates public transport services in Tokyo. Among its services, the Toei Subway is one of two rapid transit systems which make up the Tokyo subway system, the ...

  5. List of Tokyo Metro stations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tokyo_Metro_stations

    Shibuya is the fourth busiest station on the Tokyo Metro network and a major interchange with Tōkyū, Keiō, and JR East trains. List of Tokyo Metro stations lists stations on the Tokyo Metro, including lines serving the station, station location (ward or city), opening date, design (underground, at-grade, or elevated), and daily ridership.

  6. Tokyo Metro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Metro

    The Tokyo Metro (Japanese: 東京メトロ, Tōkyō Metoro) is a major rapid transit system in Tokyo, Japan, operated by the Tokyo Metro Co. With an average daily ridership of 6.52 million passengers (as of 2023), the Tokyo Metro is the larger of the two subway operators in the city; the other being the Toei Subway, with 2.85 million average daily rides.

  7. Toei Ōedo Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toei_Ōedo_Line

    The Toei Ōedo Line (都営地下鉄大江戸線, Toei Chikatetsu Ōedo-sen) is a subway line in Tokyo, Japan, operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation (Toei). It commenced full operations on December 12, 2000; using the Japanese calendar this reads "12/12/12" as the year 2000 equals Heisei 12.

  8. Ogikubo Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogikubo_Station

    The JR East station consists of ground-level platforms running east–west, and the underground platforms for the Tokyo Metro station lie parallel to the JR East platforms, slightly to the south. [1] The station has "North" and "South" ("South a" and "South b") entrances at the eastern end of the station and a "West" entrance at the western end.

  9. Azabu-juban Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azabu-juban_Station

    Azabu-juban Station (麻布十番駅, Azabu-jūban eki) is the name of two subway stations in Minato, Tokyo, Japan, one operated by Tokyo Metro and the other by Toei Subway. Lines [ edit ]