station is under renovation. It is actually the third last station of Line 1, Beijing Subway. Before May 28, 2007, two Line 1 trains stopped by this station each day to allow students of the vocational school and workers to alight; one stopped in the morning and one stopped in the evening. The station is served by several public bus routes, some of which bypass Pingguoyuan station. Of the four entrances/exits, only one was readily accessible until the station's full closure; the other three entrances/exits were sealed with cementlong ago, and the remaining entrance is locked behind a metal gate. Since the station's full closure, trains no longer stop at the station; however, some trains pass by the station to reverse by traveling through a balloon loop west of the station. In 2020, the station is under renovation. The total station size is about 10000 m2, of which the existing underground area is 4271 m2, the newly-build underground area is 1962 m2, and the newly-build ground-level area is 4257 m2. The station is located near the Metro Drivers' Vocational School. The station will also serve the nearby Beijing Banking & Insurance Business Park.
Gaojing station (53#/No. 101)
Gaojing station, the "second-to-last" station, is located in the Beijing Military Region. There are two side platforms with space for two tracks, one of which has been left unbuilt.
Heishitou station (54#)
Although officially a defunct railway station, Heishitou station is often considered a disused station on Line 1 by the general public, probably due to its location on a disused China Railway military-only branch line which happens to link to line 1. There are two side platforms with space for two tracks. The name of the Heishitou station is derived from its proximity to the nearby Heishitou Village located in Shijingshan District, Beijing, in the Western Hills. There is a secret bunker-like facility used as an underground command centre by the Chinese military dating back to the 1950s, thus rendering this part of the Western Hills inaccessible to the public.
Beyond Heishitou station
After Heishitou station, there is a connection to the, also located in Beijing's Western Hills.