Odawara Station

Odawara Station (小田原駅, Odawara-eki) is a railway station in Odawara, Kanagawa, Japan. It is a gateway station to the Hakone area.

JT16
Odawara Station

小田原駅
Location1 Sakaechō, Odawara, Kanagawa
Japan
Operated by
Line(s)
  • Tokaido Shinkansen
  • JT Tokaido Main Line
  • Odakyu Odawara Line
  • Izu-Hakone Railway Daiyuzan Line
  • Hakone Tozan Line
ConnectionsBus terminal
History
Opened1920
Services
Preceding station   JR Central   Following station
(Limited service)
toward Shin-Ōsaka
Tōkaidō Shinkansen
Hikari
(Limited service)
toward Tokyo
toward Shin-Ōsaka
Tōkaidō Shinkansen
Commuter services
Preceding station   JR East   Following station
JT20
toward Izukyu-Shimoda
Saphir Odoriko
(Limited service)
YHMJT05
toward Tokyo or Shinjuku
JT20
toward Izukyu-Shimoda or Shuzenji
Odoriko
Ofuna
OFNJT07
toward Tokyo
TerminusShonan Liner
JT14
toward Tokyo
Tōkaidō Main Line
     Commuter Rapid
JT17
toward Atami
Tōkaidō Main Line
Rapid Acty
Tōkaidō Main Line
     Local & Rapid Rabbit/Urban
JT15
toward Tokyo
TerminusOhayō Liner Shinjuku
JT14
toward Shinjuku
Home Liner Odawara
One-way operation
Shōnan-Shinjuku Line
     Special Rapid
JT14
toward Maebashi
Shōnan-Shinjuku Line
     Rapid (Tōkaidō & Takasaki Lines)
JT15
toward Maebashi
Odakyu
Terminus
Romancecar
toward Shinjuku or Kita-Senju
TerminusOdawara Line
Rapid Express
Express
toward Shinjuku
Odawara Line
Local
toward Shinjuku or Ayase
Hakone Tozan Line
Local
through to Odawara Line
Izuhakone Railway
TerminusDaiyūzan Line
toward Daiyūzan
Location
Odawara Station
Location within Kanagawa Prefecture
Odawara Station
Odawara Station (Japan)

Lines

This station is served by following lines.

Station layout

Odakyu platforms
Tokaido Shinkansen platforms

The JR companies have staffed Midori no Madoguchi ticket offices and seat reservation counters.

Izu-Hakone Railway platforms

1,2  Daiyuzan Line Sagami-Numata and Daiyuzan

JR East platforms

3 JT Tokaido Line for Atami, Numazu
JT Itō Line for Itō
4 JT Tokaido Line for Atami, Numazu
JT Itō Line for Itō
JT Tokaido Line
(Ueno-Tokyo Line)
for Kōzu, Hiratsuka, Yokohama, Tokyo, Ueno, Ōmiya
JU Utsunomiya Line for Utsunomiya and Kuroiso
JU Takasaki Line for Takasaki and Maebashi
5, 6 JT Tokaido Line
(Ueno-Tokyo Line)
for Kōzu, Hiratsuka, Yokohama, Tokyo, Ueno, Ōmiya
JU Utsunomiya Line for Utsunomiya and Kuroiso
JU Takasaki Line for Takasaki and Maebashi
JS Shōnan-Shinjuku Line for Yokohama, Shibuya, Shinjuku, Ikebukuro, Ōmiya and Takasaki (via JU Takasaki Line)

Odakyu and Hakone Tozan platforms

7  Hakone Tozan Line for Hakone-Yumoto (Change trains for Gora)
 Odakyu Odawara Line Terminating trains
8  Odakyu Odawara Line alighting
(platform 9 uses the same track)
9  Odakyu Odawara Line for Shin-Matsuda, Sagami-Ōno, Machida, Shinjuku
C Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line for Otemachi, Kita-Senju and Ayase (via Yoyogi-Uehara)
JL Joban Line (Local) for Matsudo, Kashiwa and Toride (via Ayase)
(platform 8 uses the same track)
10  Odakyu Odawara Line for Shin-Matsuda, Sagami-Ōno, Machida, Shinjuku
C Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line for Otemachi, Kita-Senju and Ayase (via Yoyogi-Uehara)
JL Joban Line (Local) for Matsudo, Kashiwa and Toride (via Ayase)
11  Hakone Tozan Line for Hakone-Yumoto (Change trains for Gora)

JR Central platforms

13  Tokaido Shinkansen for Nagoya, Kyoto, Shin-Osaka
Sanyo Shinkansen for Shin-Kobe, Okayama and Hiroshima
14  Tokaido Shinkansen for Shin-Yokohama, Shinagawa and Tokyo

Bus services

History

What is now the JR East station opened on 21 October 1920. [5] The Odakyu Electric Railway station opened on 1 April 1927.[6]

Accidents

On 9 April 2002 at 20:43, a person was hit and killed by a non-stop up train at the station after climbing down from the platform onto the shinkansen track.[7]

On 8 July 2007 at 20:46, a person was hit and killed by a non-stop train at the station after climbing down from the platform onto the shinkansen track.[7]

On 30 December 2008 at 15:54, a woman was hit and killed by a down non-stop train at the station after climbing down from the platform onto the shinkansen track.[7]

On 10 April 2009 at 21:20, a man was hit and killed by a down non-stop train at the station after climbing down from the platform onto the shinkansen track.[7]

See also

References

  1. Bus stop timetable No.3 (Hakone Tozan Bus)
  2. Bus stop timetable No.4 (Hakone Tozan Bus)
  3. Bus stop timetable No.5 (Z line, Izuhakone Bus)
  4. Bus stop timetable No.5 (J line, Izuhakone Bus)
  5. 日本国有鉄道停車場一覧 [JNR Station Directory]. Japan: Japanese National Railways. 1985. p. 20. ISBN 4-533-00503-9.
  6. Terada, Hirokazu (19 January 2013). データブック日本の私鉄 [Databook: Japan's Private Railways]. Japan: Neko Publishing. p. 237. ISBN 978-4-7770-1336-4.
  7. Sato, Yuichi (July 2011). 鉄道人身事故データブック2002-2009 [Railway Accident Data Book 2002-2009]. Japan: Tsugeshobo. p. 27. ISBN 978-4-8068-0620-2.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.