Umeda Station 梅田駅 | |
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General information | |
Location | Kita Ward, Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture Japan |
Operated by | |
Connections | ![]() |
Umeda Station (梅田駅, Umeda-eki) is a railway station in Kita-ku in the northern commercial center of Osaka, Japan. It is the busiest station in western Japan, serving 2,343,727 passengers daily in 2005.
Umeda Station is served by the following railways:
The freight terminal of Japan Freight Railway Company (JR Freight) (Umeda Freight Branch of Tōkaidō Main Line), closed in 2013, was also called Umeda.
The nearby stations Ōsaka (JR West), Kitashinchi (JR West Tōzai Line), Nishi-Umeda (Osaka Subway Yotsubashi Line, Y11) and Higashi-Umeda (Osaka Subway Tanimachi Line, T20) are within walking distance and connected by a large complex of underground malls.
Osaka-Umeda Station 大阪梅田駅 | |
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Hanshin Railway station | |
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General information | |
Location | Umeda Sanchōme, Kita-ku, Osaka, Osaka Prefecture Japan |
Coordinates | 34°42′3.49″N135°29′47.2″E / 34.7009694°N 135.496444°E |
Operated by | Hanshin Electric Railway |
Line(s) | Hanshin Main Line |
Other information | |
Station code | HS 01 |
History | |
Opened | 1906 |
Location | |
The underground Umeda terminal of Hanshin Electric Railway (officially Osaka-Umeda Station, but commonly called Hanshin Osaka-Umeda Station) is located south of Ōsaka Station, next to underground of Hanshin Department Store. The Hanshin station first opened on December 21, 1906 as a ground level station and moved to the present underground location on March 21, 1939.
There are five bay platforms and four tracks on the second basement. There are east ticket gates on the second basement and center ticket gates and west ticket gates on the first basement.
1 | (Not used during non-rush hour) ■■limited express trains (for Kobe and Himeji) |
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2 | ■■limited express trains (for Kobe and Himeji) |
3 | ■express trains ■morning express trains ■a limited express train departing for Himeji at 6:25 (weekdays) |
4 | ■local trains |
« | Service | » | ||
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Main Line (HS 01) | ||||
Terminus | Local (普通, every day) | Fukushima (HS 02) | ||
Terminus | Morning Express(区間急行, on weekdays) | Fukushima (HS 02) | ||
Terminus | Express (急行, every day) | Noda (HS 03) | ||
Terminus | Limited Express (直通特急, 特急, every day) | Amagasaki (HS 09) | ||
Terminus | Morning Limited Express terminating at Umeda (区間特急, on weekdays) | Noda (HS 03) |
Osaka-umeda Station 大阪梅田駅 | |
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Hankyu Railway station | |
Platforms of Hankyu Umeda Station | |
General information | |
Location | 1-2, Shibata Itchōme, Kita-ku, Osaka, Osaka Prefecture Japan |
Coordinates | 34°42′19.85″N135°29′53.92″E / 34.7055139°N 135.4983111°E |
Operated by | Hankyu Corporation |
Line(s) | |
Other information | |
Station code | HK-01 |
History | |
Opened | 1910 |
The Umeda terminal of Hankyu Railway (officially Osaka-umeda Station, but commonly called Hankyu Osaka-umeda Station) is located northeast of Ōsaka Station.
The station first opened on March 10, 1910, as a ground-level station. The original location of the station was southeast of Ōsaka Station and the Hankyu (then Minoo-Arima Electric Tramway) tracks crossed the Tōkaidō Main Line by an overpass. The station was elevated on July 5, 1926.
When Osaka Station was elevated in 1934, Hankyu's elevated tracks were forced to be removed and new Umeda Station was built to handle new ground-level tracks. The switching of tracks were carried out on June 1, 1934. This station facility was used until November 28, 1971, when the move of station to the present location was completed. This move was because of a sharp increase of transit, which forced Hankyu to operate 8-car trains. The existence of JNR tracks on the northern end of the 1934 station prevented the expansion of the station so that the station could not handle long trains.
After the opening of the current huge elevated station, spaces around and beneath the station, as well as the site of former station, were extensively redeveloped. One of the symbols of the commercial complex surrounding the station is the BIG MAN video screen above the Kinokuniya bookshop, common and necessary places to meet in this bustling railway station.
