fbpx
Wikipedia

Yunoyama Line

The Yunoyama Line (湯の山線, Yunoyama-sen) is a railway line of the Japanese private railway company Kintetsu Railway, connecting Kintetsu-Yokkaichi Station (Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture) and Yunoyama-Onsen Station (Komono, Mie Prefecture) in Japan.

Yunoyama Line
Local bound for Yunoyama
Overview
Owner Kintetsu Railway
Line numberK
LocaleMie Prefecture
YokkaichiKomono
Termini
Stations10
Color on map     (#1B3DB0)
Service
TypeRegional rail
Commuter rail
SystemKintetsu Railway
Operator(s)Kintetsu Railway
History
Opened24 September 1913; 110 years ago (1913-09-24)
Last extension5 March 1916; 108 years ago (1916-03-05)
Technical
Line length15.4 km (9.6 mi)
Number of tracks1
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification1,500 V DC (Overhead line)
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph)
SignallingAutomatic closed block
Train protection systemKintetsu ATS
Route map

All lines are Kintetsu unless otherwise noted

Nagoya
Yunoyama Line
0.0
Kintetsu Yokkaichi
(Suwa)
Nagoya Line
Yunoyama-Utsube link - Closed 1964
1.7
Nakagawara
2.8
Ise-Matsumoto
(Matsumotomura)
5.3
Ise-Kawashima
(Kawashimamura)
6.7
Takatsuno
8.7
Sakura
(Sakuramura)
11.3
Komono
12.6
Naka-Komono
13.5
Ōbane-en
15.4
Yunoyama-Onsen
(Yunoyama)

The line connects with the Nagoya Line and Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Utsube Line at Kintetsu-Yokkaichi Station.

History edit

Yokkaichi Railway edit

The Yunoyama Line was originally conceived and built by Yokkaichi Railway (四日市鉄道, Yokkaichi Tetsudō)) in the 1910s. It was constructed with the purposes of providing access in the city of Yokkaichi and providing tourists access to the Yunoyama area. The line was completed in 1913 and in 1916 an extension from the line's origin, Kintetsu-Yokkaichi (at that time called Suwa Station and located slightly to the east), to JR Yokkaichi was added. However, this extension had a relatively short life as part of the Yunoyama Line as it was sold to Ise Electric Railway (Iseden) in 1927, who used it for the extension of their main line from Yokkaichi to Kuwana. This made Suwa Station, a hub between three private railways and the biggest station in Yokkaichi, the origin again. Steam engines originally ran on the tracks; in the 1920s the line was electrified, following a trend of many railways in the area.

Ownership of the line has shifted. Yokkaichi Railway created the line. It was absorbed by Mie Railway (Santetsu) in 1931, who built and operated the nearby Utsube Line which also originated from Suwa Station at that time. Then in 1944, Santetsu, with six other companies, merged to form Mie Transport (Sanco). Twenty years later, the railway department of Sanco split off to become a separate company called Mie Electric Railway (Sanden). This organization was short-lived as it was bought up by railway giant Kinki Nippon Railway (Kintetsu) the following year, and thus in 1965 the line came under its current name and ownership.

Renovation edit

In 1954 the beginning of the route received a significant re-routing at the hands of Sanco, the owner. The Nagoya Line suffered from many sharp curves on its way through Yokkaichi to Suwa Station. Kintetsu developed a plan to straighten the line as well as enlarge Suwa Station, which would be moved about a kilometer to the west. Construction began in 1952 and took a few years to be completed. In accordance with this plan, Sanco altered its own Yokkaichi-area railways in 1956 to use the new location of Suwa Station, which was renamed to Kintetsu-Yokkaichi Station. From Nakagawara Station, the track that ran to the old Suwa Station was closed and a new track was built to Kintetsu-Yokkaichi. After this new section was completed, the Yunoyama Line originated from the part of Kintetsu-Yokkaichi Station where the Utsube Line still originates today; the two lines had the same track gauge at that time and connected directly with each other.

About 10 years later, in 1964, when Sanden took over the railway, more improvements were carried out even though Sanden only owned the line for about one year. Yokkaichi Railway constructed the line with an especially narrow gauge of 762 mm (2 ft 6 in). In the interest of direct connection with the Kintetsu Nagoya Line, the technical specs of the line were altered to match those of the Nagoya Line; the Yunoyama Line gauge was widened to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge and the voltage was increased to 1500 V. These changes severed the direct connection with the Utsube Line, however, direct connection with the Nagoya Line, a major railway trunk line, was seen as more beneficial.

