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Tokyo Monorail

The Tokyo Monorail (東京モノレール, Tōkyō Monorēru), officially the Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport Line (東京モノレール羽田空港線, Tōkyō Monorēru Haneda Kūkō sen), is a straddle-beam, Alweg-type monorail line in Tokyo, Japan. It is an airport rail link that connects Tokyo International Airport (Haneda) to Tokyo's Ōta, Shinagawa, and Minato wards. The 17.8-kilometer (11.1 mi) line serves 11 stations between the Monorail Hamamatsuchō and Haneda Airport Terminal 2 stations. It runs on a predominantly elevated north–south route that follows the western coast of Tokyo Bay. The monorail is operated by the Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd., which is jointly owned by JR East, the system's rolling stock supplier Hitachi, and ANA Holdings, Inc. (the holding company of All Nippon Airways). It carried an average of 140,173 passengers per day in 2018.

Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport Line
A train passing through Haneda Airport
Overview
Native name東京モノレール羽田空港線
OwnerTokyo Monorail Co., Ltd.
LocaleTokyo, Japan
Termini
Stations11
WebsiteTokyo Monorail
Service
TypeStraddle-beam monorail (Alweg-type)
SystemHitachi
Daily ridership140,173 (2018, average)[1]
History
Opened17 September 1964 (1964-09-17)
Technical
Line length17.8 km (11.1 mi)
CharacterElevated and underground[2]
Minimum radius120 m (390 ft)
Operating speed
  • 45 km/h (28 mph) (average)
  • 80 km/h (50 mph) (top)
Route diagram

Plans to build Japan's first airport rail link surfaced in 1959 as Tokyo was preparing to host the 1964 Summer Olympics. That year, the Yamato Kanko Co., Ltd.—later renamed the Tokyo Monorail Co.—was established to build the rail connection. Construction began in 1963 and completed on 17 September 1964, just 23 days ahead of the Olympic opening ceremony. Upon opening, the monorail operated between the Hamamatsuchō and Haneda stations, making no intermediate stops. It has since been expanded with infill stations and extensions, and there are plans to extend it to Tokyo Station in the future.

The Tokyo Monorail is one of two rail lines serving the airport, the other being the Keikyū Airport Line. At Hamamatsuchō Station, passengers may transfer to the Keihin–Tōhoku and Yamanote lines of JR East, as well as the Asakusa and Oedo lines of the Toei Subway via nearby Daimon Station. The monorail also connects with Tokyo Waterfront Area Rapid Transit's Rinkai Line at Tennōzu Isle Station.

Early history edit

 
Haneda Airport in the 1950s

Tokyo's Haneda Airport had emerged as the country's international gateway by the time Japan's commercial aviation industry recovered from the Second World War in the early 1950s. In 1959, the airport recorded approximately 910,000 total passengers and expected many more for the coming 1964 Summer Olympics. That same year, the government unveiled a plan for a central Tokyo-to-airport rail link. Opponents of the rail line briefly countered with a proposal to extend the Tokyo Expressway instead, but fears that this would only worsen vehicular congestion led to a preference for rail.[3]: 9 

In August 1959, the Yamato Kanko Co., Ltd. was established to build the rail line; it renamed to Japan Elevated Railway Co., Ltd. a year later. The company applied for a route license to build a straddle-beam, Alweg-type monorail in January 1960, which the Japanese government granted the following December.[4] The company selected Alweg due to two factors. First, the company's president, Tetsuzo Inumaru, was an old friend of Dr. Axel Wenner-Gren, the founder of Alweg. Second, Hitachi, which would build the line, was keen on further developing the technology.[3]: 9 

Project planners originally intended the monorail line to extend from Haneda Airport to Shimbashi or Tokyo Station,[5] and the license that had been acquired allowed building it up to either station.[6]: 3  However, opposition from residents living near the Shibaura Canal, which had been part of the proposed route,[7] as well as cost overruns during the construction of the Tōkaidō Shinkansen, which drained government subsidies, resulted in a shortened route from the airport to Hamamatsuchō Station. To further minimize costs, the line was routed over other public waterways donated by local municipalities, which eliminated the need to acquire expensive private land, but reclaimed parts of Tokyo Bay, as well as rivers and canals. The resulting alignment removed a number of fishing and aquatic farming operations, and local fishing cooperatives had their licences revoked by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government. Among them was a seaweed harvesting field in Ōta Ward that had produced a premium brand of nori since the Edo period called Omori no nori.[5]

The Ministry of Transport authorized the monorail project in December 1961.[3]: 9  A groundbreaking ceremony was held on 1 May 1963, and the subsequent construction of the line progressed rapidly.[8]: 248  In May 1964, Japan Elevated Railway Co., Ltd. again changed its name to Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd.[4] The line cost a total of ¥21.1 billion (equivalent to approximately $60 million in 1964 dollars[9]), of which ¥20 billion was spent for construction and ¥1.1 billion on rolling stock.[3]: 9  Hitachi built the first-generation cars in Japan under license of Alweg (through the Hitachi–Alweg joint venture). Upon its inauguration, the Tokyo Monorail became the world's first commercial monorail service and Japan's first airport rail connection.[10][11]

Service commenced on 17 September 1964, 23 days ahead of the Olympic opening ceremony on 10 October.[12][13] At the time of opening, the Tokyo Monorail ran a total length of 13.1 kilometers (8.1 mi) and served only its termini: Hamamatsuchō Station and the airport. Most of the artificial islands in Tokyo Bay had not yet been reclaimed, and the line mostly ran over water.[14][15] The price for a one-way ticket was ¥250,[16][17] which was relatively more expensive than other available options at the time. It was notably cheaper to take a taxi with four people to the airport than to ride the monorail. A recession following the Olympics resulted in a decrease in airport arrivals, which severely affected ridership. In 1966, the Tokyo Monorail was forced to reduce the price of its fare to ¥150 to attract more passengers.[15]

Infill stations and later expansions edit

 
Construction of Haneda Airport Terminal 3 Station, then-named Haneda Airport International Terminal Station, in 2009