The Hankyu Department Store, built next to the station in 1929, was a pioneer of the successful business model of department stores run by urban railway companies in Japan. The store is still in business at the original location even after the move of the station (as of 2007, the reconstruction of the store building is in progress).
Station numbering was introduced to all Hankyu stations on 21 December 2013 with this station being designated as station number HK-01. [1]
There are ten bay platforms serving nine tracks on the third floor. There are south ticket gates on the third floor and center ticket gates and on Chayamachi ticket gates on the second floor.
1 | ■limited express trains ■local trains |
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2 | ■local trains (non rush-hour) ■commuter limited express trains (in the morning and the evening on weekdays) ■rapid express trains (in the morning and the evening) |
3 | ■semi-express trains ■rapid services (in the evening on weekdays) ■local trains (partly in the morning on weekdays) ■rapid limited express A trains "Kyo-Train" (on the weekend and holidays) ■rapid limited express trains "Kyo-Train Garaku" (on the weekend and holidays) |
4 | ■express trains (every day) ■local trains (weekday morning rush hours only) ■limited express trains for Nissei-Chuo (weekday evening rush hours only) |
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5 | ■local trains (every day) ■express trains (weekday rush hours only) |
6 | ■local trains (weekday rush hours only) |
7 | ■local trains |
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8 | ■limited express trains (non-rush hour) ■express trains (in the morning on weekdays) ■commuter express trains (from the evening until night on weekdays) ■local trains (every early morning and every night) |
9 | ■limited express trains ■commuter limited express trains ■rapid express trains ■express trains ■local trains (every early morning and every night) |
« | Service | » | ||
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Kobe Main Line | ||||
Terminus | Local | Nakatsu (HK-02) | ||
Terminus | Semi-Express (terminating only) | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Express Rapid Express Commuter Express | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Limited Express Commuter Limited Express | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Takarazuka Main Line | ||||
Terminus | Local | Nakatsu (HK-02) | ||
Terminus | Semi-Express (terminating only) | Nakatsu (HK-02) | ||
Terminus | Express | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Commuter Limited Express (terminating only) | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Limited (Nissei) Express | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Kyoto Main Line | ||||
Terminus | Local | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Semi-Express | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Rapid Service | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Rapid Express | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Limited Express Commuter Limited Express Rapid Limited Express "Kyo-Train Garaku", "Sagano" | Jūsō (HK-03) | ||
Terminus | Rapid Limited Express A "Kyo-Train" | Awaji (HK-63) |
M 16 Umeda Station 梅田駅 | |||||||||||
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![]() Station mezzanine | |||||||||||
General information | |||||||||||
Location | 8-6, Kakudachō, Kita-ku, Osaka, Osaka Prefecture Japan | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 34°42′10.22″N135°29′51.89″E / 34.7028389°N 135.4977472°E | ||||||||||
Operated by | ![]() | ||||||||||
Line(s) | ![]() | ||||||||||
Platforms | 1 island platform | ||||||||||
Tracks | 2 | ||||||||||
Other information | |||||||||||
Station code | M 16 | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | May 20, 1933 (temporary station) October 6, 1935 (permanent station) | ||||||||||
Closed | October 5, 1935 (temporary station) | ||||||||||
Rebuilt | 1989 | ||||||||||
Passengers | |||||||||||
FY2016 | 431,007 daily [2] | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Umeda is the transferring point of three lines of the metro: the Midōsuji Line, the Tanimachi Line and the Yotsubashi Line. Among them, only the Midōsuji Line station is named Umeda, with the station number M16. The Tanimachi Line station is Higashi-Umeda (meaning "East Umeda") and the Yotsubashi Line station is Nishi-Umeda (meaning "West Umeda"). These three stations are connected with each other by underground walkways. Regular tickets of the subway, Surutto Kansai cards and IC cards are valid until the passenger gets out the ticket barrier of the station. The transfer between the three Umeda stations is an exception of this principle; the fare can be calculated as one travel as if the passengers do not exit the station provided the passengers transfer within 30 minutes. [3]
Umeda Station on the Midōsuji Line started its operation on May 20, 1933, as a temporary station. The station was moved to the present location on October 6, 1935. Originally the station with an island platform and two tracks was built amid one tunnel, but on November 5, 1989, the station was expanded to a tunnel that existed next to the station (built for Tanimachi Line but due to change of plan remained unused for decades). The two tunnels are separated by a wall with some passages.
