History
Higashi-Nakano opened on 14 June 1906 as Kashiwagi Station on the private Kōbu Railway, accepting passengers via what is now the east exit. The line was nationalised on 1 October 1906 and assigned to the Chūō Higashi Line (Chūō Main Line from 1911) on 12 October 1909. The station was renamed Higashi-Nakano on 1 January 1917, with a west entrance added in a 1928 expansion. A 5 December 1988 rear-end collision at Higashi-Nakano killed two people and accelerated JR's adoption of ATS-P automatic train stop across the Tokyo network. Toei Line 12 (renamed Ōedo Line on 20 April 2000) opened a deep-level platform here on 19 December 1997, 38.8 m underground — Tokyo's second-deepest subway station.
History summarized from Japanese & English Wikipedia · last reviewed 2026-05-18.
Notes
The cherry trees and rape flowers on the embankment northwest of the JR platforms, along the curve toward Mei-dai Nakano High School, are a noted photo spot in spring; JR East's station stamp for Higashi-Nakano takes the cherry-blossom theme from this stretch of track.