Ōi Keibajō Mae became the monorail's first infill station upon its completion in May 1965. It was originally built as a temporary station above the water along the coast and only operated on days when an event was taking place at Ohi Racecourse. Its permanent replacement opened two years later. The city government subsequently reclaimed the area around this station and developed a housing complex known as Yashio Park Town [ja].[15] In November 1967, an overpass connecting the monorail platform to the JR platforms of Hamamatsuchō Station was completed.[4] Between 1967 and 1993, four more stations were built along the original alignment; these were Haneda Seibijō, later renamed Seibijō (1967); Shin Heiwajima, later renamed Ryūtsū Center (1969); Shōwajima (1985); and Tennōzu Isle (1992).[6]: 3 

When the monorail began operating, the passenger terminal at Haneda Airport was located on the west side of the airfield, south of Seibijō, and this was the southern end of the line. Upon the opening of a new passenger terminal—now Terminal 1—in 1993, the monorail was extended to a new platform and another station, Shin Seibijō, was built for the employees of nearby maintenance facilities.[6]: 4  Meanwhile, the former airport passenger terminal was razed and the monorail tunnel beneath it abandoned to make room for an extension of Runway B.[18] The original Haneda Station, which was abandoned along with the tunnel, was rebuilt farther west along the new section of tracks and renamed Tenkūbashi Station in November 1998.[19] Although the rails were removed and its entrance walled off, the now-unused tunnel remains otherwise intact today below the Runway B extension.[18]

The monorail has continued to adapt and expand with the terminal changes and expansions of Haneda Airport. A single-station, 0.9-kilometer (0.56 mi) extension to the airport's then new Terminal 2 opened on 1 December 2004, and resulted in the renaming of the existing Haneda Airport Station to Haneda Airport Terminal 1 Station. The opening of a passing loop at Shōwajima allowed for the operation of express services from 18 March 2007.[4] A new infill station to serve the airport's new International Terminal opened on 21 October 2010. On 14 March 2020, the three stations serving Haneda Airport were renamed to coincide with the renaming of the International Terminal to Terminal 3. In Japanese, the word "building" (ビル, biru) in the station names was modified to "terminal" (ターミナル, tāminaru). From north–south, the stations are Haneda Airport Terminal 3 Station (羽田空港第3ターミナル駅), Haneda Airport Terminal 1 Station (羽田空港第1ターミナル駅), and Haneda Airport Terminal 2 Station (羽田空港第2ターミナル駅).[20][21]

Planned extension to Tokyo Station edit

In June 2009, Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd., formally notified the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport of its intent to convert the present single-track terminal at Hamamatsucho, which has remained unchanged since 1964, into a dual-track, dual-platform structure. To be built in six and a half years at an estimated cost of ¥26 billion, this would increase the line's capacity from 18 to 24 trains per hour and lay the groundwork for a long-mooted extension to Shimbashi Station.[22] In August 2014, plans were revealed to extend the line from Hamamatsucho to Tokyo Station, running alongside the Yamanote Line tracks between Shimbashi and Tokyo at a cost of ¥109.5 billion with construction taking approximately ten years.[23][24] However, in 2021 JR East has announced the construction of the Haneda Airport Access Line which will connect Tokyo Station with conventional rail.

New terminus at Hamamatsucho Station edit

As part of a redevelopment of World Trade Center Building, a new monorail station will be built at Hamamatsucho Station. It is scheduled to be completed by 2027.[25]

Monorail train, 2016

Route edit

The Tokyo Monorail is 17.8 kilometers (11.1 mi) long and traverses Tokyo's Minato, Shinagawa, and Ōta wards.[6]: 12  From its northern terminus at Monorail Hamamatsuchō Station, the line travels southbound as it crosses over the Yamanote, Keihin–Tōhoku, Ueno–Tokyo, Tōkaidō Main, and Tokaido Shinkansen lines.[26] Upon entering Shibaura, it follows the edge of canals surrounded by artificial islands.[27] On an artificial island within Kōnan [ja] just east of Shinagawa Station and the main campus of Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology,[28] the monorail starts to follow the Shuto Expressway Haneda Route alignment with a stop at Tennōzu Isle.[29]

Service patterns edit

The following three service types operate on the line:

  •   Local (普通, Futsū)
  •   Rapid (区間快速, Kukan Kaisoku)
  •   Haneda Express (空港快速, Kūkō Kaisoku)

Tokyo Monorail trains operate on an average headway of four minutes. This can be as short as three minutes and 20 seconds during peak hours.[6]: 2 [30]: 33  "Local" trains stop at every station, with end-to-end travel taking 24 minutes. "Rapid" trains bypass the Shōwajima, Seibijō, Tenkūbashi, Shin Seibijō stations, and take 21 minutes to travel across the line. "Haneda Express" trains make non-stop runs between Monorail Hamamatsuchō Station and Haneda Airport; these trains arrive at Haneda Airport Terminal 3 in 13 minutes, Haneda Airport Terminal 1 in 16 minutes, and Haneda Airport Terminal 2 in 18 minutes.[31] The Tokyo Monorail started operating "Rapid" (快速, Kaisoku) trains in December 2001, which departed from Haneda Airport at 11:50 pm; these trains began running all day three years later. In March 2007, the monorail replaced its original "Rapid" service with the two existing "Haneda Express" and "Rapid" service patterns.[4]

Stations edit

Key
Stops at this station
| Skips this station
No. Image Name Japanese Distance Local Rapid Haneda
Express
Connections and notes[31] Location
MO01
 
Monorail Hamamatsuchō モノレール浜松町 0.0 km (0 mi) JK Keihin–Tōhoku Line
JY Yamanote Line
A Asakusa Line (via Daimon Station)
E Oedo Line (via Daimon Station)
Minato
MO02
 
Tennōzu Isle 天王洲アイル 4.0 km (2.5 mi) R Rinkai Line Shinagawa
MO03
 
Ōi Keibajō Mae 大井競馬場前 7.1 km (4.4 mi) |
MO04
 
Ryūtsū Center 流通センター 8.7 km (5.4 mi) | Ōta
MO05
 
Shōwajima 昭和島 9.9 km (6.2 mi) | |
MO06
 
Seibijō 整備場 11.8 km (7.3 mi) | |
MO07
 
Tenkūbashi 天空橋 12.6 km (7.8 mi) | | KK Keikyū Airport Line
MO08
 
Haneda Airport Terminal 3 羽田空港第3ターミナル 14.0 km (8.7 mi) KK Keikyū Airport Line
Name changed from Haneda Airport International Terminal Station (羽田空港国際線ビル駅) on 14 March 2020.[20]
MO09
 
