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Kottoi Station

Kottoi Station
特牛駅
Kottoi sta.jpg
Station building
Location 264-2, Hōhoku-chō Oaza Kanda Aza Obagasako, Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi
(山口県下関市豊北町大字神田字大場ヶ迫264-2)
Japan
Coordinates 34°18′21″N 130°55′08″E / 34.305877°N 130.918972°E / 34.305877; 130.918972Coordinates: 34°18′21″N 130°55′08″E / 34.305877°N 130.918972°E / 34.305877; 130.918972
Operated by JR West
Line(s) San'in Main Line
Connections
  • Bus stop
History
Opened 1928
Traffic
Passengers (2010) 34 daily

Kottoi Station (特牛駅?, Kottoi-eki) is a JR West railway station located in Shimonoseki city, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. People who disembark at Kottoi Station can take a 20-minute bus ride to Tsunoshima (an island) via the Tsunoshima Bridge (角島大橋?, Tsunoshima-ōhashi), a 1,780-metre-long (5,840 ft) bridge that joins Tsunoshima to the mainland at Hōhoku Town. It was the longest toll free bridge in Japan when it was completed on November 3, 2000.

Kottoi Station is housed in its original wooden-framed station building. It is a one-track, single platform station. Because of this single line structure, trains bound for Nagatoshi Station as well as Kogushi Station stop at the same platform. Previously the platform had a side track, allowing trains that were travelling in different directions to pass one another, however this was discontinued in 1970. The station is run by the Nagato Railroad Bureau. Though there are no staff members at the station, some tickets can be purchased from a small shop in front of the station. As there is a difference in height of a few meters between the station building and the platform, there is a staircase to the platform which crosses over the old track. There is a waiting room on the platform side of the station building, but there is no door. The station is located considerably higher than the village it serves.

The origin of the area name Kottoi has been addressed in various media, particularly as a station name which is difficult to read by Japanese standards. There are two ideas about the origin of the place name. The first comes from the regional way for expressing the word cow (牝牛?, meushi) as kottoi. The second comes from an inlet which faces the Sea of Japan known as Kotoe (琴江?, kotoe). It is also said to mean "a robust cow that will bear a heavy load".


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