Nagahama Station


Nagahama Station is a railway station on the Hokuriku Main Line in Nagahama, Shiga, Japan, operated by West Japan Railway Company.
Between 1991 and 2006, the station was the dividing point of electrification systems so that all regional trains from Osaka and Kyoto using DC-only electric multiple units terminated at this station. In 2006 the DC zone was extended to Tsuruga Station, but there still exist some terminating trains at Nagahama.
The earlier station, built 1882, is now preserved as a museum, and is the oldest preserved railroad station in Japan.

Layout

History

The station opened on March 10, 1882 as the terminal of the railway between Nagahama and. The station became an intermediate station when railway was extended from Nagahama to on May 1, 1883. The route to Sekigahara was later replaced by the route to.
Until 1889 when the Tōkaidō Main Line was completed by the opening of the last section in Shiga Prefecture, Nagahama was a connection point of the railway and the boat on the Biwa Lake which fulfilled the gap of the railways east and west of the lake.