Iidabashi Station

JB16 T06 Y13 N10 E06
Iidabashi Station

飯田橋駅
JR East west entrance, November 2022
General information
LocationChiyoda, Tokyo
Japan
Operated by
Line(s)
Construction
Structure typeAt grade (JR East)
Underground (Toei and Tokyo Metro)
Platform levels4
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station code
  • JB16 (Chūō-Sōbu Line)
  • T-06 (Tozai Line)
  • Y-13 (Yurakucho Line)
  • N-10 (Namboku Line)
  • E-06 (Toei Oedo Line)
WebsiteOfficial website
History
Opened15 November 1928; 96 years ago (15 November 1928)
Services
Preceding station Logo of the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) JR East Following station
Ichigaya
JB15
towards Mitaka
Chūō–Sōbu Line Suidōbashi
JB17
towards Chiba
Preceding station The logo of the Tokyo Metro. Tokyo Metro Following station
Kagurazaka
T05
towards Nakano
Tozai Line
Rapid
Commuter Rapid
Local
Kudanshita
T07
Shakujii-kōen
SI10
towards Kotesashi
S-Train
(weekdays)
Yurakucho
Y18
towards Toyosu
Edogawabashi
Y12
towards Wakoshi
Yūrakuchō Line Ichigaya
Y14
towards Shin-kiba
Ichigaya
N09
towards Meguro
Namboku Line Korakuen
N11
Preceding station Toei Subway Following station
Ushigome-kagurazaka
E05
towards Tochōmae
Ōedo Line Kasuga
E07
towards Hikarigaoka
Location
Iidabashi Station is located in Special wards of Tokyo
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station
Location within Special wards of Tokyo
Iidabashi Station is located in Tokyo Bay and Bōsō Peninsula
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station (Tokyo Bay and Bōsō Peninsula)
Iidabashi Station is located in Tokyo
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station (Tokyo)
Iidabashi Station is located in Japan
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station
Iidabashi Station (Japan)

Iidabashi Station (飯田橋駅, Iidabashi-eki) is a major interchange railway station which straddles Tokyo's Chiyoda, Shinjuku and Bunkyō wards. It was originally built as Iidamachi Station (albeit in a slightly different location), terminus of the then Kōbu Railway, precursor to today's Chūō Line. The Ōedo Line addition to the station in 2000 was designed by architect Makoto Sei Watanabe.[1]

  1. ^ Capanna, Allesandra (2015). "BiOrganic Design: A New Method for Architecture and the City". In Williams, Kim; Ostwald, Michael J. (eds.). Architecture and Mathematics from Antiquity to the Future: Volume II: The 1500s to the Future. Birkhäuser. pp. 586–592. ISBN 978-3-319-00143-2.