Shin Seibijō 新整備場 16.1 km (10.0 mi) | |
MO10
 
Haneda Airport Terminal 1 羽田空港第1ターミナル 16.9 km (10.5 mi) KK Keikyū Airport Line (via Haneda Airport Terminal 1·2 Station)
Name changed in Japanese from 羽田空港第1ビル駅 on 14 March 2020.[20]
MO11
 
Haneda Airport Terminal 2 羽田空港第2ターミナル 17.8 km (11.1 mi) KK Keikyū Airport Line (via Haneda Airport Terminal 1·2 Station)
Name changed in Japanese from 羽田空港第2ビル駅 on 14 March 2020.[20]

Rolling stock edit

All rolling stock that has ever been operated in the Tokyo Monorail since inauguration are built by Hitachi Rail. As of 2020, the Tokyo Monorail operates three train types: 1000 series, 2000 series, and most recently, 10000 series. All trainsets run in a six-car configuration and are capable of running at speeds of up to 80 km/h (50 mph). Each car has a combination of aisle-facing bench seats, forward and rear-facing seats, and seats in the center of the aisle. The latter is because the train floor is lower than the diameter of the load bearing wheels above the top of the beam, unlike trains built for newer Japanese Alweg monorails. The trains also feature extra space for hand luggage, as a convenience for air travelers. These trains are stored and maintained at Shōwajima Depot beside Shōwajima Station during off-service hours. The 1000 series trains were introduced from 1989, and the 2000 series trains were introduced from 1997.[32]

From 18 July 2014, the first of a fleet of new 10000 series 6-car trains was introduced, replacing the older 1000 series trains.[32][33]

Former rolling stock edit

Former rolling stock once used on Tokyo Monorail include the 100/200/300/350 series (from 1964 until 1978), 500 series (from 1969 until 1991), 600 series (from 1977 until 1997), and 700/800 series (from 1982 until 1998).

Service edit

The Tokyo Monorail operates from around 5:00 a.m. to midnight with over 500 trains. The first departure towards the airport leaves at 04:58 and the last departure is at 00:01. Towards Hamamatsuchō, the first departure is at 05:11 and the final departure is at 00:05 (final departure serving all stations at 23:38). Passengers using the monorail to travel to the airport can take advantage of check-in facilities at Hamamatsuchō. Japan's domestic airlines (JAL, ANA, Skymark Airlines, and Air Do) have check-in counters and ticket machines right at the station. It carried its 1.5 billionth passenger on January 24, 2007.[34]

An alternative to the monorail is the Keikyu Airport Line between the airport and Shinagawa Station. Both railways compete with bus services.

Ownership edit

The monorail line is owned and operated by the Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. (東京モノレール株式会社, Tōkyō Monorēru Kabushiki-gaisha). In 1967, the Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. merged with Hitachi Transport Co., Ltd. and Western Hitachi Transport Co., Ltd. to form Hitachi Transport Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. after Hitachi Transport System acquired an 81-percent share of the company.[8]: 11  The company re-established as the Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. in 1981.[8]: 19–21  JR East acquired a 70-percent majority share of the company from Hitachi Transport System in 2002, with the remaining 30 percent going to Hitachi, Ltd.[8]: 73  As of March 2019, the Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. is divided between JR East (79 percent), Hitachi (12 percent), and All Nippon Airways' holding company, ANA Holdings Inc. (9 percent).[8]: 74 

Operation and maintenance edit

The Shōwajima Center (昭和島車両基地, Shōwajima sharyō kichi), located next to Shōwajima Station, is the operations and maintenance center of the Tokyo Monorail. The complex houses an operations control room that controls the movement of trains, a power control room that controls the line's power supply, a vehicle maintenance and storage depot where cars are inspected and serviced, a track and trolley inspection and maintenance depot, and a crew depot.

Fares edit

 
Fare gates and ticket vending machines at Seibijō Station

As of 2020, the Tokyo Monorail offers multiple fare types with varying lengths of validity and terms of use. One-way tickets, which are valid for the day of purchase, may be used to travel between two stations without making intermediate stops. Return tickets are similar but allow for a return trip; these are valid if returning to any Haneda Airport station within 10 days and to other stations within two weeks. Multiple-trip tickets are sold in books of 11 and are valid for two to three months. The purchase of "school commutation" multiple-trip tickets requires proof of a student discount certificate with the Open University of Japan. Groups of 15 or more can acquire discounted group tickets.[35] A special discount ticket is offered to riders needing to transfer to the Yamanote Line.[36] Commuter and travel passes are also available.[35] The Tokyo Monorail began accepting the contactless smart card Suica on 21 April 2002.[8]: 260  It began issuing its own "Monorail Suica" cards in 2009.[37] The monorail also accepts the regional Pasmo card and the Japan Rail Pass.[38][39]