G | Street Level | Exit/Entrance, connection to Hankyu lines |
B1F | Mezzanine | Ticket gates, ticket/ICOCA/PiTaPa machines, station agent, shopping arcade, restrooms Passageways to Yotsubashi Line, Tanimachi Line, and Hanshin Main Line platforms |
B2F Platform level | Platform 1 | ![]() |
Half of island platform, doors will open on the right | ||
Half of island platform, doors will open on the right | ||
Platform 2 | ← ![]() (Through service to Senri-Chūō on the Kitakyu Namboku Line) |
Umeda Freight Terminal 梅田 | |
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JR Freight terminal (closed) | |
Umeda Freight Terminal (12 June 2011) | |
General information | |
Location | 2-25, Ōfukachō, Kita-ku, Osaka, Osaka Prefecture Japan |
Coordinates | 34°42′13.38″N135°29′35.63″E / 34.7037167°N 135.4932306°E |
Operated by | JR Freight |
Line(s) | Tokaido Main Line Freight Branch (Umeda Freight Line) |
History | |
Opened | 1928 |
Closed | 2013 |
Umeda Freight Terminal of Japan Freight Railway Company (JR Freight) was a freight terminal on the Umeda Branchline (unofficial name) of the Tōkaidō Main Line owned by West Japan Railway Company (JR West). The station was built to separate freight services from Ōsaka Station and began operation on December 1, 1928. [4] The yard of the terminal was located to the north, literally in the backyard, of the Ōsaka Station.
The freight terminal ceased to handle freight on March 16, 2013 and its function was succeeded by newly established Suita Freight Terminal and other nearby yards. [5] The station was officially closed on March 31, 2013. [6] The site, commonly called Ōsaka Station North Area ( ja:大阪駅北地区 , Ōsaka-eki Kita-chiku) or Ume-kita (うめきた), will be redeveloped. [7]
The JR West Limited Express trains still use the freight line to transfer from the Osaka Loop Line to the JR Kyoto Line bypassing Ōsaka Station. No passenger trains have stopped at Umeda Station of JR Freight.
« | Service | » | ||
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JR West Tōkaidō Line Branch (Umeda Freight Line) | ||||
Shin-Ōsaka | - | Fukushima |
Ōsaka Station is a major railway station in the Umeda district of Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan, operated by West Japan Railway Company. It forms as one of the city's main railway terminals to the north, the other being Shin-Ōsaka.
Jūsō Station 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.
Umeda is a major commercial, business, shopping and entertainment district in Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan, and the city's main northern railway terminus. The district's name means "plum field".
Namba Station is a name shared by two railway stations in the Namba district of Chūō-ku, Osaka, Japan. One is owned by Nankai Electric Railway, while the other is by the Osaka Metro. The names of both stations are written in hiragana on signage within the stations, because the kanji "難波" can be also read "Naniwa". However, the name of both stations officially employs kanji, printed on train tickets.
Tennōji Station is a railway station on the JR West Osaka Loop Line, Hanwa Line, Yamatoji Line, Osaka Metro Midōsuji Line, and Tanimachi Line, located in Tennōji-ku and Abeno-ku, Osaka, Japan, and Tennōji-ekimae Station is a railway station on the tram Hankai Uemachi Line in Abeno-ku, Osaka, Japan. They are also connected to Ōsaka Abenobashi Station on the Kintetsu Minami Osaka Line. It forms as one of Osaka's main railway terminals to the south for lines operated by West Japan Railway Company.
Nishi-Umeda Station is the terminus railway station of the Osaka Metro Yotsubashi Line in Umeda, Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan, close to Herbis OSAKA and Herbis ENT operated by Hanshin Electric Railway Co., Ltd. and the two Hilton Plazas.
Higashi-Umeda Station is a railway station on the Osaka Metro Tanimachi Line in Umeda, Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan. The station is located along Whity Umeda.
