Shimo-takaido Station

Railway and tram station in Tokyo, Japan
  • Keio Corporation
  • Tōkyū Railways
Line(s)
Connections
  • Bus interchange Bus stop
Other informationStation codeKO07 (Keiō Line)
SG10 (Tōkyū Setagaya Line)HistoryOpened15 April 1913; 111 years ago (15 April 1913)Previous namesNichidai-mae (1938-1944, Keio)Services
Preceding station Following station
Sakurajōsui
KO08
Keiō Line
Rapid
Local
Meidaimae
KO06
towards Shinjuku
Preceding station Tōkyū Railways Following station
Terminus Setagaya Line Matsubara
SG09
towards Sangen-jaya
Location
Shimo-takaido Station is located in Special wards of Tokyo
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station
Location within Special wards of Tokyo
Show map of Special wards of Tokyo
Shimo-takaido Station is located in Tokyo Bay and Bōsō Peninsula
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station (Tokyo Bay and Bōsō Peninsula)
Show map of Tokyo Bay and Bōsō Peninsula
Shimo-takaido Station is located in Tokyo
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station (Tokyo)
Show map of Tokyo
Shimo-takaido Station is located in Japan
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station
Shimo-takaido Station (Japan)
Show map of Japan

Shimo-takaido Station (下高井戸駅, Shimo-takaido-eki) is a railway station on the Keiō Line and Tōkyū Setagaya Line in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the private railway operators Keio Corporation and Tokyu Corporation.[1]

Lines

Shimo-takaido Station is served by the Keiō Line from Shinjuku and the Tokyu Setagaya Line.

Station layout

Keio platforms

1 KO Keiō Line for Chōfu and Keiō-Hachiōji
KO Keiō Sagamihara Line for Hashimoto (via Chōfu)
KO Keiō Takao Line for Takaosanguchi (via Kitano)
2 KO Keiō Line for Meidaimae, Sasazuka, and Shinjuku
KO Keiō New Line for Shinjuku
S Toei Shinjuku Line for Moto-Yawata

Tokyu platforms

The Tokyu station has two tracks serving two bay platforms.

1 SG Tokyu Setagaya Line for Yamashita, Kamimachi, and Sangen-jaya
2 SG Tokyu Setagaya Line Disembarking only

History

The Keio Line station opened on 15 April 1913.[2] The Tokyu station opened on 1 May 1925.[2]

References

  1. ^ Keio Railway Map
  2. ^ a b Terada, Hirokazu (19 January 2013). データブック日本の私鉄 [Databook: Japan's Private Railways]. Japan: Neko Publishing. pp. 228–232. ISBN 978-4-7770-1336-4.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shimo-Takaido Station.
  • Shimo-takaido Station information (Keio) (in Japanese)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Stations of the Keiō Line
  • v
  • t
  • e
Stations of the Tōkyū Setagaya Line
SG
  • v
  • t
  • e
Districts
Setagaya Area
  • Geba
  • Ikejiri (1, 2, 3-chome, 4-chome [1-ban to 32-ban])
  • Kamiuma
  • Komazawa (1, 2-chōme)
  • Kyōdō
  • Mishuku
  • Miyasaka
  • Nozawa
  • Sakura
  • Sakuragaoka
  • Sangenjaya
  • Setagaya
  • Taishidō
  • Tsurumaki
  • Wakabayashi
Kitazawa Area
  • Akatsutsumi
  • Daita
  • Daizawa
  • Gōtokuji
  • Hanegi
  • Ikejiri (4-chome [33-ban to 39-ban])
  • Kitazawa
  • Matsubara
  • Ōhara
  • Sakurajōsui
  • Umegaoka
Tamagawa Area
  • Fukazawa
  • Higashitamagawa
  • Kaminoge
  • Kamiyōga
  • Komazawa (3, 4-chōme)
  • Komazawakōen
  • Nakamachi
  • Noge
  • Okusawa
  • Oyamadai
  • Sakurashinmachi
  • Seta
  • Shinmachi
  • Tamadzutsumi
  • Tamagawa
  • Tamagawadai
  • Tamagawaden'enchōfu
  • Todoroki
  • Yōga
Kinuta Area
  • Chitosedai
  • Funabashi
  • Kamata
  • Kinuta
  • Kinutakōen
  • Kitami
  • Okamoto
  • Ōkura
  • Seijō
  • Soshigaya
  • Unane
Karasuyama Area
Location of Setagaya in Tokyo
Education
Major stations

35°39′58″N 139°38′29″E / 35.66611°N 139.64139°E / 35.66611; 139.64139