is a major railway station and transportation hub in KyÃ
Âto, Japan. It has Japan's second-largest station building (after Nagoya Station) and is one of the country's largest buildings, incorporating a shopping mall, hotel, movie theater, Isetan department store, and several local government facilities under one 15-story roof.
Lines
Kyoto Station is served by the following railway lines:
In addition to the lines above, the following lines, among others, have through services to Kyoto Station:
JR West/JR Central
Layout
The station has a side platform and four island platforms serving eight tracks for the Tokaido Line (Biwako Line, JR Kyoto Line) and Kosei Line at ground level, three dead-end platforms serving four tracks for the Sanin Line (Sagano Line) to the west of platform 0 at ground level, and two dead-end platforms serving 3 tracks to the south of platform 7 at ground level. Two island platforms serving four tracks for the Shinkansen are elevated, above the platforms for the Kintetsu Kyoto Line.
Limited express trains
for the Hokuriku Line
for the Tokaido Line, and the Takayama Line
for the Sanin region via the Chizu Express Chizu Line
for the Hanwa Line, Kansai Airport Line and the Kinokuni Line
- Kansai Airport limited express Haruka: Maibara, Kyoto - Kansai Airport
- limited express Kuroshio: Kyoto, Shin-Osaka - Shirahama, Shingu
for the Sanin Line, the Maizuru Line and the Kitakinki Tango Railway lines
Adjacent stations
Kintetsu
Layout
The station has three levels. Four dead-end platforms serving four tracks are located on the second floor. The 1st floor is a shopping street and the 3rd floor is the platforms for the Shinkansen (JR Central).
Adjacent stations
Kyoto City Subway
Layout
The station consists of one underground island platform serving two tracks.
History
The governmental railway from reached Kyoto on 5 September 1876, but the station was under construction and a temporary facility called Ã
Âmiya-dÃ
Âri (Ã
Âmiya Street) Temporary Station was used until the opening of the main station. The first Kyoto Station opened for service by decree of Emperor Meiji on 5 February 1877.
In 1889, the railway became a part of the trunk line to Tokyo (Tokaido Main Line). Subsequently, the station became the terminal of two private railways, Nara Railway (1895, present-day Nara Line) and Kyoto Railway (1897, present-day Sagano Line), that connected the station with southern and northern regions of Kyoto Prefecture, respectively.
The station was replaced by a newer, Renaissance-inspired facility in 1914, which featured a broad square (the site of demolished first station) leading from the station to ShichijÃ
 Avenue. Before and during World War II, the square was often used by imperial motorcades when Emperor Showa traveled between Kyoto and Tokyo. The station was spacious and designed to handle a large number of people, but when a few thousand people gathered to bid farewell to naval recruits on 8 January 1934, 77 people were crushed to death. This station burned to the ground in 1950, and was replaced by a more utilitarian concrete facility in 1952.
Aside from the main building on the north side of the station, the HachijÃ
Â-guchi building on the south side was built to house Tokaido Shinkansen which started operation in 1964. The underground facilities of the station, including the shopping mall Porta beneath the station square, were constructed when the subway opened in 1981.
The current Kyoto Station was designed by architect Hiroshi Hara, and it opened in 1997 which commemorated Kyoto's 1,200th anniversary. It is 70 meters high and 470 meters from east to west, with a total floor area of 238,000 square meters. Architecturally, it exhibits many characteristics of futurism, with a slightly irregular cubic façade of plate glass over a steel frame.https://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3922.html During the mid-1990s, Kyoto was one of the least modern cities in Japan by virtue of its many cultural heritage sites, so locals were largely reluctant to accept such an ambitious structure. However, the station's completion began a wave of new high-rise developments in Kyoto that culminated in the 20-story Kyocera Building.
In addition to traditional rail services, Kyoto Station also housed the KyÃ
Âto CAT (City Air Terminal), a downtown check in, baggage, and train service for some JAL flights operating out of Kansai International Airport. This service was discontinued on August 31, 2002 due to lack of ridership.
Station numbers were introduced to the JR Lines in March 2018. Kyoto Station was assigned:
- JR-A31 for the Tokaido Main Line
- JR-B31 for the Kosei Line
- JR-E01 for the San'in Main Line
- JR-D01 for the Nara Line
Passenger statistics
In fiscal 2016, the JR West part of the station was used by an average of 200,426 passengers daily (boarding passengers only), making it the second busiest JR West station after . The Kyoto City Subway station was used by an average of 123,360 passengers daily (in fiscal 2016).