Ōsaka-Uehommachi Station is a railway station in Tennoji-ku, Osaka, Japan, served by the Kintetsu Railway's Osaka, Nara, and Namba Lines. Trains on the Nara Line arrive at and depart from an underground platform. The station is connected to Tanimachi Kyuchome Station on the Tanimachi Line (T25) and the Sennichimae Line (S18) of the Osaka Metro. It has been the Kintetsu Railway's terminus since the Nara Line was opened in 1914.
Kita is one of 24 wards of Osaka in Japan.
Hanshin Department Store (阪神百貨店, Hanshin Hyakkaten) is a Japanese department store chain owned by Hankyu Hanshin Department Stores, Incorporated (株式会社阪急阪神百貨店, Kabushiki-gaisha Hankyū Hanshin Hyakkaten), a subsidiary of H2O Retailing Corporation.
The Hankyu Senri Line is a railway line in Osaka Prefecture, Japan, operated by Hankyu Railway. It commenced operation in 1921 and was completed on March 1, 1967. Through trains operate to and from the Hankyu Kyoto Line and the Osaka Municipal Subway Sakaisuji Line.
Kitashinchi Station is a railway station on the West Japan Railway JR Tōzai Line in Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan. The station is located in the Kitashinchi dining and entertainment district of Osaka, and at 23.95 metres (78.6 ft) below sea level, it is the deepest station in the JR West system.
Nakatsu Station is a railway station in Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan on the Hankyu Kobe Line and the Hankyu Takarazuka Line, and is operated by Hankyu Railway. While situated relatively close to the station of the same name on the Midosuji Line, there are no free transfers between the two stations. In past, there was a car stop on the Hanshin Railway Kita-Osaka Line in the west side of this station on the Hankyu Railway lines.
Mikage Station is a passenger railway station located in Higashinada-ku, Kobe, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by the private transportation company Hanshin Electric Railway.
Watanabebashi Station (渡辺橋駅) is a railway station on the Keihan Electric Railway Nakanoshima Line in Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan, and opened on October 19, 2008.
Shukugawa Station is a passenger railway station located in the Aioichō neighborhood of the city of Nishinomiya, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by the private transportation company Hankyu Railway.
Umeda Arts Theater is a Japanese theater located at Chayamachi Applause in Chayamachi, Kita-ku, Osaka, operated by Umeda Arts Theater Co., Ltd. It opened in 1992.
The Osaka Metro Yotsubashi Line is an underground rapid transit line in Osaka, Japan, operated by Osaka Metro. The line connects Umeda, Hommachi, Yotsubashi, Namba, Daikokuchō and Suminoe, and runs parallel to the Midōsuji Line from Daikokuchō to Nishi-Umeda. Its official name is Rapid Electric Tramway Line No. 3 (高速電気軌道第3号線), while the Osaka Municipal Transportation Bureau refers to it as Osaka City Rapid Railway Line No. 3 (大阪市高速鉄道第3号線), and in Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport publications, it is written as Line No. 3 . Station numbers are indicated by the letter Y.
The Osaka Metro Tanimachi Line is a rapid transit line of Osaka Metro, running from Dainichi Station in Moriguchi to Yaominami Station in Yao through Osaka. Its official name is Rapid Electric Tramway Line No. 2 (高速電気軌道第2号線), while the Osaka Municipal Transportation Bureau refers to it as Osaka City Rapid Railway Line No. 2 (大阪市高速鉄道第2号線), and in MLIT publications, it is written as Line No. 2 . On line maps, stations on the Tanimachi Line are indicated with the letter T.
The Naniwasuji Line is the tentative name for an underground heavy rail line under construction, which will run north-south through Osaka City, primarily under the avenue Naniwasuji. It has long been pursued by West Japan Railway Company and Nankai Railway in order to connect the Yamatoji Line and Nankai Main Line with Shin-Osaka Station, greatly enhancing both companies' connections to Kansai Airport and Wakayama Prefecture. As of 18 March 2023, the tracks through the northern terminus at Osaka Station and adjoining platforms were opened for Haruka and Kuroshio services as well as ordinary trains on the Osaka Higashi Line.