History
Nakayama Stop opened on 20 February 1908 as a Tosa Electric Railway stop when the Konai — Edagawa segment of the Ino Line was placed in service. It was suspended on 16 January 1943 and reopened on 22 February 1949; the stop is sometimes recorded as having borne the name 'Nakayama-dōri' before the wartime suspension. On 1 October 2014, after the consolidation of Tosa Electric Railway with Kōchi Kenkō Kōtsū and Tosaden Dream Service to form Tosaden Kōtsū, the stop passed to the new operator.
History summarized from Japanese & English Wikipedia · last reviewed 2026-05-22.
Notes
Nakayama Stop is a single-track halt with two platforms offset diagonally on either side of the road; the Ino-bound platform is marked only by white lines painted on the roadway. Beside it National Route 33 carries volume retailers and shops along a stretch of recent residential development.