Ōtemachi Station (Tokyo)

Otemachi Station
大手町駅

Layout of Otemachi Station
Location Chiyoda, Tokyo
Japan
Operated by Tokyo Metro, Toei Subway
Line(s)
Inside Otemachi station, March 2005

Otemachi Station (大手町駅 Otemachi-eki) is a subway station in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan, jointly operated by Tokyo Metro and Toei Subway. It is served by five lines, more than any other station on the Tokyo underground network, and is thus the biggest subway station in Tokyo.[1]

Otemachi is also within walking distance (either at street level or via underground passages) of Tokyo Station.

Lines

Station layout

1  Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line for Ginza, Shinjuku, and Ogikubo
2  Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line for Ochanomizu and Ikebukuro
3  Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line for Nishi-funabashi, Tsudanuma, and Toyo-Katsutadai
4  Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line for Takadanobaba, Nakano, Mitaka
5  Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line for Kasumigaseki, Yoyogi-uehara, and Karakida
6  Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line for Kita-senju, Ayase, Abiko, and Toride
7  Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line for Kudanshita, Shibuya, and Chuo-rinkan
8  Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line for Kinshicho, Oshiage, Tōbu-dōbutsu-kōen, Kuki, and Minami-kurihashi
9  Toei Mita Line for Meguro and Hiyoshi
10  Toei Mita Line for Sugamo and Nishi-takashimadaira

Adjacent stations

Exit D2
« Service »
Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line (M-18)
Tokyo (M-17) - Awajicho (M-19)
Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line (T-09)
Takebashi (T-08) - Nihombashi (T-10)
Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line (C-11)
Nijubashimae (C-10) - Shin-ochanomizu (C-12)
Kasumigaseki (C-08) Limited Express Romancecar Kita-senju (C-18)
Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line (Z-08)
Jimbocho (Z-07) - Mitsukoshimae (Z-09)
Toei Mita Line (I-09)
Hibiya (I-08) - Jimbōchō (I-10)

History

The station opened on July 20, 1956 as a station on the Marunouchi Line. The Tōzai Line platforms opened on October 1, 1966 as a terminus of the line from Nakano, becoming through platforms on September 14, 1967. The Chiyoda Line platforms opened on December 20, 1969 as the terminus of the line from Kita-Senju; they became through platforms on March 20, 1971. The Mita Line platforms opened on June 30, 1972, and the Hanzōmon Line platforms on January 26, 1989.[2]

References

  1. "Otemachi". Tokyo-Tokyo.com. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  2. "Tokyo Subway". Robert Schwandl. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
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Coordinates: 35°41′05″N 139°45′57″E / 35.684699°N 139.765964°E / 35.684699; 139.765964

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