Jūsō Station

Jūsō
十三

West gate of Jūsō Station
Location Juso-higashi Nichome, Yodogawa, Osaka, Osaka
(大阪市淀川区十三東二丁目)
Japan
Coordinates 34°43′11.61″N 135°28′58.05″E / 34.7198917°N 135.4827917°E / 34.7198917; 135.4827917Coordinates: 34°43′11.61″N 135°28′58.05″E / 34.7198917°N 135.4827917°E / 34.7198917; 135.4827917
Operated by Hankyu Railway
Line(s)
Connections
  • Bus stop
Other information
Station code HK-03
History
Opened 1910

Jūsō Station (十三駅, Jūsō eki) is a railway station in Jūsō, Yodogawa-ku, Osaka, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Hankyu Railway. The six-track trunk line from Umeda Station diverges into the three double tracks of the Hankyu Kobe Line, the Hankyu Kyoto Line and the Hankyu Takarazuka Line at this station. The area surrounding the station is an extensive shopping and entertainment district.

Station layout

This station has two island platforms and two side platforms serving six tracks on the ground level, enabling to change trains from the Kobe Line for Umeda to the Takarazuka Line for Takarazuka and Minoo on one island platform between Tracks 2 and 3, and from the Takarazuka Line for Umeda to the Kyoto Line for Kyoto (Kawaramachi, Arashiyama) and Kita-Senri on another island platform between Tracks 4 and 5. The platforms are connected by two transfer concourses, one elevated and one underground. The east gate connects directly to platform 6 while the west gate connects directly to platform 1.[1] Several shops and restaurants serving transferring passengers are located inside the station.

There is a returning track in the south of the station between the Kobe Line and the Takarazuka Line. The track is used for the trains for the Kobe Line and the Takarazuka Line running to and from Shojaku Workshop for maintenance, and for seasonal trains running between Kobe or Takarazuka and Arashiyama via the Kobe Line and the Kyoto Line.

1  Kobe Line for Nishinomiya-kitaguchi, Kobe (Kobe-sannomiya, Shinkaichi) and Nigawa
2  Kobe Line for Umeda (Local trains stop at Nakatsu)
3  Takarazuka Line for Takarazuka, Ishibashi, Minoo, Kawanishi-noseguchi and the Nose Railway line (Nissei Chūō)
4  Takarazuka Line for Umeda (Semi-express trains and local trains stop at Nakatsu)
5  Kyoto Line for Takatsuki-shi, Kyoto (Kawaramachi), Arashiyama and Kita-Senri
6  Kyoto Line to Umeda (No trains stop at Nakatsu)

Tracks 1-2 (Kobe Line)

Tracks 3-4 (Takarazuka Line)

Tracks 5-6 (Kyoto Line)

Adjacent stations

« Service »
Kobe Main Line
Nakatsu (HK-02)   Local   Kanzakigawa (HK-04)
Umeda (HK-01)   Semi-Express (from Takarazuka for Umeda via the Imazu Line)   Tsukaguchi (HK-06)
Umeda (HK-01)   Express
Rapid Express
Commutation Express
  Tsukaguchi (HK-06)
Umeda (HK-01)   Limited Express   Nishinomiya-Kitaguchi (HK-08)
Umeda (HK-01)   Commutation Limited Express   Tsukaguchi (HK-06)
Awaji (Kyoto Line, HK-63)   Limited Express "Atago", "Togetsu"   Tsukaguchi (HK-06)
Takarazuka Main Line
Nakatsu (HK-02)   Local   Mikuni (HK-41)
Nakatsu (HK-02)   Semi-Express   Sone (HK-44)
Umeda (HK-01)   Express   Toyonaka (HK-46)
Umeda (HK-01)   Commutation Limited Express (from Kawanishi-Noseguchi to Umeda)   Toyonaka (HK-46)
Umeda (HK-01)   Limited Express (Nissei Express)   Ishibashi (HK-48)
Kyoto Main Line
Umeda (HK-01)   Local   Minamikata (HK-61)
Umeda (HK-01)   Semi-Express   Minamikata (HK-61)
Umeda (HK-01)   Rapid Service   Minamikata (HK-61)
Umeda (HK-01)   Rapid Express   Awaji (HK-63)
Umeda (HK-01)   Limited Express
Limited Express "Kyo-Train", "Sagano"
  Awaji (HK-63)
Umeda (HK-01)   Commutation Limited Express   Ibaraki-shi (HK-69)
Tsukaguchi (Kobe Line, HK-06)   Limited Express "Atago", "Togetsu"   Awaji (HK-63)

History

The station opened on March 10, 1910, as a stop on the Minoo-Arima Railway (today's Takarazuka Line). The Kobe Line was added in 1920. In 1921, the North Osaka Electric Railway began service between Juso and Senriyama; this line was acquired by the Keihan Electric Railway and was extended from Awaji Station to both Kyoto and central Osaka. Keihan and Hankyu merged in 1943, bringing all of Juso's lines under common ownership. While Keihan was again spun off as a separate company in 1949, Hankyu retained the Juso-Kyoto and Senriyama lines. Juso served as the terminal of the Kyoto Main Line until 1959, when the line was extended to Umeda.[2]

References

  1. "十三" (PDF). Hankyu Electric Railway. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  2. Sugiyama, Junichi (27 July 2013). "阪急梅田~十三間の3複線区間、京都本線だけ中津駅がない理由". Mynavi News. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
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