Fares may be purchased from ticket vending machines at any monorail station.[40] As of June 2020, Tokyo Monorail tickets can also be purchased from machines at the following airports: Fukuoka Airport, Hakodate Airport, Hiroshima Airport, Itami and Kansai airports in Osaka, Kagoshima Airport, Kumamoto Airport, Nagasaki Airport, Naha Airport, New Chitose Airport in Sapporo, Oita Airport, Okayama Airport, Takamatsu Airport, and Toyama Airport.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ [Company Profile] (in Japanese). Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Archived from the original on May 12, 2019. Retrieved May 12, 2019.
  2. ^ (PDF). Hitachi Rail. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 6, 2019. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e モノレールヒストリー [Monorail History] (in Japanese). Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Whiting, Robert (October 24, 2014). "Negative impact of 1964 Olympics profound". The Japan Times. p. 14. Retrieved May 12, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e (PDF). Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. 2010. Archived from the original on May 11, 2019. Retrieved May 11, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ Kusamachi, Yoshikazu (March 25, 2018). [Why does Tokyo Monorail end at Hamamatsuchō? Will the north extension remain a "vision"?]. Norimono News (in Japanese). Archived from the original on September 5, 2019. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Corporate History Editorial Committee (September 2014), 東京モノレール50年史 1964-2014 [Tokyo Monorail 50 Years History 1964-2014] (in Japanese), Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd.
  8. ^ "Tokyo monorail wins its comeback fight". Business Week. No. 2131–2139. McGraw Hill. 1970. p. 56.
  9. ^ "Tokyo Monorial Service Opened". Railway Gazette: 793. October 2, 1964.
  10. ^ "Tokyo monorail opened". The Railway Magazine. No. 763. November 1964. p. 862.
  11. ^ Terada, Hirokazu (January 19, 2013). データブック日本の私鉄 [Databook: Japan's Private Railways] (in Japanese). Japan: Neko Publishing. p. 53. ISBN 978-4-7770-1336-4.
  12. ^ The Haneda monorail Modern Railways issue 431 August 1984 page 406
  13. ^ @JPNatArchives (September 17, 2016). 昭和39年(1964)、東京モノレールが開業しました。開業当時、羽田空港・浜松町間には途中駅がなく、区間13.1kmを約15分で結んだそうです。画像は、開業時の路線図です。#モノレール [The Tokyo Monorail opened in 1964. At the time of opening, there was no station on the way between Haneda Airport and Hamamatsucho, and the 13.1-km route took about 15 minutes. The image is a route map at the time of opening. #monorail] (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved August 14, 2020 – via Twitter.
  14. ^ a b c [Tokyo Monorail 50 years: Development history of the bay from the view of a train window]. Nihon Keizai Shimbun (in Japanese). September 5, 2014. Archived from the original on September 5, 2019. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  15. ^ Kamizawa, Hiroyuki (14 February 2015). [(Tokyo Olympics Story) Hamamatsucho–Haneda Monorail opens, airport in 15 minutes, construction rushed]. Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 12 May 2019.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ [Tokyo Monorail Opens]. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). September 17, 1964. Archived from the original on June 7, 2014. Retrieved September 4, 2019.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  17. ^ a b Imoto, Keisuke (December 16, 2010). [Haneda Airport History] (in Japanese). 地図. pp. 11–13. Archived from the original on August 29, 2018. Retrieved November 28, 2013.
  18. ^ Okuyama, Seijiro (September 17, 2014). [Tokyo Monorail 50th Anniversary: Vanished "Haneda Station", actually small "Tenkubashi"]. withnews [ja] (in Japanese). Archived from the original on March 6, 2020. Retrieved March 5, 2020.
  19. ^ a b c d [Three stations at Haneda Airport (Haneda Airport International Terminal Building Station, Haneda Airport Building 1 Station, Haneda Airport Building 1 Station) change names] (PDF) (Press release) (in Japanese). Tokyo Monorail. December 16, 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 16, 2019. Retrieved March 5, 2020.
  20. ^ 東京モノレール 羽田空港の3つの駅名変更 [Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport changes 3 station names] (in Japanese). NHK. March 14, 2020. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  21. ^ 東京モノレール/浜松町駅を複線化/事業費260億円、東京駅延伸も視野 [Tokyo Monorail: Double-tracking of Hamamatsucho Station - Project cost 26 billion yen, extension to Tokyo also eyed]. The Daily Engineering & Construction News (in Japanese). The Nikkan Kensetsu Kogyo Shinbun. 24 June 2009.
  22. ^ 東京モノレールが「終点・東京駅」構想 [Plans for Tokyo Monorail to terminate at Tokyo Station]. News 24 (in Japanese). Japan: Nippon Television Network Corporation. 20 August 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  23. ^ . Railway Gazette International. 22 August 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-08-26. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
  24. ^ "浜松町駅「世界貿易センター」再開発で何が変わる". toyokeiza. 18 July 2021. Retrieved 2021-08-04.
  25. ^ Google (January 6, 2020). "Hamamatsuchō Station" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  26. ^ Google (August 22, 2020). "Shibaura" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
  27. ^ Google (August 22, 2020). "Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology Shinagawa Campus" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
  28. ^ Google (August 22, 2020). "Tennozu Isle Station" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
  29. ^ Yamaguchi, Takuma; Nishino, Toru; Ueki, Naoji; Hirano, Syuji (2014). "Development of 10000 Series Rolling Stock for Tokyo Monorail" (PDF). Hitachi Review. 63 (10): 33–37. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  30. ^ a b "Timetables / Fares / Access Information". Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  31. ^ a b . MSN Sankei News (in Japanese). Japan: The Sankei Shimbun & Sankei Digital. 10 September 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-09-12. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
  32. ^ 指原莉乃が出発進行!東京モノレールに新型車両、「和」デザイン [New Tokyo Monorail train with "Wa" design seen off by Rino Sashihara]. Sponichi Annex (in Japanese). Japan: Sports Nippon Newspapers. 18 July 2014. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  33. ^ "1.5 billionth rides monorail to Haneda". The Japan Times. The Japan Times Ltd. 2007-01-24. Retrieved 2007-01-24.
  34. ^ a b "About Tickets". Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  35. ^ "Monorail and Yamanote Line Discount Ticket". Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  36. ^ [About the launching of the new Monorail Suica] (PDF) (in Japanese). Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. April 6, 2009. Archived from the original on April 19, 2009. Retrieved April 19, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  37. ^ モノレールSuicaとは [What is Monorail Suica] (in Japanese). Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  38. ^ "The Tokyo Monorail: Haneda Airport to Tokyo". Japan Railways Group. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
  39. ^ "Purchasing tickets". Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  40. ^ きっぷのご案内 [Ticket Information] (in Japanese). Tokyo Monorail Co., Ltd. Retrieved May 23, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • L.W. Demery, R. Forty, R. DeGroote and J.W. Higgins, Electric Railways of Japan (Interurbans- Tramways-Metros) Vol.1: Tokyo and Northern Japan. Light Rail Transit Association, 1983.
  • Kusamachi, Yoshikazu (June 2009). 再発見!! モノレールの魅力 [Rediscovering the fascination of monorails]. Japan Railfan Magazine (in Japanese). Vol. 49, no. 578. Koyusha Co., Ltd. pp. 114–118.