When Kintetsu acquired the line the following year, it was relatively painless to tie the two lines together and it soon began offering limited express service directly from Uehommachi in Osaka and Nagoya to Yunoyama, aimed at attracting tourists to the onsen and nearby Mount Gozaisho. This service was offered for over 30 years but was ceased in 1998 due to insufficient ridership. Limited express trains that originated at Kintetsu-Yokkaichi continued to run the length of the Yunoyama Line for a few more years, but this service was ended in 2004. The Yunoyama Line is notable because it is the only one of Kintetsu's many small branch lines to have offered limited express service.

Timeline edit

  • June 1, 1913 – Kawashimamura (now Ise-Kawashima) ~ Yunoyama (now Yunoyama-Onsen) section opened by Yokkaichi Railway.
  • September 24, 1913 – Suwa (now Kintetsu-Yokkaichi) ~ Kawashimamura section opens.
  • March 3, 1916 – Yokkaichi (Kokutetsu) ~ Suwa section opens.
  • November 1, 1921 – Entire line electrified.
  • November 29, 1927 – Yokkaichi – Suwa section closes. Suwa becomes the origin of the line.
  • March 1, 1931 – Yokkaichi Railway is absorbed by Mie Railway (Santetsu).
  • February 1, 1944 – Matsumotomura Station officially renamed Ise-Matsumoto Station.
  • February 11, 1944 – Santetsu and six other companies merge to form Mie Transport (Sanco). Connection with Utsube Line opens. Officially renamed Sanco Mie Line.
  • July 1, 1954 – Kawashimamura Station officially renamed Ise-Kawashima Station. Sakuramura Station officially renamed Sakura Station.
  • September 23, 1956 – Suwa Station closed, moved, and re-opened as Kintetsu-Yokkaichi Station. Suwa ~ Nakagawara section closes. Kintetsu-Yokkaichi ~ Nakagawara section opens.
  • February 1, 1964 – Sanco railway division splits off and forms a new company Mie Electric Railway (Sanden).
  • March 23, 1964 – Ōbane-en Station opens. Voltage along line increased to 1500 V. Entire line re-gauged from 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge. Direct connection with Utsube Line closes. Direct connection with Nagoya Line opens.
  • April 1, 1965 – Sanden, and all of its lines, are acquired by Kinki Nippon Railway (Kintetsu). Line officially renamed Kintetsu Yunoyama Line.
  • July 15, 1965 – Direct limited express service from Osaka and Nagoya begins.
  • October 17, 1968 – ATS system activated on entire line.
  • August 1, 1970 – Yunoyama Station officially renamed to Yunoyama-Onsen Station.
  • March 11, 1973 – Elevated portion of the Kintetsu-Yokkaichi ~ Nakagawara section is completed and opens.
  • March 17, 1998 – Direct limited express service from Osaka and Nagoya ends.
  • March 18, 2004 – Limited express service along the line ends.

Service edit

Local (普通 futsū)

  For Yokkaichi
  For Yunoyama-Onsen
Locals stop at every station.
All trains offer conductor-less (one man) service.
Trains run twice per hour during the day, three or four times per hour in the mornings and evenings.

Limited express service on the Yunoyama Line ended in 2004.

2008 limited express service edit

Direct limited express service to and from Nagoya will be temporarily resumed on weekends and holidays in late July and early August 2008 in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Gozaisho Ropeway as well as the 40th anniversary of Suzuka National Park. These trains will run once a day in each direction.[1] Limited express trains on the Yunoyama Line will go from Kintetsu-Yokkaichi to Yunoyama-Onsen without stopping.

Stations edit

No. Station Distance
(km)
Connections Location
 K21  Kintetsu-Yokkaichi 近鉄四日市 0.0 E Nagoya Line
Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Utsube Line
Yokkaichi Mie
Prefecture
 K22  Nakagawara 中川原 1.7
 K23  Ise-Matsumoto 伊勢松本 2.8
 K24  Ise-Kawashima 伊勢川島 5.3
 K25  Takatsuno 高角 6.7
 K26  Sakura 8.7
 K27  Komono 菰野 11.3 Komono
 K28  Naka-Komono 中菰野 12.6
 K29  Ōbane-en 大羽根園 13.5
 K30  Yunoyama-Onsen 湯の山温泉 15.4

References edit

  • (in Japanese) Kintetsu Line Archives - Yunoyama Line
  • (in Japanese) Wikipedia - Kintetsu Yunoyama Line

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ (in Japanese) Temporary resumption of the Nagoya ~ Yunoyama-Onsen limited express direct service: 2008-05-13 (PDF). Kintetsu.

