There are two large train stations in Osaka City, and you can directly transfer to many subways

Mondo Social Updated on 2024-01-29

Since the Nara period, Osaka has been a ** port due to its seaside location, and Nambakyo was established here. During the Azuchi-Momoyama period, Toyotomi Hideyoshi built Osaka Castle and used Osaka as the political center of the Toyotomi regime. During the Edo period, Osaka was renamed Osaka, and along with Kyoto and Edo, it was the most economically active city in Japan at that time, and was known as the kitchen of the world.

After the Meiji era, Osaka remained the most important industrial city in Japan, and its population once surpassed that of Tokyo, and it was known as Osaka at the time.

Osaka Station is the largest station in western Japan and is the first station to be selected as one of the 100 best stations in Station. This station is a directly managed station, and it also manages Tsukamoto Station on the Tokaido Main Line. In JR's system of specific metropolitan areas, it is a station (central station) in Osaka City. The station is located at the entrance to the north of Osaka City, near Umeda, and is bustling with the city of Osaka to the east and south. The station was once the terminus, departure or intermediate station of many long-distance trains, and was replaced by the Tokaido Shinkansen (and later the Sanyo Shinkansen) and Shin-Osaka Station, which opened in 1964.

At present, this station is the starting and terminating station of limited express trains bound for Hokuriku, Shinshu, Kita-, and Sanin. The new Keihanshin Intercity Train must also stop at this station.

The Tokaido Main Line is the line of this station, and there are also two lines that stop at the Osaka Loop Line. Trains on the Fukuchiyama Line, which starts at Amagasaki Station, run directly to this station, and only local trains can be operated in the direction of Kyoto Station on the Tokaido Main Line.

According to the name of JR West's unique nickname line, the JR Kyoto Line is the Kyoto Line, the JR Kobe Line is the Kobe Line, and the Takarazuka Line is the JR Takarazuka Line. On these routes, JR West's passenger guides use the nickname route name.

Among them, the Sakurajima Line (JR Yumesaki Line), Kansai Main Line (Yamato Line), and Hanwa Line (Kansai Airport Line) direct trains that pass through the Osaka Loop Line also depart at this station.

Shin-Osaka Station (Japanese: 新大阪駅 shin-ōsaka eki) 4] is located in Nishi-Nakajima 5-chome, Yodogawa-ku, Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture, Japan, and is a railway station of the Tokai Railway Company (JR Central), West Japan Railway Company (JR West), and Osaka Metro, and is the western terminus of the Tokaido Shinkansen, the eastern terminus of the San'yo Shinkansen, the JR Kyoto Line, and the Osaka Municipal Subway, providing transportation services connecting Shin-Osaka Station to the center of Osaka. JR Tokai and JR West's Shin-Osaka Station were selected as one of the 100 stations in the 4th "100 Best Stations in".

The Shinkansen section is an east-west elevated station that is jointly used by JR Central and JR West, and the jurisdiction is vested in JR Central. There are 3 island platforms with a total of 6 strands and 2 side platforms, with a total of 5 sides and 8 lines.

The platform is on the fourth floor. The third floor is the ticket gate, and the second floor is the ticket gate for the shopping street and the subway.

The station nameplate is in the style of JR Central, but since it is a boundary station on the Tokaido of JR Central and the Sanyo Shinkansen of JR West, the station nameplate does not have the "JR Central" logo printed on it. 100 help plan

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