External links edit

  • Official site

tokyo, monorail, 東京モノレール, tōkyō, monorēru, officially, haneda, airport, line, 東京モノレール羽田空港線, tōkyō, monorēru, haneda, kūkō, straddle, beam, alweg, type, monorail, line, tokyo, japan, airport, rail, link, that, connects, tokyo, international, airport, haneda, to. The Tokyo Monorail 東京モノレール Tōkyō Monoreru officially the Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport Line 東京モノレール羽田空港線 Tōkyō Monoreru Haneda Kukō sen is a straddle beam Alweg type monorail line in Tokyo Japan It is an airport rail link that connects Tokyo International Airport Haneda to Tokyo s Ōta Shinagawa and Minato wards The 17 8 kilometer 11 1 mi line serves 11 stations between the Monorail Hamamatsuchō and Haneda Airport Terminal 2 stations It runs on a predominantly elevated north south route that follows the western coast of Tokyo Bay The monorail is operated by the Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd which is jointly owned by JR East the system s rolling stock supplier Hitachi and ANA Holdings Inc the holding company of All Nippon Airways It carried an average of 140 173 passengers per day in 2018 Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport LineA train passing through Haneda AirportOverviewNative name東京モノレール羽田空港線OwnerTokyo Monorail Co Ltd LocaleTokyo JapanTerminiMonorail Hamamatsuchō north Haneda Airport Terminal 2 south Stations11WebsiteTokyo MonorailServiceTypeStraddle beam monorail Alweg type SystemHitachiDaily ridership140 173 2018 average 1 HistoryOpened17 September 1964 1964 09 17 TechnicalLine length17 8 km 11 1 mi CharacterElevated and underground 2 Minimum radius120 m 390 ft Operating speed45 km h 28 mph average 80 km h 50 mph top Route diagramLegendJK JY to Shimbashi and TokyoMonorail Hamamatsuchō JK JY A EJK JY to Tamachi and ShinagawaTennōzu Isle RŌi Keibajō MaeRyutsu CenterShōwajimaSeibijōTenkubashi KKHaneda Airport Terminal 3 KKShin SeibijōHaneda Airport Terminal 1 KKHaneda Airport Terminal 2 KKThis diagram viewtalkeditPlans to build Japan s first airport rail link surfaced in 1959 as Tokyo was preparing to host the 1964 Summer Olympics That year the Yamato Kanko Co Ltd later renamed the Tokyo Monorail Co was established to build the rail connection Construction began in 1963 and completed on 17 September 1964 just 23 days ahead of the Olympic opening ceremony Upon opening the monorail operated between the Hamamatsuchō and Haneda stations making no intermediate stops It has since been expanded with infill stations and extensions and there are plans to extend it to Tokyo Station in the future The Tokyo Monorail is one of two rail lines serving the airport the other being the Keikyu Airport Line At Hamamatsuchō Station passengers may transfer to the Keihin Tōhoku and Yamanote lines of JR East as well as the Asakusa and Oedo lines of the Toei Subway via nearby Daimon Station The monorail also connects with Tokyo Waterfront Area Rapid Transit s Rinkai Line at Tennōzu Isle Station Contents 1 Early history 2 Infill stations and later expansions 2 1 Planned extension to Tokyo Station 2 2 New terminus at Hamamatsucho Station 3 Route 3 1 Service patterns 3 2 Stations 4 Rolling stock 4 1 Former rolling stock 5 Service 5 1 Ownership 5 2 Operation and maintenance 5 3 Fares 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly history edit nbsp Haneda Airport in the 1950sTokyo s Haneda Airport had emerged as the country s international gateway by the time Japan s commercial aviation industry recovered from the Second World War in the early 1950s In 1959 the airport recorded approximately 910 000 total passengers and expected many more for the coming 1964 Summer Olympics That same year the government unveiled a plan for a central Tokyo to airport rail link Opponents of the rail line briefly countered with a proposal to extend the Tokyo Expressway instead but fears that this would only worsen vehicular congestion led to a preference for rail 3 9 In August 1959 the Yamato Kanko Co Ltd was established to build the rail line it renamed to Japan Elevated Railway Co Ltd a year later The company applied for a route license to build a straddle beam Alweg type monorail in January 1960 which the Japanese government granted the following December 4 The company selected Alweg due to two factors First the company s president Tetsuzo Inumaru was an old friend of Dr Axel Wenner Gren the founder of Alweg Second Hitachi which would build the line was keen on further developing the technology 3 9 Project planners originally intended the monorail line to extend from Haneda Airport to Shimbashi or Tokyo Station 5 and the license that had been acquired allowed building it up to either station 6 3 However opposition from residents living near the Shibaura Canal which had been part of the proposed route 7 as well as cost overruns during the construction of the Tōkaidō Shinkansen which drained government subsidies resulted in a shortened route from the airport to Hamamatsuchō Station To further minimize costs the line was routed over other public waterways donated by local municipalities which eliminated the need to acquire expensive private land but reclaimed parts of Tokyo Bay as well as rivers and canals The resulting alignment removed a number of fishing and aquatic farming operations and local fishing cooperatives had their licences revoked by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Among them was a seaweed harvesting field in Ōta Ward that had produced a premium brand of nori since the Edo period called Omori no nori 5 The Ministry of Transport authorized the monorail project in December 1961 3 9 A groundbreaking ceremony was held on 1 May 1963 and the subsequent construction of the line progressed rapidly 8 248 In May 1964 Japan Elevated Railway Co Ltd again changed its name to Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd 4 The line cost a total of 21 1 billion equivalent to approximately 60 million in 1964 dollars 9 of which 20 billion was spent for construction and 1 1 billion on rolling stock 3 9 Hitachi built the first generation cars in Japan under license of Alweg through the Hitachi Alweg joint venture Upon its inauguration the Tokyo Monorail became the world s first commercial monorail service and Japan s first airport rail connection 10 11 Service commenced on 17 September 1964 23 days ahead of the Olympic opening ceremony on 10 October 12 13 At the time of opening the Tokyo Monorail ran a total length of 13 1 kilometers 8 1 mi and served only its termini Hamamatsuchō Station and the airport Most of the artificial islands in Tokyo Bay had