External links edit

  • Kintetsu railway network map - Yunoyama Line
  • (in Japanese) Main Terminal - Kintetsu Yunoyama Line

yunoyama, line, 湯の山線, yunoyama, railway, line, japanese, private, railway, company, kintetsu, railway, connecting, kintetsu, yokkaichi, station, yokkaichi, prefecture, yunoyama, onsen, station, komono, prefecture, japan, local, bound, yunoyamaoverviewownerkint. The Yunoyama Line 湯の山線 Yunoyama sen is a railway line of the Japanese private railway company Kintetsu Railway connecting Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station Yokkaichi Mie Prefecture and Yunoyama Onsen Station Komono Mie Prefecture in Japan Yunoyama LineLocal bound for YunoyamaOverviewOwnerKintetsu RailwayLine numberKLocaleMie PrefectureYokkaichi KomonoTerminiKintetsu YokkaichiYunoyama OnsenStations10Color on map 1B3DB0 ServiceTypeRegional railCommuter railSystemKintetsu RailwayOperator s Kintetsu RailwayHistoryOpened24 September 1913 110 years ago 1913 09 24 Last extension5 March 1916 108 years ago 1916 03 05 TechnicalLine length15 4 km 9 6 mi Number of tracks1Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification1 500 V DC Overhead line Operating speed80 km h 50 mph SignallingAutomatic closed blockTrain protection systemKintetsu ATSRoute mapAll lines are Kintetsu unless otherwise noted Legend Nagoya Nagoya Line Yunoyama Line 0 0 Kintetsu Yokkaichi Suwa Nagoya Line Yunoyama Utsube link Closed 1964 Utsube Line 1 7 Nakagawara 2 8 Ise Matsumoto Matsumotomura 5 3 Ise Kawashima Kawashimamura 6 7 Takatsuno Higashi Meihan Expressway 8 7 Sakura Sakuramura 11 3 Komono 12 6 Naka Komono 13 5 Ōbane en 15 4 Yunoyama Onsen Yunoyama The line connects with the Nagoya Line and Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Utsube Line at Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station Contents 1 History 1 1 Yokkaichi Railway 1 2 Renovation 1 3 Timeline 2 Service 2 1 2008 limited express service 3 Stations 4 References 5 Footnotes 6 External linksHistory editYokkaichi Railway edit The Yunoyama Line was originally conceived and built by Yokkaichi Railway 四日市鉄道 Yokkaichi Tetsudō in the 1910s It was constructed with the purposes of providing access in the city of Yokkaichi and providing tourists access to the Yunoyama area The line was completed in 1913 and in 1916 an extension from the line s origin Kintetsu Yokkaichi at that time called Suwa Station and located slightly to the east to JR Yokkaichi was added However this extension had a relatively short life as part of the Yunoyama Line as it was sold to Ise Electric Railway Iseden in 1927 who used it for the extension of their main line from Yokkaichi to Kuwana This made Suwa Station a hub between three private railways and the biggest station in Yokkaichi the origin again Steam engines originally ran on the tracks in the 1920s the line was electrified following a trend of many railways in the area Ownership of the line has shifted Yokkaichi Railway created the line It was absorbed by Mie Railway Santetsu in 1931 who built and operated the nearby Utsube Line which also originated from Suwa Station at that time Then in 1944 Santetsu with six other companies merged to form Mie Transport Sanco Twenty years later the railway department of Sanco split off to become a separate company called Mie Electric Railway Sanden This organization was short lived as it was bought up by railway giant Kinki Nippon Railway Kintetsu the following year and thus in 1965 the line came under its current name and ownership Renovation edit In 1954 the beginning of the route received a significant re routing at the hands of Sanco the owner The Nagoya Line suffered from many sharp curves on its way through Yokkaichi to Suwa Station Kintetsu developed a plan to straighten the line as well as enlarge Suwa Station which would be moved about a kilometer to the west Construction began in 1952 and took a few years to be completed In accordance with this plan Sanco altered its own Yokkaichi area railways in 1956 to use the new location of Suwa Station which was renamed to Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station From Nakagawara Station the track that ran to the old Suwa Station was closed and a new track was built to Kintetsu Yokkaichi After this new section was completed the Yunoyama Line originated from the part of Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station where the Utsube Line still originates today the two lines had the same track gauge at that time and connected directly with each other About 10 years later in 1964 when Sanden took over the railway more improvements were carried out even though Sanden only owned the line for about one year Yokkaichi Railway constructed the line with