Gangxia North station is an interchange station for Line 2, Line 10, Line 11 and Line 14 of the Shenzhen Metro. Line 2 platforms opened on 28 June 2011,[1] Line 10, Line 11[2] and Line 14 platforms[3][4] opened on 28 October 2022.[5] Measuring 220,000 meters square, it is 1.6 times as large as the nearby intermodal Futian station.[6] It is the second four-line interchange hub in Shenzhen after Chegongmiao station.
Shenzhen Central Garden, Tianjian Century Garden, Yasongju, Shenzhen Contemporary Art And Urban Planning
Exit 7
Xinghe Century Building, Zhuoyue Center, Jindi Center, Bank of China Building, Zhongzhou building
Exit 12
Greater China International Trading Center, Fuhua New Village, Shenda New Village, Futian Middle School, Shenzhen International Culture Building, Gangxia Village, Jialin Haoting, Caitian Mingyuan, Wenwei Building
Exit 16
North side of Shennan Boulevard, The First Vocational Technical School of Shenzhen, International Innovation Center, Postal Savings Bank of China, Futian District Administrative Service Hall
Exit 18
North side of Shennan Boulevard, Caitian Road, Hongjia Hotel, CGN Building, Pingan International Hotel, Huarun Wanjia, Phoenix Mansion
Exit 19
Fujian Building, Tianmian New Village, Tianmian City Building, Green Oasis School, Fuli Garden, The First Vocational Technical School of Shenzhen (Futian Campus), Caidecheng, Fujing Building, International Talent Building, Futian Science and Technology Plaza, Caixia Pavilion, Zhenye Garden, Fulian Garden, Changfu Garden
Accident
On 7 July 2018, during the construction of the Line 10 part of the station, four electric cables were broken, leading to a massive power cut at the nearby buildings. The broken cables were repaired six days later.[7][8]
Gallery
Line 2 platform
Line 2 concourse
Line 11 reversing platform
Line 11 reserved eastbound platform, currently not in use
Line 14 originating platform
Line 10 northbound platform, towards Shuangyong Street
Line 10 southbound platform, towards Futian Checkpoint
References
^"地铁2号线下周试运营" (in Chinese (China)). 深圳新闻网. 2010-12-23. Archived from the original on 2015-06-04. Retrieved 2011-06-24.