Tenri Station
Lines
Although the JR station is on the Sakurai Line as rail infrastructure, it has been served by the Man-yō Mahoroba Line since 2010 in terms of passenger train services. It is 14.3 kilometers from the starting point of the line at Nara. Tenri Station is also the terminus of the 4.5 Tenri Line of the Kintetsu Railway from Hirahata.
Layout
The platforms for teh JR portion of the station are elevated, and are located on the second floor of the station building. The station consists of two island platforms and four tracks, but only platforms 3 and 4 are in use. Platforms 1 and 2 are used as group-only platforms, and are usually used by out-of-service trains in the early morning to remove rust from the rails, and the stairs to the platforms are closed. Ticket gates, including those for groups, are on the first floor, and the south side of the first floor under the elevated track is the JR station facilities (waiting room, ticket gates, and concourse). The Tenri Line enters the station from the west at a right angle to JR West on the first floor. The station has four terminal platforms and three tracks, and there is a siding (track number 4) on the west side of the station. Platforms 2 and 3 are usually used, but platform 1 may be used during the Tenrikyo monthly festival.
JR West platforms
1 | ■ Man-yō Mahoroba Line | Chartered trains only |
2 | ■ Man-yō Mahoroba Line | Chartered trains only |
3 | ■ Man-yō Mahoroba Line—Local | for Nara |
4 | ■ Man-yō Mahoroba Line—Local | for Sakurai and Takada |
■ Man-yō Mahoroba Line—Rapid Service | for JR Namba via the Yamatoji Line |
Kintetsu Railway platforms
1~3 | ■ Tenri Line | for Hirahata Yamato-Saidaiji and Kyoto |
Connections
Within a couple of minutes' walking distance from the main entrance, three bus stands serves local bus routes by Nara Kotsu Bus Lines and Tenri City Community Bus, as well as the inter-city and airport bus routes by Nara Kotsu Bus Lines and its co-operators, Kanto Bus, Keisei Bus, and Osaka Airport Transport.
History
The station was opened 11 May 1898 as Tanbachi Station (丹波市駅) on the Nara Railway. In 1905 the station becomes the part of the Kansai Railway, which was nationalized by the Japanese Government Railways (the predecessor of JNR) in 1907. On 7 February 1915, the Tenri Light Railway expanded its route to Tenri. The Tenri Light Railway was acquired by the Osaka Electric Railway (the predecessor of Kintetsu) in 1921.The company merged with the Sangu Express Railway on March 15, 1941 to become the Kansai Express Railway. The Kansai Express Railway merged with the Nankai Railway to form Kintetsu on June 1, 1944. The JNR Tanbaichi Station was renamed as Tenrishi Station (天理市駅) on 25 May 1963. The JNR and Kintetsu stations were merged on 1 September 1965, with the station becoming Tenri Station. With the privatization of the Japan National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the JNR station was transferred to JR West.
Passenger statistics
In fiscal 2019, the JR station was used by an average of 2578 passengers daily, whereas the Kintetsu portion of the station was used by 6341 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).
Surrounding area
- Tenri City Hall
- Tenrikyo Church Headquarters
- Tenri University
See also
References
- ^ Terada, Hirokazu (July 2002). データブック日本の私鉄 [Databook: Japan's Private Railways]. Japan: Neko Publishing. ISBN 4-87366-874-3.
- ^ "天理駅" [Tenri Station]. hacchi-no-he.net. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
- ^ [1] Kintetsu Company History
- ^ Nara Prefecture Statistical Yearbook
External links
- Media related to Tenri Station at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (JR-West) (in Japanese)
- Official website (Kintetsu Railway)