not yet been reclaimed and the line mostly ran over water 14 15 The price for a one way ticket was 250 16 17 which was relatively more expensive than other available options at the time It was notably cheaper to take a taxi with four people to the airport than to ride the monorail A recession following the Olympics resulted in a decrease in airport arrivals which severely affected ridership In 1966 the Tokyo Monorail was forced to reduce the price of its fare to 150 to attract more passengers 15 Infill stations and later expansions edit nbsp Construction of Haneda Airport Terminal 3 Station then named Haneda Airport International Terminal Station in 2009Ōi Keibajō Mae became the monorail s first infill station upon its completion in May 1965 It was originally built as a temporary station above the water along the coast and only operated on days when an event was taking place at Ohi Racecourse Its permanent replacement opened two years later The city government subsequently reclaimed the area around this station and developed a housing complex known as Yashio Park Town ja 15 In November 1967 an overpass connecting the monorail platform to the JR platforms of Hamamatsuchō Station was completed 4 Between 1967 and 1993 four more stations were built along the original alignment these were Haneda Seibijō later renamed Seibijō 1967 Shin Heiwajima later renamed Ryutsu Center 1969 Shōwajima 1985 and Tennōzu Isle 1992 6 3 When the monorail began operating the passenger terminal at Haneda Airport was located on the west side of the airfield south of Seibijō and this was the southern end of the line Upon the opening of a new passenger terminal now Terminal 1 in 1993 the monorail was extended to a new platform and another station Shin Seibijō was built for the employees of nearby maintenance facilities 6 4 Meanwhile the former airport passenger terminal was razed and the monorail tunnel beneath it abandoned to make room for an extension of Runway B 18 The original Haneda Station which was abandoned along with the tunnel was rebuilt farther west along the new section of tracks and renamed Tenkubashi Station in November 1998 19 Although the rails were removed and its entrance walled off the now unused tunnel remains otherwise intact today below the Runway B extension 18 The monorail has continued to adapt and expand with the terminal changes and expansions of Haneda Airport A single station 0 9 kilometer 0 56 mi extension to the airport s then new Terminal 2 opened on 1 December 2004 and resulted in the renaming of the existing Haneda Airport Station to Haneda Airport Terminal 1 Station The opening of a passing loop at Shōwajima allowed for the operation of express services from 18 March 2007 4 A new infill station to serve the airport s new International Terminal opened on 21 October 2010 On 14 March 2020 the three stations serving Haneda Airport were renamed to coincide with the renaming of the International Terminal to Terminal 3 In Japanese the word building ビル biru in the station names was modified to terminal ターミナル taminaru From north south the stations are Haneda Airport Terminal 3 Station 羽田空港第3ターミナル駅 Haneda Airport Terminal 1 Station 羽田空港第1ターミナル駅 and Haneda Airport Terminal 2 Station 羽田空港第2ターミナル駅 20 21 Planned extension to Tokyo Station edit In June 2009 Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd formally notified the Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport of its intent to convert the present single track terminal at Hamamatsucho which has remained unchanged since 1964 into a dual track dual platform structure To be built in six and a half years at an estimated cost of 26 billion this would increase the line s capacity from 18 to 24 trains per hour and lay the groundwork for a long mooted extension to Shimbashi Station 22 In August 2014 plans were revealed to extend the line from Hamamatsucho to Tokyo Station running alongside the Yamanote Line tracks between Shimbashi and Tokyo at a cost of 109 5 billion with construction taking approximately ten years 23 24 However in 2021 JR East has announced the construction of the Haneda Airport Access Line which will connect Tokyo Station with conventional rail New terminus at Hamamatsucho Station edit As part of a redevelopment of World Trade Center Building a new monorail station will be built at Hamamatsucho Station It is scheduled to be completed by 2027 25 source source source source source source source source Monorail train 2016Route editThe Tokyo Monorail is 17 8 kilometers 11 1 mi long and traverses Tokyo s Minato Shinagawa and Ōta wards 6 12 From its northern terminus at Monorail Hamamatsuchō Station the line travels southbound as it crosses over the Yamanote Keihin Tōhoku Ueno Tokyo Tōkaidō Main and Tokaido Shinkansen lines 26 Upon entering Shibaura it follows the edge of canals surrounded by artificial islands 27 On an artificial island within Kōnan ja just east of Shinagawa Station and the main campus of Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology 28 the monorail starts to follow the Shuto Expressway Haneda Route alignment with a stop at Tennōzu Isle 29 Service patterns edit The following three service types operate on the line Local 普通 Futsu Rapid 区間快速 Kukan Kaisoku Haneda Express 空港快速 Kukō Kaisoku Tokyo Monorail trains operate on an average headway of four minutes This can be as short as three minutes and 20 seconds during peak hours 6 2 30 33 Local trains stop at every station with end to end travel taking 24 minutes Rapid trains bypass the Shōwajima Seibijō Tenkubashi Shin Seibijō stations and take 21 minutes to travel across the line Haneda Express trains make non stop runs between Monorail Hamamatsuchō Station and Haneda Airport these trains arrive at Haneda Airport Terminal 3 in 13 minutes Haneda Airport Terminal 1 in 16 minutes and Haneda Airport Terminal 2 in 18 minutes 31 The Tokyo Monorail started operating Rapid 快速 Kaisoku trains in December 2001 which departed from Haneda Airport at 11 50 pm these trains began running all day three years later In March 2007 the monorail replaced its original Rapid service with the two existing Haneda Express and Rapid service patterns 4 Stations edit Key Stops at this station Skips this stationNo Image Name Japanese Distance Local Rapid HanedaExpress Connections and notes 31 LocationMO 01 nbsp Monorail Hamamatsuchō モノレール浜松町 0 0 km 0 mi JK Keihin Tōhoku LineJY Yamanote LineA Asakusa Line via Daimon Station E Oedo Line via Daimon Station MinatoMO 02 nbsp Tennōzu Isle 天王洲アイル 4 0 km 2 5 mi R Rinkai Line ShinagawaMO 03 nbsp Ōi Keibajō Mae 大井競馬場前 7 1 km 4 4 mi MO 04 nbsp Ryutsu