Tokyo Metro Yūrakuchō Line


     Yūrakuchō Line
有楽町線

Yūrakuchō Line EMUs (from left: 10000 series, 07 series, 7000 series)
Overview
Type Heavy rail rapid transit
Locale Tokyo
Termini Wakōshi
Shin-Kiba
Stations 24
Operation
Opened 1974
Owner Tokyo Metro
Depot(s) Wakō, Shin-Kiba
Rolling stock 7000 series, 10000 series
Technical
Line length 28.3 km (17.58 mi)
Track gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification 1,500 V DC overhead catenary
Operating speed 80 km/h (50 mph)

The Tokyo Metro Yūrakuchō Line (有楽町線 Yūrakuchō-sen?) is a subway line owned and operated by Tokyo Metro. The line connects Wakōshi Station in Wakō, Saitama and Shin-Kiba Station in Kōtō, Tokyo. On maps, diagrams and signboards, the line is shown using the color "gold" (), and its stations are given numbers using the letter Y.

The proper name as given in an annual report of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport is Line No. 8 Yūrakuchō Line (8号線有楽町線 Hachi-gō-sen Yūrakuchō-sen?).[1] According to the Tokyo urban transportation plan, however, it is more complicated. The line number assigned to the section south from Kotake-Mukaihara to Shin-Kiba is Line 8, but that of north of Kotake-Mukaihara to Wakōshi is Line 13, which indicates the section is a portion of Fukutoshin Line which shares the same number.

Contents

Services

The Yūrakuchō Line has inter-running counterparts on its northern side, both of which are "major" Japanese private railway companies in Greater Tokyo. One is the Tōbu Railway at Wakōshi, north to Shinrinkōen. The other is the Seibu Railway at Kotake-Mukaihara with its bypass line Seibu Yūrakuchō Line connecting to its main Ikebukuro Line, through trains north to Kotesashi or Hannō.

According to the Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation, as of June 2009 the Yūrakuchō Line is the fifth most crowded subway line in Tokyo, at its peak running at 173% capacity between Higashi-Ikebukuro and Gokokuji stations.[2]

Semi-express (準急?) services ran on the Yūrakuchō Line between June 14, 2008 and March 6, 2010, operating twice hourly between Wakōshi and Shin-Kiba. Between Wakōshi and Ikebukuro, semi-express trains stopped only at Kotake-Mukaihara; between Ikebukuro and Shin-Kiba, trains stopped at all stations. The semi-express trains ran between rush hours during weekdays and more frequently on weekends and holidays. These services were abolished and replaced with local services on March 6, 2010.[3]

History

Future developments

A branch line has been planned since the early 1980s from Toyosu Station, heading north via Kameari Station (on the Jōban Line) to Noda in northwest Chiba Prefecture.[4]

Station list

Station
Number
Station Japanese Distance (km) Limited
Express
Transfers Location
Between
Stations
Total
Y-01 Wakōshi 和光市 - 0.0  [* 1] Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-01) (same tracks)
Tōbu Tōjō Line (some through services)
Wakō Saitama
Y-02 Chikatetsu-Narimasu 地下鉄成増 2.2 2.2 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-02) (same tracks)
Tōbu Tōjō Line (Narimasu)
Itabashi Tokyo
Y-03 Chikatetsu-Akatsuka 地下鉄赤塚 1.4 3.6 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-03) (same tracks)
Tōbu Tōjō Line (Shimo-Akatsuka)
Nerima
Y-04 Heiwadai 平和台 1.8 5.4 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-04) (same tracks)
Y-05 Hikawadai 氷川台 1.4 6.8 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-05) (same tracks)
Y-06 Kotake-Mukaihara 小竹向原 1.5 8.3 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-06) (same tracks)
Seibu Yūrakuchō Line (through trains from Ikebukuro)
Y-07 Senkawa 千川 1.0 9.3 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-07) Toshima
Y-08 Kanamechō 要町 1.0 10.3 Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-08)
Y-09 Ikebukuro 池袋 1.2 11.5 Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line (M-25), Tokyo Metro Fukutoshin Line (F-09)
Yamanote Line, Saikyō Line, Shōnan Shinjuku Line
Tōbu Tōjō Line
Seibu Ikebukuro Line
Y-10 Higashi-Ikebukuro 東池袋 0.9 12.4 Toden Arakawa Line (Higashi-Ikebukuro-yon-chōme)
Y-11 Gokokuji 護国寺 1.1 13.5   Bunkyō
Y-12 Edogawabashi 江戸川橋 1.3 14.8  
Y-13 Iidabashi 飯田橋 1.6 16.4 Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line (T-06), Tokyo Metro Namboku Line (N-10)
Chūō-Sōbu Line
Toei Ōedo Line (E-06)
Shinjuku
Y-14 Ichigaya 市ヶ谷 1.1 17.5 Tokyo Metro Namboku Line (N-09)
Chūō-Sōbu Line
Toei Shinjuku Line (S-04)
Chiyoda
Y-15 Kōjimachi 麹町 0.9 18.4  
Y-16 Nagatachō 永田町 0.9 19.3 Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line (Z-04), Tokyo Metro Namboku Line (N-07), Tokyo Metro Ginza Line (Akasaka-mitsuke: G-05), Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line (Akasaka-mitsuke: M-13)
Y-17 Sakuradamon 桜田門 0.9 20.2  
Y-18 Yūrakuchō 有楽町 1.0 21.2 Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line (Hibiya: H-07), Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line (Hibiya: C-09)
Yamanote Line, Keihin-Tōhoku Line
Toei Mita Line (Hibiya: I-08)
Y-19 Ginza-itchōme 銀座一丁目 0.5 21.7   Chūō
Y-20 Shintomichō 新富町 0.7 22.4  
Y-21 Tsukishima 月島 1.3 23.7 Toei Ōedo Line (E-16)
Y-22 Toyosu 豊洲 1.4 25.1 Yurikamome Kōtō
Y-23 Tatsumi 辰巳 1.7 26.8  
Y-24 Shin-Kiba 新木場 1.5 28.3 Keiyō Line
Rinkai Line
  1. ^ The limited express Romancecar service Bay Resort runs between Shin-Kiba and Hon-Atsugi on the Odakyū Odawara Line two to three times a month, connecting via tracks between Sakuradamon and Kasumigaseki to the Chiyoda Line.

Rolling stock

All types are operated as 10-car sets.

Tokyo Metro

Other operators

Depots

References

  1. ^ 株式会社電気車研究会・鉄道図書刊行会。鉄道要覧 (Tetsudō Yōran?)。 (Issued every September)
  2. ^ Metropolis, "Commute", June 12, 2009, p. 07. Capacity is defined as all passengers having a seat or a strap or door railing to hold on to.
  3. ^ 3月6日(土)有楽町線・副都心線のダイヤ改正 (Japanese) February 3, 2010. Accessed March 6, 2010.
  4. ^ 平成22年度予算案プレス発表(仮称)江東区地下鉄8号線建設基金を創設 (Japanese)
  • Shaw, Dennis and Morioka, Hisashi, "Tokyo Subways", published 1992 by Hoikusha Publishing

External links