Futako-Tamagawa Station

Futako-Tamagawa Station (二子玉川駅, Futako-tamagawa-eki) is located in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan, on the north-east bank of the Tama River. The area surrounding the station is commonly called Futako-Tamagawa, and often refers to the Tamagawa and Seta districts of Setagaya, but there is no precise definition. It is colloquially referred to as "Futako" (フタコ) or "Nikotama" (ニコタマ), from an alternate reading of the first three kanji characters in the name.

DT07 OM15
Futako-Tamagawa

二子玉川
Futako-Tamagawa Station and Futako-Tamagawa Rise
Location2-22-13 Tamagawa, Setagaya, Tokyo
(東京都世田谷区玉川2-22-13)
Japan
Operated byTōkyū Corporation
Line(s)
Connections
  • Bus terminal
Other information
Station codeDT-07, OM-15
History
Opened1907
Previous namesTamagawa (玉川); Futako-Tamagawaen (二子玉川園) (until 2000)
Passengers
103,061 daily

Lines

Station layout

Futako-Tamagawa Station platforms, 2018
1  Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line SaginumaNagatsuta ・ Chūō-Rinkan
2  Tokyu Oimachi Line Mizonokuchi
3  Tokyu Oimachi Line Jiyūgaoka ・ Ōokayama ・ HatanodaiŌimachi
4  Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line Shibuya ・ (Tokyo Metro Hanzomon Line Direct) Oshiage ・ (Tobu Skytree Line Direct) Tōbu-Dōbutsu-Kōen・(Tobu Isesaki Line Direct) Kuki ・ (Tobu Nikko Line Direct) Minami-Kurihashi

Adjacent stations

Service
Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line
Yōga   Local   Futako-Shinchi
Yōga   Semi-Express   Mizonokuchi
Sangen-Jaya   Express   Mizonokuchi
Tokyu Ōimachi Line
Kami-noge   Local
(not passing Futako-Shinchi and Takatsu)
  Futako-Shinchi
Kami-noge   Local
(passing Futako-Shinchi and Takatsu)
  Mizonokuchi
Jiyūgaoka   Express   Mizonokuchi

Surrounding area

The east side of Futako-Tamagawa station is mostly occupied by the Futako-Tamagawa Rise complex. The Tamagawa Takashimaya (玉川高島屋) shopping center, located on the west side, is a branch of the Takashimaya department store chain. It opened as Japan's first suburban shopping centre in 1969, and kick-started the development of similar stores around Japan. St. Mary's International School students use this station as a primary way to get to school. Rakuten also has its corporate headquarters adjacent to this station.

History

Station platforms in 1969.
  • April 1, 1907 Tamagawa Line (玉川線, Tamagawa-sen) (Tram) has been started, and the station opened as Tamagawa Station (玉川駅, Tamagawa-eki).
  • March 1, 1924 Kinuta Line (砧線, Kinuta-sen) (Tram) started.
  • July 15, 1927 Mizonokuchi Line (溝ノ口線, Mizonokuchi-sen) started from Tamagawa Station to Mizonokuchi Station.
  • November 1, 1929 Futako-Tamagawa Line (二子玉川線, Futako-Tamagawa-sen) started. And Futako-Tamagawa Station (二子玉川駅, Futako-Tamagawa-eki) opened.
  • December 25, 1929 Futako-Tamagawa Line was integrated into Oimachi Line.
  • March 10, 1939 Tamagawa Station was renamed to Yomiuri-Yuen Station (よみうり遊園駅, Yomiuri-Yuen-eki).
  • December 1, 1940 Yomiuri-Yuen Station and Futako-Tamagawa Station were integrated, and the name became Futako-Yomiurien Station (二子読売園駅, Futako-Yomiurien-eki).
  • July 1, 1943 Mizonokuchi Line was integrated into Oimachi Line.
  • October 20, 1944 Futako-Yomiurien Station was renamed to Futako-Tamagawa Station.
  • August 1, 1954 Futako-Tamagawa Station was renamed to Futako-Tamagawaen Station (二子玉川園駅, Futako-Tamagawaen-eki).
  • October 11, 1963 Oimachi Line was renamed to Den-en-toshi Line.
  • May 10, 1969 Tamagawa Line and Kinuta Line were abolished.
  • April 7, 1977 Shin-Tamagawa Line (新玉川線, Shin-Tamagawa-sen) started.
  • August 12, 1979 The name of Oimachi Line was revived.
  • August 6, 2000 Shin-Tamagawa Line was renamed to Den-en-toshi Line. And, Futako-Tamagawaen Station was renamed to Futako-Tamagawa Station.

Further reading

  • Konno, Yukiko; Itoh, Yuki (2017). "A creative city planning framework by a private company: Case study of the development of Futako-Tamagawa by Tokyu". Cogent Business & Management. 4 (1). doi:10.1080/23311975.2016.1270712. - Published online on January 3, 2017

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