Ulsan Station

For the station named Ulsan Station until October 31, 2010, see Taehwagang Station.

Coordinates: 35°33′07″N 129°08′18″E / 35.55189°N 129.13837°E / 35.55189; 129.13837

Ulsan
울산
KTX
Korean name
Hangul 울산
Hanja 蔚山
Revised Romanization Ulsan-yeok
McCune–Reischauer Ulsan yŏk
General information
Location 177, Ulsanyeok-ro,
Samnam-myeon, Ulju-gun, Ulsan
Republic of Korea
Operated by Korail Busan-Gyeongnam Regional HQ
Line(s) Gyeongbu High Speed Railway
Platforms 2
History
Opened November 1, 2010
Traffic
Passengers (2013.04) 12732 per day[1]Increase 9.8%
Services
Preceding station   Korail   Following station
Gyeongbu KTX
Terminus

Ulsan Station (Tongdosa) is a South Korean high-speed rail station located in Samnam-myeon, Ulju-gun. It is on Gyeongbu High Speed Railway and named Ulsan Station with subname Tongdosa, which is located in Yangsan, nearer than downtown Ulsan from the station. The existing Ulsan Station in Samsan-Dong, Nam-gu has been renamed to Taehwagang Station.[2]

History

The Ulsan Station had not planned for second phase of Gyeongbu HSR, although Ulsan is one of the metropolitan cities. But with constant civil petitions, President Roh Moo-hyun appealed positive reaction,[3] and the station was added to the plan from November 14, 2003. In result, it became the most successful case of second phase of Gyeongbu HSR.

Subname dispute

The subname of Ulsan Station is Tongdosa, the temple located in Yangsan, not Ulsan. Some Christians didn't agree with the subname, arguing that it is a religious problem. But the Korail made a vote, resulted 7 of 9 committee agreed with the 'Tongdosa' subname. Nonetheless, the subname had not been displayed in the station until 2012.

Station layout

Singyeongju
| | | |
Busan/Bujeon
Platform No.LineTrainDestination
1 Gyeongbu HSR KTX For Busan
2 Gyeongbu HSR KTX For Dongdaegu·Osong·Daejeon·Seoul

See also

References

External links

Media related to Ulsan Station at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, November 03, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.