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Ginza Station
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Everything about Ginza Station totally explained

is a metro station in Chūō, Tokyo, Japan, serving the Ginza commercial district. It is the fourth-busiest Tokyo Metro station after Ikebukuro, Kita-senju and Ōtemachi.

History

Ginza Station opened in March 1934 as part of an extension of the Tokyo Underground Railway line (now the Ginza Line) from Asakusa. The Marunouchi Line began service to Ginza in December 1957, and the Hibiya Line platforms opened in February 1963.
   The Hibiya Line platform, which runs east-west between the north-south Ginza Line and Marunouchi Line platforms, was actually built before World War II as part of a planned TUR line to Shinjuku.

Lines

Station layout

  • Each line has an island platform serving two tracks.
        ・ ・ }} ・ ・ }} ・ ・ }} ・ ・ }} ・ ・ (Tōkyū Tōyoko Line) }} ・ ・ (Tōbu Isesaki Line) }}

    Adjacent stations


    Surroundings

    An underground passage connects with the following stations, allowing transfer on foot.
  • (Tokyo Metro Yūrakuchō Line)
  • (Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line, Toei Asakusa Line)
  • (Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line, Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line, Toei Mita Line)
  • (Tokyo Metro Yūrakuchō Line, Yamanote Line, Keihin-Tōhoku Line)

    Further Information

    Get more info on 'Ginza Station'.


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