Okhotsk and Taisetsu limited express trains and Shiretoko rapid services terminate at this station. The Yūmō Line formerly diverged from here, but the line was closed on March 20, 1987.
Station layout
The station consists of one side platforms and one island platform serving two tracks. There is a ticket office (business hours: 05:30 to 23:00), automatic ticket machines, and a travel centre (business hours: 09:30 to 17:30).
Abashiri Station is unusual in having the station name sign at the entrance to the building written vertically instead of horizontally. This was intended to ensure that prisoners released from nearby Abashiri Prison and returning to their hometowns from the station would not "revert sideways" (横道にそれない) to a life of crime.[1]
Buses
Abashiri Bus, Abashiri Kōtsū Bus, Akan Bus, Shari Bus and joint operating companies all operate to/from the station. The tourist information centre in Abashiri Station handles tickets for tour buses. The bus stop for services to Higashi Mokoto (Abashiri Kōtsū Bus) does not have a number.
Shari, Koshimizu, Tsukushigaoka Apartments, Tokyo Agriculture University, Abashiri Bus Terminal
No. 4 Stop
no service
Higashi Mokoto
Hokkaidō Chūō Bus, Hokkaidō Kitami Bus and Abashiri Bus operate services from Abashiri Bus Terminal to Sapporo.
History
October 5, 1912: Abashiri Station was opened by the National Railway Authority.[2]
September 15, 1927: The Railways Ministry opened the Senmō Line (which later became the Senmō Main Line).
December 1, 1932: The passenger station was moved to its present location, and the original station was renamed Hama-Abashiri Station and converted to freight-only.[3]
October 10, 1935: The Yūmō East Line (later the Yūmō Line) opened between Abashiri and Ubaranai.
February 1, 1984: Freight services to Hama-Abashiri were discontinued.
March 20, 1987: The Yūmō Line closed.
April 1, 1987: Abashiri Station was transferred to JR Hokkaido following privatization of the Japanese National Railways.
^Sone, Satoru (2010). 『週刊 歴史でめぐる鉄道全路線 国鉄・JR』28号・釧網本線/石北本線 (Weekly. Exploring through History: All Railway Lines. JNR and JR. No. 28. Senmo Main Line, Sekihoku Main Line). Japan: 朝日新聞出版 (Asahi Shimbun Publishing). pp. 14–15.