Hibarigaoka Station (Tokyo)
Encyclopedia
is a railway station in Nishitōkyō, Tokyo, Japan
. Hibarigaoka is the 12th station from Ikebukuro Station
on the Seibu Ikebukuro Line
.
The typical off-peak service is:
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...
. Hibarigaoka is the 12th station from Ikebukuro Station
Ikebukuro Station
is a railway station located in the Ikebukuro district of Toshima, Tokyo, Japan. With 2.71 million passengers on an average daily in 2007, it is the second-busiest train station in the world , and the busiest station in the Tobu, Seibu and Tokyo Metro networks. It primarily serves commuters from...
on the Seibu Ikebukuro Line
Seibu Ikebukuro Line
The is a commuter railway line of the Japanese private railway operator Seibu Railway. It originates at Ikebukuro Station, a large railway junction in north-western Tokyo, extending to northwest suburbs as far as Tokorozawa, Saitama, and nominally terminates at Agano Station.The Seibu Chichibu...
.
History
The station opened on June 11, 1924 as Tanashimachi Station. It gained its current name on May 1, 1959.Services
Trains run between 0450 and 0105 weekdays, and 0450 and 0045 weekends.The typical off-peak service is:
- 7 trains an hour to Ikebukuro, of which:
- 3 are Rapid Expresses or Expresses (Shakujii-Kōen and Ikebukuro)
- 4 are Semi-Expresses (all stations to Shakujii-Kōen, Nerima, Ikebukuro)
- 4 trains an hour to Shin-Kiba on the Tokyo Metro Yūrakuchō LineTokyo Metro Yurakucho LineThe is a subway line owned and operated by Tokyo Metro. The line connects Wakōshi Station in Wakō, Saitama and Shin-Kiba Station in Kōtō, Tokyo. On maps, diagrams and signboards, the line is shown using the color "gold" , and its stations are given numbers using the letter Y.The proper name as...
, of which:- 2 are Semi-Expresses on Seibu (all stations to Shakujii-Kōen, Nerima, then all stations)
- 2 are Local
- 4 trains an hour to Shibuya on the Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line, of which:
- 2 are Rapids on Seibu and Expresses on Tokyo Metro (Shakujii-Kōen, Nerima, Shin-Sakuradai, Kotake-Mukaihara, Ikebukuro, Shinjuku-Sanchōme, Shibuya)
- 2 are Local
- 15 trains in the 'down' direction, of which:
- 1 is a rapid express to Hannō (Tokorozawa, Kotesashi, Irumashi, Hannō)
- 2 are Expresses to Hannō (Tokorozawa, then all stations)
- 12 are Locals to Kiyose
- of which 8 continue to Kotesashi
- of which 4 continue to Hannō
- of which 8 continue to Kotesashi