Mejiro Station | |
Style: | JR East |
Native Name: | 目白駅 |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Address: | 3 Mejiro, Toshima City, Tokyo |
Country: | Japan |
Platforms: | 1 island platform |
Tracks: | 2 |
Connections: | Bus stop |
Structure: | At grade |
Code: | JY14 |
Passengers: | 37,684 daily |
Pass Year: | FY2012 |
Map Type: | Tokyo city#Japan Tokyo Bay and Boso Peninsula#Japan Tokyo#Japan |
Map Dot Label: | Mejiro Station |
is a railway station on the Yamanote Line in Toshima, Tokyo, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).
Mejiro Station is served by the circular Yamanote Line. It is one of only two stations on the Yamanote Line that does not provide a direct connection to any other line, the other being .
Mejiro Station has one island platform serving two tracks. The station building is located above the tracks, and accessibility to and from the platforms is provided by escalators as well as lifts. There are several small shops and a bakery/cafe within the station.
Platform edge doors were installed and brought into use from 9 November 2013.[1]
The station opened on 16 March 1885.
Station numbering was introduced in 2016 with Mejiro being assigned station number JY14.[2] [3]
In fiscal 2012, the station was used by an average of 37,684 passengers daily (boarding passengers only).[4] The passenger figures for previous years are as shown below.
Fiscal year | Daily average | |
---|---|---|
2000 | 39,505[5] | |
2005 | 39,065[6] | |
2010 | 37,568[7] | |
2011 | 37,355[8] | |
2012 | 37,684 |
Mejiro is one of the Yamanote Line's smaller stations, situated between the bustling Ikebukuro and the relatively quiet Takadanobaba.
Mejiro Station has only one exit. The ticket gate emerges onto Mejiro-dori with the co-ed campus of Gakushuin University and the Mejiro Elementary School to the right, and a busy row of shops and restaurants to the left. Just off Mejiro-dori, the wealthy area becomes residential and quite peaceful. The streets to the west, away from the Yamanote loop, feature a mix of typical apartment buildings spanning a few decades, and some very opulent designer houses with luxury vehicles in their garages.
By looking straight ahead from Mejiro Station's main exit, one can see well into the distance toward Ikebukuro's monument-like garbage processing center and the towering Sunshine 60 building.
When inside Mejiro Station, if you stand at the southernmost part, you can see Takadanobaba Station.