Surrounding area
Karasuma Gate
- Kyoto Station Building
- JR Kyoto Isetan
- Kyoto Station Shopping street "The Cube"
- Hotel Granvia Kyoto
- Kyoto Gekijo
- Museum of Art "Eki" Kyoto
- Kyoto Station Underground Mall "Porta"
- Kyoto-Yodobashi
- Hotel New Hankyu Kyoto
- Kyoto Tower
- Higashi Hongan-ji
- Shimogyo-ku General Building
- Campus Plaza Kyoto
- Kyoto Central Post Office
- Omron
- Kyoto Bus Station
Nishinotoin Gate
- Bic Camera JR Kyoto Station (JR Kyoto Station NK Building)
Hachijo Gate
- Hotel Kintetsu Kyoto Station
- Kyoto Avanti
- Hotel Keihan Kyoto
- Sightseeing Bus Terminal
- Expressway Bus Terminal
- New Miyako Hotel
- To-ji
- ÃÂON Mall Kyoto
- PHP Institute
Bus terminals
Highway buses
Karasuma Gate
Karasuma Gate Bus Terminal
- Dream / Hiru Tokkyu; For Shinjuku Station and Tokyo Station
- Harbor Light; For Hon-Atsugi Station, Machida Station, and Yokohama Station
- Dream Saitama; For Tachikawa Station, Higashi-Yamatoshi Station, Tokorozawa Station, and Ã
Âmiya Station (Saitama)
- Keihanshin Dream Shizuoka; For Hamamatsu Station, Kakegawa Station, Yaizu, and Shizuoka Station
- Meishin Highway Bus; For Higashiomi, Taga, Ã
Âgaki, and Nagoya Station
- Hokurikudo Hiru Tokkyu Osaka / Hokuriku Dream Osaka; For Fukui, Komatsu, Kanazawa Station and Toyama Station
- Seishun Dream Shinshu; For Nagano Station, Sakaki, Ueda Station, TÃ
Âmi, and Sakudaira Station
- Wakasa Maizuru Express Kyoto; For Nishi-Maizuru Station, Higashi-Maizuru Station, and Obama Station
- For Miyazu Station, Amanohashidate Station, Amino Station, and Taiza
- Tsuyama Express Kyoto; For KatÃ
Â, Kasai, ShisÃ
Â, Mimasaka, ShÃ
ÂÃ
Â, and Tsuyama Station
- Miyako Liner; For Fukuyama Station and Onomichi Station
- Kyoto Express; For Akaiwa, Okayama Station, and Kurashiki Station
- Sanyodo Hiru Tokkyu Hiroshima / Seishun Dream Hiroshima; For Hiroshima University, Nakasuji Station, Hiroshima Bus Center, and Hiroshima Station
- Awa Express Kyoto; For Naruto, Matsushige, and Tokushima Station
- Takamatsu Express Kyoto; For Higashikagawa, Sanuki, Miki, and Takamatsu Station (Kagawa)
- Kochi Express; For KÃ
Âchi Station, Harimayabashi Station, KÃ
Âchi University, and Susaki Station
- Izumo no Okuni / Izumo Express Kyoto; For Matsue Station, Shinji, and Izumoshi Station
- Tottori Express Kyoto; For Chizu and Tottori Station
- Yonago Express Kyoto; For Yonago Station
Hotel New Hankyu Kyoto bus stop
- Alpen Nagano; For Omi, Chikuma, and Nagano Station
- Alpen Matsumoto; For Okaya Station, Shiojiri, and Matsumoto Bus Terminal(Matsumoto Station)
- Alpen Suwa; For Okaya Station, Kami-Suwa Station, and Chino Station
- Sawayaka Shinshu; For KamikÃ
Âchi
- Okesa; For SanjÃ
Â-Tsubame, Katahigashi, and Nigata Station
- For Tonami Station, and Toyama Station
- Kyoto Osaka Liner; For Yoshida, Yaizu, Shin-Shizuoka Station, and Shimizu Station
Hachijo Gate
Hotel Keihan Kyoto bus stops
- Airport Limousine; For Kansai International Airport
- Airport Limousine; For Osaka International Airport
- Tokyo Midnight Express Kyoto; For Shibuya Station and Shinjuku Station
- For Keisei Ueno Station, Asakusa(Kaminarimon), Tokyo Skytree, Nishi-Funabashi Station, Tokyo Disney Resort, Kaihin-Makuhari Station, Chiba Station and Kamatori Station
- Moonlight; For Kokura Station, Hakata Station, and Nishitetsu Fukuoka (Tenjin) Station
