Makurazaki Station

Makurazaki Station (枕崎駅, Makurazaki-eki) is a railway station located in Makurazaki, Kagoshima, Japan. The station opened in 1931 and is the southernmost conventional rail terminal station in Japan.

Makurazaki Station

枕崎駅
General information
LocationHigashi-Honmachi, Makurazaki, Kagoshima
(鹿児島県枕崎市東本町)
Japan
Coordinates31°16′19.64″N 130°17′58.14″E
Operated byJR Kyushu
Line(s)Ibusuki Makurazaki Line
History
Opened1931

Line

Layout

   Ibusuki Makurazaki Line for Kagoshima-Chūō and Ibusuki

History

The station opened on March 10, 1931, when private Nansatsu Railway (now Kagoshima Kotsu) extended the Makurazaki Line from Kaseda to Makurazaki. The old station building was owned by the same company until its demolishment in 2006. The station began to serve two lines when the Ibusuki Makurazaki Line of Japanese National Railways (JNR) was extended from Nishi-Ei to Makurazaki on October 31, 1963.[1] The JNR paid access charges to Nansatsu Railway for the use of the station, and the station was not counted as an official JNR station until the subsequent closure of the Makurazaki Line.

The operation of the Makurazaki Line was suspended on June 21, 1983, due to a flood. The line was abandoned and officially closed on March 18, 1984. Only the Ibusuki Makurazaki Line has served the station since then.[1]

In 2006, the land on which the station stood was sold to Taiyo, a local supermarket chain. As a result, on May 1, 2006, the station was moved approximately 100 meters towards Kagoshima. The new station on opening had no station building, but one was subsequently constructed from local donation funding. Unveiled on April 28, 2013, the new building received the Good Design Award in the same year. The station has a single platform.[1]

Adjacent stations

Service
Ibusuki Makurazaki Line
Satsuma-Itashiki   Local   Terminus

Nearby places

  • Taiyo Market Store
  • Makurazaki Port
  • Makurazaki City Hall
  • Makurazaki-Nagisa HotSpa

References

  1. City of Makurazaki. 枕崎市 :: 観光・文化 :: 観光 :: 観光スポット(4/4) (in Japanese). Archived from the original on June 22, 2003. Retrieved July 8, 2010.


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