Oe Station | |
Native Name: | 小江駅 |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Symbol Location: | jp |
Symbol: | jrk |
Style: | JR Kyushu |
Address: | Takakicho Shitagumi, Isahaya-shi, Nagasaki-ken 859-0113 |
Country: | Japan |
Coordinates: | 32.8913°N 130.1123°W |
Operator: | JR Kyushu |
Line: | Nagasaki Main Line |
Distance: | 90.9 km from |
Platforms: | 1 island platform |
Tracks: | 2 |
Structure: | At grade |
Bicycle: | Bike shed |
Accessible: | No - access to platform by footbridge |
Status: | Unstaffed |
Passengers: | 145 daily |
Pass Year: | FY2014 |
Map Type: | Japan Nagasaki Prefecture#Japan |
Map Dot Label: | Oe Station |
Mapframe: | yes |
Mapframe-Zoom: | 17 |
is a passenger railway station located in the city of Isahaya, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Kyushu.[1] Oe Station has one of the shortest station names in Japan. The others are Ei Station in Kagoshima Prefecture, Ao Station in Hyōgo Prefecture and Ii Station in Yamaguchi Prefecture. Tsu Station of Mie Prefecture has a shorter name in Japanese (it is the only station name written with one kana), but this is not so when romanized.
The station is served by the Nagasaki Main Line and is located 90.9 km from the starting point of the line at .
The station consists of an island platform serving two tracks. The station building is a metal cabin and is unstaffed, serving only as a waiting room with an automatic ticket vending machine. Access to the island platform is by means of a footbridge.[2] [3]
Japanese Government Railways (JGR) built the station in the 1930s during the development of an alternative route for the Nagasaki Main Line along the coast of the Ariake Sea. In a phase of construction of what was at first called the Ariake West Line, a track was built from (on the existing Nagasaki Main Line) north to which opened on 24 March 1934 as the terminus of the track. Oe was opened on the same day as an intermediate station on this stretch of track. A few months later, link up was made from Yue to (which had been extended south from). With through traffic achieved from Hizen-Yamaguchi on the new route to Nagasaki, the entire stretch of track was designated as part of the Nagasaki Main Line on 1 December 1934. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR), the successor of JGR, on 1 April 1987, control of the station passed to JR Kyushu.
In fiscal 2014, there were a total of 52,823 boarding passengers, given a daily average of 145 passengers.[4]
To the south of the station is the Ariake Sea. Route 207 runs along the coast. Other locations nearby include: