List_of_Toei_Subway_stations

List of Toei Subway stations

List of Toei Subway stations

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List of Toei Subway stations lists stations on the Toei Subway, including station location (ward or city), opening date, design (underground, at-grade, or elevated), and daily ridership.

Shinjuku is the busiest station on the Toei Subway, served by the Toei Shinjuku Line and Toei Ōedo Line. In particular, the Shinjuku Line's station at Shinjuku is the busiest, designed to allow through-services and cross-platform transfers from Keiō trains via the Keiō New Line.

Summary

There are a total of 99 “unique” stations (i.e., counting stations served by multiple lines only once) on the Toei Subway network, or 106 total stations if each station on each line counts as one station.[1] Almost all stations are located within the 23 special wards, with many located in areas not served by the complementary Tokyo Metro network.

The Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation reports ridership for each station by line—stations served by multiple lines have multiple ridership figures, one for each line serving the station. Passengers making in-system transfers between lines are counted in the ridership of each line used, at the station where the transfer takes place. As a result, summing the total daily ridership of each of the lines will yield a total that is greater than the actual daily ridership of the system as a whole.

For stations directly shared with other railways—e.g., Shirokanedai and other Toei Mita Line stations shared with the Namboku Line, the daily ridership only considers people using Toei Subway trains (or through-servicing trains owned by other railways operating as Toei Subway trains). For “interface” stations designed to allow for through-servicing and transfers with other railways without exiting the station's paid area (e.g., Oshiage on the Asakusa Line), the station “entries” and “exits” also consider cross-company passengers riding on through-servicing trains (as part of trackage rights agreements) or transferring to or from other railways' trains without passing through faregates.

Opening dates are given in standard Japanese date format (YYYY.MM.DD).

Stations

More information Station No., Station ...

References

  1. "交通局の概要 都営地下鉄". 東京都交通局. Retrieved 2012-06-06.
  2. "地下鉄関連情報 地下鉄関連情報". 東京都交通局. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-06-06.

See also


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