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  2. List of Tokyo Metro stations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tokyo_Metro_stations

    Shibuya is the fourth busiest station on the Tokyo Metro network and a major interchange with Tōkyū, Keiō, and JR East trains. List of Tokyo Metro stations lists stations on the Tokyo Metro, including lines serving the station, station location (ward or city), opening date, design (underground, at-grade, or elevated), and daily ridership.

  3. Transport in Greater Tokyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Greater_Tokyo

    Public transport within Greater Tokyo is dominated by the world's most extensive urban rail network (as of May 2014, the article Tokyo rail list lists 158 lines, 48 operators, 4,714.5 km of operational track and 2,210 stations [although stations are recounted for each operator]) of suburban trains and subways run by a variety of operators, with ...

  4. Tokyo Metro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Metro

    The Tokyo Metro (Japanese: 東京メトロ, Tōkyō Metoro) is a major rapid transit system in Tokyo, Japan, operated by the Tokyo Metro Co. With an average daily ridership of 6.52 million passengers (as of 2023), the Tokyo Metro is the larger of the two subway operators in the city; the other being the Toei Subway, with 2.85 million average daily rides.

  5. Tokyo subway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_subway

    The systems represent the metro network differently in station, train, and customer information diagrams. For example, the Toei map represents the Toei Ōedo Line as a circle in the centre, whereas the Tokyo Metro's map saves the central ring line for the Marunouchi Line and the JR Yamanote Line. As well, each system's lines are generally ...

  6. List of Toei Subway stations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Toei_Subway_stations

    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 ...

  7. Tokyo Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Station

    Tokyo's mainline railway network in 1904, a decade before the opening of Tokyo Station; the station was constructed as an integrated terminus for these lines. In 1889, a Tokyo municipal committee drew up plans for an elevated railway line connecting the Tōkaidō Main Line terminal at Shinbashi to the Nippon Railway (now Tōhoku Main Line ...

  8. Keiyō Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keiyō_Line

    Map of the Keiyō Line and surrounding JR lines Keiyō Line "Local" (各駅停車 kakueki-teisha)trains stop at all stations between Tokyo and Soga except Nishi-Funabashi. Musashino Line ''Local'' through trains stop at all stations between Tokyo and Nishi-Funabashi before continuing to the Musashino Line. Some trains originate at ...

  9. Toei Asakusa Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toei_Asakusa_Line

    The Toei Asakusa Line (都営地下鉄浅草線, Toei Chikatetsu Asakusa-sen) is a subway line in Tokyo, Japan, operated by the municipal subway operator Toei Subway.The line runs between Nishi-magome in Ōta and Oshiage in Sumida.