Disney Resort station

Disney Resort

迪士尼
Shanghai Metro
Concourse of Disney Resort station
Station concourse
Chinese name
Chinese迪士尼
Literal meaningDisney
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDíshìní
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingdik6 si6 nei4
General information
LocationShanghai Disney Resort, Pudong New Area, Shanghai
China
Coordinates31°08′36″N 121°39′49″E / 31.143429°N 121.663737°E / 31.143429; 121.663737
Operated byShanghai No. 2 Metro Operation Co. Ltd.
Line(s)     Line 11
Platforms2 (1 island platform)
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeUnderground
AccessibleYes
History
OpenedApril 26, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-04-26) (operational)
June 16, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-06-16) (official)
Services
Preceding station Shanghai Metro Following station
Terminus Line 11 Kangxin Highway
Route map
 21 
to Tanghuang Road
(opening 2026)
1
2
Shanghai Disney Resort
theme park entrance
Bus stops
 21 
to Dongjing Road
(opening 2026)
Location
Disney Resort is located in Shanghai
Disney Resort
Disney Resort
Location in Shanghai

Disney Resort (Chinese: 迪士尼; pinyin: Díshìní) is a station on Line 11 of the Shanghai Metro in Shanghai's Pudong New Area. Located within the Shanghai Disney Resort complex, it serves as the eastern terminus of Line 11 and also a transportation hub for travel to and within the resort area. The station opened on April 26, 2016, and is known for its design, including a blue color scheme, fantasy elements, and skylight roof, and is fully accessible.

History

The station opened for "soft" passenger trial operation on April 26, 2016, two months prior to the opening of the Shanghai Disney Resort. During the trial period, due to the continuing construction around the metro station, passengers were suggested to avoid using the station.[1] The station was ready for full passenger operation with the opening of the resort complex on June 16, 2016.[2]

Description

The station is located within the Shanghai Disney Resort complex, just east of the gates to Shanghai Disneyland Park and north of Wishing Star Park and overlooking the Wishing Star Lake. On the north side of the station is a bus terminal which provides bus services to areas throughout the park.[3]

The station structure itself is semi-underground,[4] with the concourse located at street level and the platform one level below. Located at concourse level are ticket machines, fare gates, and customer service counters. There are four entrances to the station. Toilets are available on the platform level, at the west end, within the fare-paid zone. Like all stations on Line 11, Disney Resort Station is fully accessible. There are two elevators which connect the concourse level to the platform.[5]

For the extension to this station, three of Line 11's 60 trains have been decorated with Disney elements, similar to the Hong Kong Disneyland Resort line. However, unlike its Hong Kong counterpart, the line's Disney livery is not as extensive, since the line is primarily a commuter metro line that serves other suburban districts of Shanghai, as opposed to a dedicated line servicing mostly resort guests. The station itself incorporates a blue color scheme that highlights fantasy elements, which was selected by a public poll. A skylight ceiling above the concourse level brings natural light indoors.[4]

Service

Service is provided daily at this station from 06:00 to 22:30. During the weekday morning and evening rush hour period, all trains departing Disney Resort station head for North Jiading. At all other times, both North Jiading and Huaqiao-bound trains begin their trips at the station.

Exits

There are four exits of the station:

  • Exit 1: Disneyland, west side
  • Exit 2: Wishing Star Park, south side
  • Exit 3: East Shendi Road, east side
  • Exit 4: Bus terminal, north side[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Shanghai Shentong Metro Group Co., Ltd. (2016-04-25). "Disney Resort Station's Soft Operation at 10:00 on Apr. 26". Shanghai Metro. Retrieved 2018-01-02.
  2. ^ Smith, Thomas (2016-02-22). "Shanghai Disneyland Resort Opens June 16". Disney. Archived from the original on June 22, 2016.
  3. ^ OpenStreetMap contributors (2017-12-27). "Disney Resort" (Map). "Disney Resort". Retrieved 2018-01-02. {{cite map}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  4. ^ a b Yang, Jian (2014-01-23). "Disney-decor trains to run on Metro extension to Shanghai Disneyland - Shanghai Daily". Shanghai Daily.
  5. ^ a b Shanghai Shentong Metro Group Co., Ltd. 车站信息. Shanghai Metro (in Chinese). Retrieved 2018-01-02.