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The station opened on December 24, 1905, as a station on the Keihin Electric Railway. It closed on June 22, 1929, but reopened as Aokibashi Station (青木橋駅) on March 29, 1930. Six days later, it was renamed Keihin Kanagawa Station (京浜神奈川駅). The station was renamed Kanagawa Station on April 20, 1956.
Keikyū Higashi-kanagawa Station (京急東神奈川駅, Keikyū Higashi-kanagawa-eki) is a passenger railway station located in Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, operated by the private railway company Keikyū. The station is approximately 50 m from Higashi-Kanagawa Station on the Keihin-Tohoku Line and Yokohama Line.
Kanagawa, Japan 35°26′56.95″N 139°38′10.62″E / 35.4491528°N 139.6362833°E / 35.4491528; 139.6362833 Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Cultural History ( 神奈川県立歴史博物館 , Kanagawa Kenritsu Rekishi Hakubutsukan ) also known as the Yokohama Museum of Cultural History is a history museum in Naka-ku , Yokohama ...
quick silver, Keio University Conference Hall "Raiousha" (Kanagawa, Japan) quick silver, "ImPulsTanz: Vienna International Dance Festival," Akademietheater (Vienna, Austria), STUDIO 5 and Culture Techno (New York/USA/Niigata, Japan/Portugal) DEAD1, choreography, "Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival" (London, England) 2009
Station Japanese Distance (km) Rapid Transfers Location Between stations Total JH 13: Higashi-Kanagawa: 東神奈川 - 0.0 JK Keihin-Tohoku Line (through to Yokohama and Ōfuna via the JK Negishi Line) KK Keikyu Main Line (Keikyū Higashi-kanagawa) Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama: Kanagawa: JH 14: Ōguchi: 大口 2.2 2.2 | JH 15: Kikuna: 菊名 2.6 4.8 ...
The station has two ground-level island platforms serving four tracks, connected to the station building by a footbridge. Although the Tōkaidō Main Line and Yokosuka Line tracks run parallel to the station, neither line stops at Higashi-Kanagawa. The station has a Midori no Madoguchi staffed ticket office.
Kanagawa-juku was established parallel to Kanagawa Port and it flourished as part of the route that goods traveled on the way to Sagami Province.Though the area had officially been designated as the place for the port to be opened, it was actually opened on the opposite shore in what is now Naka-ku, Yokohama.
It was relocated to its present address and rebuilt as an elevated station in 1969. A new station building and bus terminal were completed on December 1, 1982, and the station renamed to its present name at that time. Keikyū introduced station numbering to its stations on 21 October 2010; Nōkendai Station was assigned station number KK48. [1]