ÅŒmori Station (Tokyo)

Keihin - Tohoku Line

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The Omori Station (Japanese大 森 駅, Omori -eki ) is located in Ōta located in Tokyo, Japan.

History

The station was opened on 12 June 1876 as a station for the passenger of the Japanese National Railways. To April 1, 1898 also the goods operations began at the station. On December 20, 1914 for the first time held a train of Keihin - line ( predecessor of today's line Keihin - Tohoku Line) at the train station and took on its commercial operation. As of October 1 in 1971 after over 70 years of freight operation was discontinued. Between July 1982 and July 1984, the station was renovated and built a new station building and opened. Like all stations of the Japanese National Railways was transferred on April 1, 1989 to the privatized JR East also Omori Station. Since November 18, 2001 can be used as an electronic ticket in the station also the Suica. One last major rebuild was the station between 2003 and 2007 as part of construction work on accessibility with the installation of escalators and lifts.

Platforms and tracks

The station was built in the most commonly encountered construction of a railway station as a transit station and has a single central platform which is served by the Keihin - Tohoku Line.

Lines

The train station is only served by the Keihin - Tohoku Line of JR East. The paint used in the table below corresponds to the color code assigned by the Company of the line.

Use

In 2008, the station from an average of 93 057 passengers was used on the day, so that the rank 40 took over 900 on the ranking of the busiest train stations of JR East in 2008.

Footnotes and References

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