Takadanobaba Station
Railway and metro station in Tokyo, Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Takadanobaba Station (高田馬場駅, Takadanobaba-eki) is a railway station in the Takadanobaba area of Tokyo's Shinjuku ward, situated between the commercial districts of Ikebukuro and Shinjuku.
JY15 SS02 T03 Takadanobaba Station 高田馬場駅 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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![]() Waseda entrance, September 2024 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
General information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Location | Shinjuku, Tokyo Japan | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Opened | 15 September 1910 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The station is a major commuting hub, linking the Seibu Shinjuku Line, Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line and Yamanote Line. It also serves the surrounding Takadanobaba area, known as a popular student district, and is linked by bus to nearby Waseda University. It is the busiest station on the Seibu Shinjuku Line, and the second-busiest in the Seibu Railway network after Ikebukuro Station. It is the ninth-busiest station in the Tokyo Metro network and the eleventh-busiest station in the JR East network.
Lines
Takadanobaba Station is served by the following lines:
Station layout
Summarize
Perspective
Platforms
Yamanote and Seibu Shinjuku Line
The Yamanote Line island platform and two Seibu Shinjuku Line platforms are located parallel to each other, and are connected by an overhead transfer concourse, as well as transfer gates at ground level by the main Waseda exit.
1 | JY Yamanote Line (Clockwise) | for Ikebukuro, Ueno, and Tokyo |
2 | JY Yamanote Line (Anti-clockwise) | for Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Shinagawa |
3 | ![]() |
for Tanashi, Tokorozawa, Haijima, and Hon-Kawagoe |
4 | ![]() |
Spare arrival platform used for Seibu-Shinjuku bound trains on weekday mornings only |
5 | ![]() |
for Seibu-Shinjuku |
The theme music from Astro Boy is played prior to each train departure from the Yamanote Line platform, a homage to the series being set in the Takadanobaba area. Chest-high platform edge doors were brought into use on the Yamanote Line platform on 21 December 2013.[1]
The Yamanote Freight Line tracks (used by Saikyo Line and Shonan-Shinjuku Line services) pass Takadanobaba running between the Yamanote Line and Seibu Shinjuku Line tracks.
- Yamanote line platforms 1 and 2
- Seibu platforms 3 and 4
- Seibu platform 5
Tozai Line
1 | T Tozai Line | for Ōtemachi, Tōyōchō, Nishi-Funabashi JB Chuo-Sobu Line for Tsudanuma TR Toyo Rapid Railway Line for Tōyō-Katsutadai |
2 | T Tozai Line | for Nakano JB Chuo-Sobu Line for Mitaka |
- Tozai Line platform 1
- Tozai Line platform 2
History
The Yamanote Line station opened on 15 September 1910.[2]
Seibu Railway opened a temporary station perpendicular to the Yamanote Line in April 1927, followed by a permanent station parallel to the Yamanote Line in April 1928. The original station buildings were burned to the ground during the bombing of Tokyo in April 1945. Takadanobaba was the Tokyo terminal of the Seibu Railway Murayama Line (now Seibu Shinjuku Line) until it was extended to Seibu-Shinjuku Station in 1952.
The Tozai Line began service to Takadanobaba in December 1964 under the auspices of the Teito Rapid Transit Authority. Takadanobaba was the western terminus of the Tozai Line until the connection to Nakano Station and the Chuo Main Line opened in March 1966.
The station facilities of the Tozai Line were inherited by Tokyo Metro after the privatization of the Teito Rapid Transit Authority (TRTA) in 2004.[3]
Station numbering was introduced on all Seibu Railway lines during fiscal 2012, with Takadanobaba being assigned station number SS02.[4] Numbering was expanded to the JR East platforms in 2016 with the Yamanote Line station being assigned station number JY15.[5][6]

Surrounding area
The surrounding area of Takadanobaba is often referred to as "Baba". It lacks the history of nearby Waseda and Mejiro, often conjuring up images of a student spot with its many cheap bars and izakaya serving the needs of students at nearby Waseda and Gakushuin universities.
The symbol of Takadanobaba is the monolithic and appropriately named Big Box building next to the station. Big Box houses a sports gym, swimming pool, Uniqlo clothing store, cafe, bowling alley, arcade, and a fast food restaurant. It has recently been reopened after an extensive renovation.
Passenger statistics
Daily average passenger figures for each operator are as shown below.
- Note that JR East figures account for boarding passengers only.[16]
See also
References
External links
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