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Kintetsu-Nagoya Station (近鉄名古屋駅, Kintetsu Nagoya-eki) is a terminal station on the Kintetsu Nagoya Line. It is connected to Nagoya Station ( JR Central , Aonami Line , and Nagoya City Subway ) and Meitetsu Nagoya Station ( Nagoya Railroad ).
English: Rail tracks map of Kintetsu Kintetsu Nagoya Station (with Komeno Station, Komeno Depot) in Nakamura-ku, Nagoya, Aichi Pref., Japan. Reference material: Ryozo KAWASHIMA, "Zenkoku Tetsudo Jijyo Daikenkyu - Nagoya Toshimbu and Mie", ISBN 978-4-7942-0700-5 , 168p., Soshisha, 1996.
The Nagoya Line (名古屋線, Nagoya-sen) is a railway line owned and operated by the Kintetsu Railway, a Japanese private railway company, connecting Nagoya and Ise Nakagawa Station in Matsusaka, Mie Prefecture via Kuwana, Yokkaichi, Suzuka, Tsu municipalities along the Ise Bay. The official starting-point of the line is Ise-Nakagawa and the ...
This is a route-map template for the Nagoya Line (Kintetsu), a private commuter rail line in Japan.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
The station is adjacent to Meitetsu Nagoya Station, the terminal of Meitetsu, and Kintetsu Nagoya Station, the terminal of the Kintetsu Nagoya Line. The twin-towered station rises over 50 storeys, and is the tallest railway-station building in the world. [2]
The station opened on August 12, 1941 and was known as Shin-Nagoya Station (新名古屋駅, Shin-Nagoya-eki) until it was renamed in early 2005, just prior to the opening of Chubu Centrair International Airport.
Kintetsu Railway Co., Ltd. (近畿日本鉄道株式会社, Kinki-nippon Tetsudō Kabushiki-gaisha), referred to as Kintetsu (近鉄) and officially Kinki-Nippon Railway, is a Japanese passenger railway company, managing infrastructure and operating passenger train service.
The Nagoya Municipal Subway (名古屋市営地下鉄, Nagoya Shiei Chikatetsu), also referred to as simply the Nagoya Subway, [3] is a rapid transit system serving Nagoya, the capital of Aichi Prefecture in Japan. It consists of six lines that cover 93.3 kilometers (58.0 mi) of route and serve 87 stations. [1]