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Hakubutsukan-Dōbutsuen Station

Defunct railway stations in JapanRailway stations closed in 1997Railway stations in Japan opened in 1933Railway stations in TokyoStations of Keisei Electric Railway
Tokyo railway station stubs
Hakubutsukan Dobutsuen Sta
Hakubutsukan Dobutsuen Sta

Hakubutsukan-Dōbutsuen Station (Japanese: 博物館動物園駅) is a former station of the Keisei Electric Railway in Taito-ku, Tokyo. It is located between Nippori Station and Keisei Ueno Station. It opened in 1933, but was closed on 1 April 1997 due to the length of the platform being too short for most trains. The station was formally abandoned in April 2004. The station building and platform are still in existence and have been renovated and opened to the public in 2018.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hakubutsukan-Dōbutsuen Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hakubutsukan-Dōbutsuen Station
Kanda-Hakusan Line, Taito

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Latitude Longitude
N 35.718638888889 ° E 139.77347222222 °
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東京国立博物館

Kanda-Hakusan Line
110-8712 Taito
Japan
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Hakubutsukan Dobutsuen Sta
Hakubutsukan Dobutsuen Sta
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Independent Administrative Institution National Museum

Independent Administrative Institution (IAI) National Museum ("National Museum") was the official name of the corporate entity created by the Japanese government in 2001 by merging three formerly independent national museums—the Tokyo National Museum, the Kyoto National Museum, and the Nara National Museum. The assimilated organizational structure was brought about as a part of the national government's administrative reform program; and the clear goal was to provide higher quality and better educational services to the public. In 2005, a fourth institution was added—the Kyushu National Museum. These reforms are designed to bring keiretsu-like synergy and enhanced administrative efficiencies in the work of achieving the range of inter-related preservation, conservation, and education goals of each unique institution.In 2007, the perceived successes of the IAI National Museum experiment led to a further consolidation. The Independent Administrative Institution National Institutes for Cultural Heritage was established by merging two Independent Administrative Institutions—the National Museum, which comprised the Tokyo National Museum, the Kyoto National Museum, the Nara National Museum and the Kyushu National Museum—and the Independent Administrative Institution National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, which consisted of the National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Tokyo and the National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Nara. The rationale for merging these entities flow from a recognition that all share the same purpose of conservation and utilization of cultural properties.

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