- For Tsuchiyama and Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station
- For Tsuchiyama, Seki, and Tsu Station
- Kyoto Express; For Kawauchi I.C., Okaido Station, and Matsuyama City Station
- For KÃ
Âchi Station, and Harimayabashi Station
Hachijo-Dori Street north side (Kintetsu Bus)
- Arcadia; For KaminoyamaYandamagata Station
- Forest; For Sendai Station (Miyagi)
- Galaxy; For NishigÃ
Â, Sukagawa, KÃ
Âriyama Station, Nihonmatsu, and Fukushima Station
- Tochinoki; For Kuki Station, Tochigi Station, Kanuma, and Utsunomiya Station
- Seagull; For Hitachi, Takahagi Station, Isohara Station, and Iwaki Station
- Yokappe; For Tsukuba Station, Tsuchiura Station, Ishioka, and Mito Station
- Flying Liner; For Yokohama Station, Tokyo Station, Ueno Station, and Asakusa Station
- Fujiyama Liner; For Higashi-Shizuoka Station, Fuji Station, Fujinomiya Station, Taiseki-ji, Fuji-Q Highland, Kawaguchiko Station and Fujisan Station
- Kintaro; For Shin-Fuji Station, Numazu Station, Mishima Station, Gotemba Station, Shin-Matsuda Station, and Odawara Station
- Crystal Liner; For Hokuto, Nirasaki Station, RyÃ
«Ã
 Station, and KÃ
Âfu Station
- Chikumagawa Liner; For Chikuma, Sakaki, Ueda Station, TÃ
Âmi, Sakudaira Station, and Karuizawa Station
- West Liner; For GujÃ
 and Takayama Station
- Karst; For Ã
Âtake, Iwakuni, ShÃ
«nan, Tokuyama Station, HÃ
Âfu Station, Yamaguchi, MitÃ
Â, and Hagi
- Shimanto Blue Liner; For Kubokawa Station, Tosa-Saga Station, Nakamura Station, and Sukumo Station
- Holland; For Ã
Âmura, Isahaya, Nagasaki Station, and Nagasaki Shinchi Terminal
- Sunrise / AsoâÂÂKuma; For Kumamoto Bus Terminal and Kumamoto Station
- Ohisama; For Ebino, Kobayashi, MiyakonojÃ
Â, and Miyazaki Station
Hachijo-Dori Street south side (Kintetsu Bus and Nankai Bus)
This bus stop is in front of Nippon Rent-A- Car Kyoto Station East Exit Office.
- Silk Liner; For Saitama-Shintoshin Station, Ashikagashi Station, Ã
Âta Station, KiryÃ
« Station, Isesaki Station, Takasaki Station, and Maebashi Station
- Southern Cross; For Akihabara Station, YotsukaidÃ
 Station, Tomisato, Keisei Narita Station, Narita International Airport, Sawara Station, and ChÃ
Âshi Station
- Dream Wakayama; For Shinjuku Station, Tokyo Station, and Shin-Kiba Station
- Let's Go; For Hashimoto Station, Akishima Station, Tachikawa Station, and Tamagawa-JÃ
Âsui Station
- Southern Cross; For Odawara Station, Fujisawa Station, Kamakura Station, Ã
Âfuna Station, and Totsuka Station
- Southern Cross; For Nagano Station, Suzaka Station, Shinshu-Nakano Station, Iiyama Station, and Yudanaka Station
- Southern Cross; For Kashiwazaki Station, Nagaoka Station, and Higashi-SanjÃ
 Station
- Honokuni; For Toyokawa Station and Toyohashi Station
- For Yao Station and KyÃ
«hÃ
Âji Station
- Shirahama Blue Sky; For Inami, Haya Station, Kii-Tanabe Station, and Shirahama
- SORIN; For Nakatsu Station, Usa, Beppu, and Ã
Âita Station
Hachijo-Dori Street south side (Osaka Bus)
In media
- In ', the final battle takes place in Kyoto Station.
- Parts of the 2003 film Lost in Translation were filmed on Kyoto Station's Shinkansen platforms.
- The Kyoto level featured in ' and Tony Hawk's American Wasteland is set in Kyoto Station and the surrounding area.
See also
References
External links