Center 流通センター 8 7 km 5 4 mi ŌtaMO 05 nbsp Shōwajima 昭和島 9 9 km 6 2 mi MO 06 nbsp Seibijō 整備場 11 8 km 7 3 mi MO 07 nbsp Tenkubashi 天空橋 12 6 km 7 8 mi KK Keikyu Airport LineMO 08 nbsp Haneda Airport Terminal 3 羽田空港第3ターミナル 14 0 km 8 7 mi KK Keikyu Airport LineName changed from Haneda Airport International Terminal Station 羽田空港国際線ビル駅 on 14 March 2020 20 MO 09 nbsp Shin Seibijō 新整備場 16 1 km 10 0 mi MO 10 nbsp Haneda Airport Terminal 1 羽田空港第1ターミナル 16 9 km 10 5 mi KK Keikyu Airport Line via Haneda Airport Terminal 1 2 Station Name changed in Japanese from 羽田空港第1ビル駅 on 14 March 2020 20 MO 11 nbsp Haneda Airport Terminal 2 羽田空港第2ターミナル 17 8 km 11 1 mi KK Keikyu Airport Line via Haneda Airport Terminal 1 2 Station Name changed in Japanese from 羽田空港第2ビル駅 on 14 March 2020 20 Rolling stock editAll rolling stock that has ever been operated in the Tokyo Monorail since inauguration are built by Hitachi Rail As of 2020 update the Tokyo Monorail operates three train types 1000 series 2000 series and most recently 10000 series All trainsets run in a six car configuration and are capable of running at speeds of up to 80 km h 50 mph Each car has a combination of aisle facing bench seats forward and rear facing seats and seats in the center of the aisle The latter is because the train floor is lower than the diameter of the load bearing wheels above the top of the beam unlike trains built for newer Japanese Alweg monorails The trains also feature extra space for hand luggage as a convenience for air travelers These trains are stored and maintained at Shōwajima Depot beside Shōwajima Station during off service hours The 1000 series trains were introduced from 1989 and the 2000 series trains were introduced from 1997 32 From 18 July 2014 the first of a fleet of new 10000 series 6 car trains was introduced replacing the older 1000 series trains 32 33 Current fleet nbsp 1000 series nbsp 2000 series nbsp 10000 series Former rolling stock edit Former rolling stock once used on Tokyo Monorail include the 100 200 300 350 series from 1964 until 1978 500 series from 1969 until 1991 600 series from 1977 until 1997 and 700 800 series from 1982 until 1998 Service editThe Tokyo Monorail operates from around 5 00 a m to midnight with over 500 trains The first departure towards the airport leaves at 04 58 and the last departure is at 00 01 Towards Hamamatsuchō the first departure is at 05 11 and the final departure is at 00 05 final departure serving all stations at 23 38 Passengers using the monorail to travel to the airport can take advantage of check in facilities at Hamamatsuchō Japan s domestic airlines JAL ANA Skymark Airlines and Air Do have check in counters and ticket machines right at the station It carried its 1 5 billionth passenger on January 24 2007 34 An alternative to the monorail is the Keikyu Airport Line between the airport and Shinagawa Station Both railways compete with bus services Ownership edit The monorail line is owned and operated by the Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd 東京モノレール株式会社 Tōkyō Monoreru Kabushiki gaisha In 1967 the Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd merged with Hitachi Transport Co Ltd and Western Hitachi Transport Co Ltd to form Hitachi Transport Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd after Hitachi Transport System acquired an 81 percent share of the company 8 11 The company re established as the Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd in 1981 8 19 21 JR East acquired a 70 percent majority share of the company from Hitachi Transport System in 2002 with the remaining 30 percent going to Hitachi Ltd 8 73 As of March 2019 update the Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd is divided between JR East 79 percent Hitachi 12 percent and All Nippon Airways holding company ANA Holdings Inc 9 percent 8 74 Operation and maintenance edit The Shōwajima Center 昭和島車両基地 Shōwajima sharyō kichi located next to Shōwajima Station is the operations and maintenance center of the Tokyo Monorail The complex houses an operations control room that controls the movement of trains a power control room that controls the line s power supply a vehicle maintenance and storage depot where cars are inspected and serviced a track and trolley inspection and maintenance depot and a crew depot Fares edit nbsp Fare gates and ticket vending machines at Seibijō StationAs of 2020 update the Tokyo Monorail offers multiple fare types with varying lengths of validity and terms of use One way tickets which are valid for the day of purchase may be used to travel between two stations without making intermediate stops Return tickets are similar but allow for a return trip these are valid if returning to any Haneda Airport station within 10 days and to other stations within two weeks Multiple trip tickets are sold in books of 11 and are valid for two to three months The purchase of school commutation multiple trip tickets requires proof of a student discount certificate with the Open University of Japan Groups of 15 or more can acquire discounted group tickets 35 A special discount ticket is offered to riders needing to transfer to the Yamanote Line 36 Commuter and travel passes are also available 35 The Tokyo Monorail began accepting the contactless smart card Suica on 21 April 2002 8 260 It began issuing its own Monorail Suica cards in 2009 37 The monorail also accepts the regional Pasmo card and the Japan Rail Pass 38 39 Fares may be purchased from ticket vending machines at any monorail station 40 As of June 2020 update Tokyo Monorail tickets can also be purchased from machines at the following airports Fukuoka Airport Hakodate Airport Hiroshima Airport Itami and Kansai airports in Osaka Kagoshima Airport Kumamoto Airport Nagasaki Airport Naha Airport New Chitose Airport in Sapporo Oita Airport Okayama Airport Takamatsu Airport and Toyama Airport 41 See also edit nbsp Tokyo portal nbsp Trains portalMonorails in JapanReferences edit 会社概要 Company Profile in Japanese Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Archived from the original on May 12 2019 Retrieved May 12 2019 Case Study Heavy Duty Performance Tokyo Monorail PDF Hitachi Rail 2014 Archived from the original PDF on December 6 2019 Retrieved September 4 2019 a b c d Hirota Ryosuke March 1999 Air Rail Links in Japan 35 Years Old and Healthier than Ever PDF Japan Railway amp Transport Review 19 Retrieved August 22 2019 a b c d e モノレールヒストリー Monorail History in Japanese Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved May 23 2020 a b Whiting Robert October 24 2014 Negative impact of 1964 Olympics