an especially narrow gauge of 762 mm 2 ft 6 in In the interest of direct connection with the Kintetsu Nagoya Line the technical specs of the line were altered to match those of the Nagoya Line the Yunoyama Line gauge was widened to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge and the voltage was increased to 1500 V These changes severed the direct connection with the Utsube Line however direct connection with the Nagoya Line a major railway trunk line was seen as more beneficial When Kintetsu acquired the line the following year it was relatively painless to tie the two lines together and it soon began offering limited express service directly from Uehommachi in Osaka and Nagoya to Yunoyama aimed at attracting tourists to the onsen and nearby Mount Gozaisho This service was offered for over 30 years but was ceased in 1998 due to insufficient ridership Limited express trains that originated at Kintetsu Yokkaichi continued to run the length of the Yunoyama Line for a few more years but this service was ended in 2004 The Yunoyama Line is notable because it is the only one of Kintetsu s many small branch lines to have offered limited express service Timeline edit June 1 1913 Kawashimamura now Ise Kawashima Yunoyama now Yunoyama Onsen section opened by Yokkaichi Railway September 24 1913 Suwa now Kintetsu Yokkaichi Kawashimamura section opens March 3 1916 Yokkaichi Kokutetsu Suwa section opens November 1 1921 Entire line electrified November 29 1927 Yokkaichi Suwa section closes Suwa becomes the origin of the line March 1 1931 Yokkaichi Railway is absorbed by Mie Railway Santetsu February 1 1944 Matsumotomura Station officially renamed Ise Matsumoto Station February 11 1944 Santetsu and six other companies merge to form Mie Transport Sanco Connection with Utsube Line opens Officially renamed Sanco Mie Line July 1 1954 Kawashimamura Station officially renamed Ise Kawashima Station Sakuramura Station officially renamed Sakura Station September 23 1956 Suwa Station closed moved and re opened as Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station Suwa Nakagawara section closes Kintetsu Yokkaichi Nakagawara section opens February 1 1964 Sanco railway division splits off and forms a new company Mie Electric Railway Sanden March 23 1964 Ōbane en Station opens Voltage along line increased to 1500 V Entire line re gauged from 762 mm 2 ft 6 in to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge Direct connection with Utsube Line closes Direct connection with Nagoya Line opens April 1 1965 Sanden and all of its lines are acquired by Kinki Nippon Railway Kintetsu Line officially renamed Kintetsu Yunoyama Line July 15 1965 Direct limited express service from Osaka and Nagoya begins October 17 1968 ATS system activated on entire line August 1 1970 Yunoyama Station officially renamed to Yunoyama Onsen Station March 11 1973 Elevated portion of the Kintetsu Yokkaichi Nakagawara section is completed and opens March 17 1998 Direct limited express service from Osaka and Nagoya ends March 18 2004 Limited express service along the line ends Service editLocal 普通 futsu nbsp For Yokkaichi nbsp For Yunoyama Onsen Locals stop at every station All trains offer conductor less one man service Trains run twice per hour during the day three or four times per hour in the mornings and evenings Limited express service on the Yunoyama Line ended in 2004 2008 limited express service edit Direct limited express service to and from Nagoya will be temporarily resumed on weekends and holidays in late July and early August 2008 in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Gozaisho Ropeway as well as the 40th anniversary of Suzuka National Park These trains will run once a day in each direction 1 Limited express trains on the Yunoyama Line will go from Kintetsu Yokkaichi to Yunoyama Onsen without stopping Stations editNo Station Distance km Connections Location K21 Kintetsu Yokkaichi 近鉄四日市 0 0 E Nagoya LineYokkaichi Asunarou Railway Utsube Line Yokkaichi MiePrefecture K22 Nakagawara 中川原 1 7 K23 Ise Matsumoto 伊勢松本 2 8 K24 Ise Kawashima 伊勢川島 5 3 K25 Takatsuno 高角 6 7 K26 Sakura 桜 8 7 K27 Komono 菰野 11 3 Komono K28 Naka Komono 中菰野 12 6 K29 Ōbane en 大羽根園 13 5 K30 Yunoyama Onsen 湯の山温泉 15 4References edit in Japanese Kintetsu Line Archives Yunoyama Line in Japanese Wikipedia Kintetsu Yunoyama LineFootnotes edit in Japanese Temporary resumption of the Nagoya Yunoyama Onsen limited express direct service 2008 05 13 PDF Kintetsu External links editKintetsu railway network map Yunoyama Line in Japanese Main Terminal Kintetsu Yunoyama Line Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yunoyama Line amp oldid 1139444570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.