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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Mizuhashi Station

Mizuhashi Station (水橋駅, Mizuhashi-eki) is a railway station on the Ainokaze Toyama Railway Line in the city of Toyama, Toyama Prefecture, Japan, operated by the third-sector railway operator Ainokaze Toyama Railway.

Lines

Mizuhashi Station is served by the Ainokaze Toyama Railway Line and is 53.1 kilometres from the starting point of the line at Kurikara.

Station layout

Mizuhashi Station has two opposed ground-level side platforms connected by a footbridge. The station is staffed.

Platforms

1  Ainokaze Toyama Railway Line for Uozu and Itoigawa
2  Ainokaze Toyama Railway Line for Toyama and Kanazawa

History

Mizuhashi Station opened on 16 November 1908 as a station on the Japanese Government Railways (JGR), later becoming the Japanese National Railways (JNR). It was privatized on 1 April 1987, becoming a station on JR West.

From 14 March 2015, with the opening of the Hokuriku Shinkansen extension from Nagano to Kanazawa, local passenger operations over sections of the former Hokuriku Main Line running roughly parallel to the new shinkansen line were reassigned to different third-sector railway operating companies. From this date, Mizuhashi Station was transferred to the ownership of the third-sector operating company Ainokaze Toyama Railway.

Adjacent stations

« Service »
Ainokaze Toyama Railway Line
Higashi-Toyama Local Namerikawa

Passenger statistics

In fiscal 2015, the station was used by an average of 965 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).

Surrounding area

  • Mizuhashi Post Office
  • Mizuhashi High School

See also

References

  1. ^ しなの鉄道(株)、えちごトキめき鉄道(株)、あいの風とやま鉄道(株)及びIRいしかわ鉄道(株)申請の第一種鉄道事業許可について [Details of railway business approval for Shinano Railway, Echigo Tokimeki Railway Company, Ainokaze Toyama Railway, and IR Ishikawa Railway]. News release (in Japanese). Japan: Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  2. ^ 10-1 あいの風とやま鉄道各駅旅客輸送状況(1日平均)) (in Japanese). Japan: Toyama Prefectural Office. 2016. Retrieved 6 June 2017.