profound The Japan Times p 14 Retrieved May 12 2019 a b c d e Tokyo Monorail Company Profile PDF Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd 2010 Archived from the original on May 11 2019 Retrieved May 11 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Kusamachi Yoshikazu March 25 2018 東京モノレール なぜ浜松町発着 北への延伸は 幻 に終わるか Why does Tokyo Monorail end at Hamamatsuchō Will the north extension remain a vision Norimono News in Japanese Archived from the original on September 5 2019 Retrieved September 4 2019 a b c d e f Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Corporate History Editorial Committee September 2014 東京モノレール50年史 1964 2014 Tokyo Monorail 50 Years History 1964 2014 in Japanese Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Tokyo monorail wins its comeback fight Business Week No 2131 2139 McGraw Hill 1970 p 56 Tokyo Monorial Service Opened Railway Gazette 793 October 2 1964 Tokyo monorail opened The Railway Magazine No 763 November 1964 p 862 Terada Hirokazu January 19 2013 データブック日本の私鉄 Databook Japan s Private Railways in Japanese Japan Neko Publishing p 53 ISBN 978 4 7770 1336 4 The Haneda monorail Modern Railways issue 431 August 1984 page 406 JPNatArchives September 17 2016 昭和39年 1964 東京モノレールが開業しました 開業当時 羽田空港 浜松町間には途中駅がなく 区間13 1kmを約15分で結んだそうです 画像は 開業時の路線図です モノレール The Tokyo Monorail opened in 1964 At the time of opening there was no station on the way between Haneda Airport and Hamamatsucho and the 13 1 km route took about 15 minutes The image is a route map at the time of opening monorail Tweet in Japanese Retrieved August 14 2020 via Twitter a b c 東京モノレール50年 車窓から見た湾岸開発史 Tokyo Monorail 50 years Development history of the bay from the view of a train window Nihon Keizai Shimbun in Japanese September 5 2014 Archived from the original on September 5 2019 Retrieved September 4 2019 Kamizawa Hiroyuki 14 February 2015 東京五輪物語 浜松町 羽田モノレール開通 空港まで15分 突貫工事 Tokyo Olympics Story Hamamatsucho Haneda Monorail opens airport in 15 minutes construction rushed Asahi Shimbun in Japanese Archived from the original on 14 February 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2019 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link 東京モノレール開業 Tokyo Monorail Opens Mainichi Shimbun in Japanese September 17 1964 Archived from the original on June 7 2014 Retrieved September 4 2019 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Imoto Keisuke December 16 2010 羽田空港の歴史 Haneda Airport History in Japanese 地図 pp 11 13 Archived from the original on August 29 2018 Retrieved November 28 2013 Okuyama Seijiro September 17 2014 東京モノレール50周年 消えた 羽田駅 実は小さい 天空橋 Tokyo Monorail 50th Anniversary Vanished Haneda Station actually small Tenkubashi withnews ja in Japanese Archived from the original on March 6 2020 Retrieved March 5 2020 a b c d 羽田空港にある3つの駅 羽田空港国際線ビル駅 羽田空港第1ビル駅 羽田空港第2ビル駅 の名称が変わります Three stations at Haneda Airport Haneda Airport International Terminal Building Station Haneda Airport Building 1 Station Haneda Airport Building 1 Station change names PDF Press release in Japanese Tokyo Monorail December 16 2019 Archived from the original PDF on December 16 2019 Retrieved March 5 2020 東京モノレール 羽田空港の3つの駅名変更 Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport changes 3 station names in Japanese NHK March 14 2020 Retrieved March 15 2020 東京モノレール 浜松町駅を複線化 事業費260億円 東京駅延伸も視野 Tokyo Monorail Double tracking of Hamamatsucho Station Project cost 26 billion yen extension to Tokyo also eyed The Daily Engineering amp Construction News in Japanese The Nikkan Kensetsu Kogyo Shinbun 24 June 2009 東京モノレールが 終点 東京駅 構想 Plans for Tokyo Monorail to terminate at Tokyo Station News 24 in Japanese Japan Nippon Television Network Corporation 20 August 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2014 Tokyo Monorail plans to extend Railway Gazette International 22 August 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 08 26 Retrieved 22 August 2019 浜松町駅 世界貿易センター 再開発で何が変わる toyokeiza 18 July 2021 Retrieved 2021 08 04 Google January 6 2020 Hamamatsuchō Station Map Google Maps Google Retrieved January 6 2020 Google August 22 2020 Shibaura Map Google Maps Google Retrieved August 22 2020 Google August 22 2020 Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology Shinagawa Campus Map Google Maps Google Retrieved August 22 2020 Google August 22 2020 Tennozu Isle Station Map Google Maps Google Retrieved August 22 2020 Yamaguchi Takuma Nishino Toru Ueki Naoji Hirano Syuji 2014 Development of 10000 Series Rolling Stock for Tokyo Monorail PDF Hitachi Review 63 10 33 37 Retrieved 11 May 2019 a b Timetables Fares Access Information Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved 11 May 2019 a b 東京モノレール開業50年 新型車両 車内は 和風 26年導入 MSN Sankei News in Japanese Japan The Sankei Shimbun amp Sankei Digital 10 September 2013 Archived from the original on 2013 09 12 Retrieved 11 September 2013 指原莉乃が出発進行 東京モノレールに新型車両 和 デザイン New Tokyo Monorail train with Wa design seen off by Rino Sashihara Sponichi Annex in Japanese Japan Sports Nippon Newspapers 18 July 2014 Retrieved 18 July 2014 1 5 billionth rides monorail to Haneda The Japan Times The Japan Times Ltd 2007 01 24 Retrieved 2007 01 24 a b About Tickets Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved June 6 2020 Monorail and Yamanote Line Discount Ticket Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved June 6 2020 新モノレールSuica発売開始について About the launching of the new Monorail Suica PDF in Japanese Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd April 6 2009 Archived from the original on April 19 2009 Retrieved April 19 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link モノレールSuicaとは What is Monorail Suica in Japanese Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved June 6 2020 The Tokyo Monorail Haneda Airport to Tokyo Japan Railways Group Retrieved February 28 2024 Purchasing tickets Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved June 6 2020 きっぷのご案内 Ticket Information in Japanese Tokyo Monorail Co Ltd Retrieved May 23 2020 Further reading editL W Demery R Forty R DeGroote and J W Higgins Electric Railways of Japan Interurbans Tramways Metros Vol 1 Tokyo and Northern Japan Light Rail Transit Association 1983 Kusamachi Yoshikazu June 2009 再発見 モノレールの魅力 Rediscovering the fascination of monorails Japan Railfan Magazine in Japanese Vol 49 no 578 Koyusha Co Ltd pp 114 118 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tokyo Monorail Official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tokyo Monorail amp oldid 1210830623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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