Kyoto Line (Kintetsu)


The Kyoto Line (京都線, Kyōto sen) is a Japanese railway line owned and operated by the Kintetsu Railway, a private railway operator. It connects the cities of Kyoto, Uji, and Nara, and competes with the Nara Line of West Japan Railway Company (JR-West), which also connects those cities.

Kyoto Line
A limited express train
Overview
Native name京都線
OwnerThe logo of the Kintetsu Railway Company. Kintetsu Railway
Line numberB
LocaleKyoto Prefecture
Nara Prefecture
Termini
Stations26
Color on map     (#e7a61a)
Service
Type
SystemThe logo of the Kintetsu Railway Company. Kintetsu Railway
Operator(s)Kintetsu Railway
Depot(s)
  • Shin-Tanabe
  • Saidaiji
  • Miyazu
History
Opened3 November 1928; 95 years ago (1928-11-03)
Technical
Line length34.6 km (21.5 mi)
Number of tracksDouble-track
Character
  • Heavy rail
  • Commuter rail
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification1,500 V DC (Overhead line)
Operating speed105 km/h (65 mph)
SignallingAutomatic closing block
Train protection systemKintetsu ATS, ATS-SP
Route map

Kintetsu Lines unless noted

JR-West lines
 B01 
Kyōto
0.0
closed 1946
Hachijō
 B02 
Tōji
0.9
Kujō
Kyoto Tram
Kujō Line
 B03 
Jūjō
1.5
Jūjō
 B04 
Kamitobaguchi
2.5
Kuinabashi
Takeda Depot
 B05 
Takeda
3.6
4.9
Fushimi
 B06 
original JNR Nara Line
Tambabashi
6.0
Kintetsu Tambabashi
 B07 
Fushimi Momoyama
6.5
Momoyamagoryōmae
 B08 
Yodo-Gawa Bridge
over Uji River
8.6
Mukaijima
 B09 
 B10 
Ogura
11.4
 B11 
Iseda
12.7
 B12 
Ōkubo
13.6
Shinden
 B13 
Kutsukawa
14.6
 B14 
Terada
15.9
 B15 
Tonoshō
17.4
Kizu-Gawa Bridge
over Kizu River
Kizugawa
closed 1974
Shin-Tanabe Depot
Kyōtanabe
19.6
Shin-Tanabe
 B16 
Dōshisha-mae
21.1
Kōdo
 B17 
JR Miyamaki
22.4
Miyamaki
 B18 
 
Miyazu
23.1
 
Kintetsu
Depot
 
Miyazu
 
 B19 
Shimokoma
24.4
Komada
 B20 
Hōsono
26.7
Shin-Hōsono
 B21 
28.2
Kizugawadai
 B22 
29.2
Yamadagawa
 B23 
30.8
Takanohara
 B24 
33.5
Heijō
 B25 
34.6
Yamato-Saidaiji
 B26 
Kintetsu Nara
Nara Line
 A28 
Saidaiji Depot

Many trains on the line continue to the Nara Line to Kintetsu Nara Station or the Kashihara Line via Yamato-Saidaiji Station. The line also provides the through train services with the Karasuma Line of Kyoto Municipal Subway.

History edit

The Kyoto Line was built by Nara Electric Railway (奈良電気鉄道, Nara Denki Tetsudō) in November 1928 as dual track electrified at 600 V DC. The track between Kyoto Station and Horiuchi Station (present-day Kintetsu-Tambabashi Station) was placed on the site of a removed railway, which had been rerouted and is now called the JR Nara Line.[1]

The railway provided the through services to the lines of Kintetsu (originally, Osaka Electric Tramway) from the beginning. As of September 1961, Kintetsu was the largest shareholder of Nara Electric Railway with 980,000 shares out of the company's 1.9 million shares, while Keihan Electric Railway owned 710,000 shares. Through a deal between the two major shareholders, the shares owned by Keihan were transferred to Kintetsu in April 1962 and the company was merged into Kintetsu from October 1963.[1]

Between 1945 and 1968, there were through services with the Keihan Main Line using crossovers at Tambabashi.[2] The line voltage was increased to 1,500 V DC in 1969, and in 1988 through services with the Karasuma Line were introduced.[citation needed]

Stations edit

  • S: All trains stop
  • M: Only express trains operated from Kyoto to Kintetsu Miyazu stop
  • X: limited stop of limited express trains (northbound in the morning and southbound in the evening and night)
  • |: Trains pass
  • Local trains stop at every station between Kyoto and Yamato-Saidaiji.
  • SE: Semi-express
  • Ex: Express
  • LE: Limited express
No.NameJapaneseDistance
(km)
SEExLETransfersLocation
 B01 Kyōto京都0.0SSSShimogyō-ku, KyotoKyoto Prefecture
 B02 Tōji東寺0.9SS|Minami-ku, Kyoto
 B03 Jūjō十条1.5|||
 B04 Kamitobaguchi上鳥羽口2.5|||Fushimi-ku, Kyoto
 B05 Takeda竹田3.6SS| Karasuma Line (K15)
 B06 Fushimi伏見4.9|||
 B07 Kintetsu-Tambabashi近鉄丹波橋6.0SSS Keihan Main Line (Tambabashi) (KH30)
 B08 Momoyamagoryōmae桃山御陵前6.5SS|
 B09 Mukaijima向島8.6S||
 B10 Ogura小倉11.4S||Uji
 B11 Iseda伊勢田12.7S||
 B12 Ōkubo大久保13.6SS|
 B13 Kutsukawa久津川14.6S||Jōyō
 B14 Terada寺田15.9S||
 B15 Tonoshō富野荘17.4S||
 B16 Shin-Tanabe新田辺19.6SS|Kyōtanabe
 B17 Kōdo興戸21.1M|
 B18 Miyamaki三山木22.4M|
 B19 Kintetsu Miyazu近鉄宮津23.1M|
 B20 Komada狛田24.4||Seika
 B21 Shin-Hōsono新祝園26.7SSH Gakkentoshi Line (Hōsono) (JR-H20)
 B22 Kizugawadai木津川台28.2||
 B23 Yamadagawa山田川29.2||
 B24 Takanohara高の原30.8SXNaraNara Prefecture
 B25 Heijō平城33.5||
 B26 Yamato-Saidaiji大和西大寺34.6SSB Kashihara Line (through service) (B26)
A Kintetsu-Nara Line (A26)

Trains down to

References edit

This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wiki How.

  1. ^ a b Takayama, Reizō (December 1992). "奈良電の時代" [The Era of Naraden]. The Railway Pictorial (in Japanese). No. 569. Denkisha Kenkyūkai Tetsudōtosho Kankōkai. p. 124.
  2. ^ Teramoto, Mitsuteru (December 1991). "京阪 列車・運転の移り変わり" [Transition of Keihan trains and operation]. The Railway Pictorial (in Japanese). No. 553. Denkisha Kenkyūkai Tetsudōtosho Kankōkai. p. 94.

External links edit