Badu railway station

Badu Station (Chinese: 八堵車站; pinyin: Bādǔ Chēzhàn; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Peh-tó͘ Chhia-chām) is a railway station at the junction of the Taiwan Railways Administration West Coast line and the Yilan line. It is the western terminus of the Yilan line and is located in Nuannuan District, Keelung, Taiwan.

Badu

八堵
Badu Station
Location142 Badu Rd.
Nuannuan, Keelung, Taiwan
Coordinates25°6′30″N 121°43′44″E
Operated by
Line(s)
Distance3.7 km from Keelung, 0 km from Badu
Platforms1 Island platform, 2 side platforms
ConnectionsBus stops
Construction
Structure typeAt-Grade
History
Opened20 July 1899 (original)
1986 (present building)
Traffic
Passengers5,722 daily (2014)[1]
Services
Preceding station Taiwan Railways Following station
Sankeng
towards Keelung
Western Trunk line Qidu
towards Pingtung
Nuannuan
towards Taitung
Eastern Trunk line Terminus
Badu station platform

History

The station was opened in 1899, during Japanese rule. In April 1914, the rail line from Keelung to Haccho (Badu) was completed. The station has served as an important transfer point between the West Coast line and the Yilan line since 1919, when the first segment of the Yilan line was built in the same year.

The Badu railway station incident occurred in March 1947, as a part of anti-government protests known as the February 28 incident. Civilians began protesting at Badu railway station on 1 March 1947 the government response to the events of the previous day, and attacked National Revolutionary Army servicemen. Military forces returned ten days later, killing between five and eight station employees, while also removing at least eight more from their posts. The latter group vanished without a trace.[2]

The current station building was completed in 1986, and a memorial to the victims of the February 28 incident was unveiled outside the station in 1994. Now it is one of the busiest stations in southern Keelung, with more than 5,000 passengers per day as of 2014.

Platform layout

1 1 Yilan line (northbound arrival), West Coast line (southbound departure) Toward Qidu, Taipei, Taichung, Kaohsiung, Pingtung
2 2 Yilan line (southbound departure) Toward Ruifang, Yilan, Su'aoxin
3 3A West Coast line (southbound departure) Toward Qidu, Taipei, Taichung, Kaohsiung, Pingtung
4 3B West Coast line (northbound departure) Toward Keelung

See also

  • List of railway stations in Taiwan

References

  1. "Volume of Passenger and Freight Traffic" (PDF). Taiwan Railway Administration. 2015. Retrieved 2015-05-08.
  2. Han Cheung (23 February 2020). "Taiwan in Time: Terror on the north coast". Taipei Times. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
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