Hashioka Station | |
Native Name: | 端岡駅 |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Address: | Kokubunjicho Nii, Takamatsu-shi, Kagawa-ken 769-0101 |
Country: | Japan |
Operator: | JR Shikoku |
Line: | Yosan Line |
Distance: | 9.5 km from |
Platforms: | 1 side + 2 island platforms |
Tracks: | 4 + 2 sidings |
Structure: | At grade |
Accessible: | No - island platforms accessed by footbridge |
Code: | Y03 |
Status: | Staffed - JR ticket window |
Passengers: | 1349 |
Pass Year: | FY2019 |
Map Type: | Japan Kagawa Prefecture#Japan |
Map Dot Label: | Hashioka Station |
is a passenger railway station located in the city of Takamatsu, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Shikoku and has the station number "Y03".[1]
The station is served by the JR Shikoku Yosan Line and is located 9.5 km from the beginning of the line at Takamatsu. Yosan line local, Rapid Sunport, and Nanpū Relay services stop at the station. The Marine Liner rapid service on the Seto-Ohashi Line between and also stop at the station. Although is the official start of the Dosan Line, some of its local trains start from and return to . These trains also stop at Hashioka.[2]
Hashioka Station consists of a side platform and two staggered island platforms serving four tracks. The side platform, attached to the station building is designated platform 0. Track 1 is served by both platform 0 and platform 1 (island) and trains stopping there occasionally open their doors on both sides to allow passengers to quickly get from the island platform to the station building. Platforms 1 and 2 serve eastbound trains while platforms 3 and 4 serve westbound ones. A station building houses a waiting room and a JR ticket window (without a Midori no Madoguchi facility). Access to the island platforms is by means of two footbridges, one for each island. Two sidings branch of off the main tracks on either side.[3] [4] [5]
Hashioka Station opened on 21 February 1897 as an intermediate stop when the track of the privately Sanuki Railway (later the Sanyo Railway) was extended from to . After the railway as nationalized on 1 December 1906, Japanese Government Railways (JGR) took over the station and operated it as part of the Sanuki Line (later the Sanyo and then the Yosan Main Line). With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR, the successor of JGR) on 1 April 1987, control of the station passed to JR Shikoku.