Arashiyama Station (Keifuku)

The station includes a small shopping arcade, outdoor eating areas, a foot bath, a garden featuring cherry and maple trees, as well as the "Kimono Forest," a collection of 600 kimono gowns wrapped around poles with LED lighting inside[4][5] developed by the interior designer Yasumichi Morita.

[6] This line started at Arashiyama and headed westward towards Kiyotaki via the Kiyotaki Tunnel, where passengers would transfer to a narrow-gauge funicular to proceed their journey to the top of Mt.

[6] In 1944 the Atagosan Railway was abandoned, just two years after the Keifuku Electric Railroad seized operation of the Arashiyama Line.

In 2002 the "Arashiyama Hannari Hokkori Square" plaza was built, with the addition of the iconic foot bath in 2004.

The station consists of three platforms at ground level, with a wheelchair-accessible concourse and ticket barriers.

The "Kimono Forest" lit at night
Arashiyama station (Keifuku), with train, Kimono forest around, and Arashiyama mountain on the background