Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Hachiōji Line

Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Hachiōji Line

Narrow gauge train at Nishihino Station
Overview
Type Commuter rail
Locale Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture
Termini Hinaga
Nishihino
Stations 2
Operation
Opened August 15, 1912
Operator(s) Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway
Technical
Line length 1.3 km (0.81 mi)
No. of tracks 1
Track gauge 762 mm (2 ft 6 in)
Electrification 750 V DC Overhead line
Route map
Legend

All lines are Kintetsu unless otherwise noted

Nagoya
Nagoya Line
Yunoyama Line

Kintetsu-Yokkaichi(Suwa)
Nagoya Line
Yunoyama-Utsube link - Closed 1964
Utsube Line
Minami-HamadaClosed 1944
Akahori
0.0 Hinaga
Hachiōji Line
Utsube Line
0.6 HigashihinoClosed 1952, Abandoned 1969
1.3 Nishihino (II)
1.5 Nishihino (I)
1.8 ShimizubashiClosed 1952, Abandoned 1969
2.3 MuroyamaClosed 1974, Abandoned 1976
3.0 Ise-HachiōjiClosed 1974, Abandoned 1976

The Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Hachiōji Line (四日市あすなろう鉄道八王子線 Yokkaichi Asunarō Tetsudō Hachiōji-sen) is a 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) narrow gauge railway line operated by the Japanese private railway company Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway, connecting Hinaga Station and Nishihino Station, both in the city of Yokkaichi, Mie, Japan. With a total length of 1.3 km.

The line connects with the Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Utsube Line at Hinaga. Because all trains on the Hachiōji Line offer direct service to Asunarou Yokkaichi via the Utsube Line, the two lines are collectively called the Utsube-Hachiōji Line (内部・八王子線 Utsube-Hachiōji-sen).

The line is called the "Hachiōji Line" because it originally ran to Ise-Hachiōji Station, however for many years the endpoint has been Nishihino.

Until March 2015, the line was under control of Kintetsu, a major railway company.

Narrow gauge railway

The line was originally built as a tram utilising a track gauge of 762mm, which was relatively common at that time for such local lines. Later on the legal classification of the line was changed from a tram to a light rail, however the gauge was not widened, unlike the majority of 762mm gauge lines. Today, there are only four 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) gauge train lines in operation in Japan, and the Hachiōji Line is both the oldest and shortest of those four.

762 mm railways of Japan

Services

"Local" (普通 Futsū) services stop at every station.
All trains are wanman driver only operation.
Trains run twice per hour in both directions.

Stations

Station Distance (km) Transfers Location
Hinaga 日永 0.0 Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway Utsube Line Yokkaichi Mie Prefecture
Nishihino 西日野 1.3

History

The Hachiōji Line was built in 1912 and, like the Kintetsu Utsube Line, is one of Kintetsu's oldest train lines. The Hachiōji Line was actually built first, but became a branch line after the original section of what is now the much longer Utsube Line was opened later the same year. Steam engines ran on the line for many years until 1928 when gasoline-powered trains were introduced, which ran until the line was electrified in 1948.

Ownership of the line has shifted a few times during its existence. Mie Tramway built the line but control was given to Mie Railway (Santetsu) shortly after in 1916. Then in 1944, Santetsu, along 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), however this organization was short-lived as it was bought up by railway giant Kintetsu the following year.

Flood damage

As the line's official name indicates, Nishihino is not the original terminus. When the line was built it was 2.8 kilometers in length and extended past Nishihino and terminated in Yokkaichi's Hachiōji neighborhood and for over 60 years, trains went all the way to Ise-Hachiōji Station. However, in 1974, there was an especially heavy rainstorm that flooded the Tenpaku River which runs right alongside the line. The track suffered from severe water damage and the entire line was temporarily shut down for repairs. The track was repaired only as far as Nishihino, and the rest of the line was abandoned. The remainder of the line, only 1.3 kilometers long, was reopened in 1976.

Because so many years have passed since the endpoint was changed to Nishihino, younger generations primarily refer to the line as the Nishihino Line, a name that was even used by some Kintetsu train conductors.

In August 2012, Kintetsu announced its wishes to close both the Utsube and Hachioji Lines, with plans to convert the trackbed into a dedicated bus route. The two lines together lose approximately ¥300 million annually. It has since been announced that Kintetsu would transfer the operation of these lines to the Yokkaichi City Government in 2015.[1]

As a consequence, Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway was incorporated and took control of the line as from April 1, 2015. In this new scheme, the railway tracks and rolling stock are owned by the city government while Yokkaichi Asunarou Railway operates trains.[2]

Timeline

References

  1. 近鉄:内部線・八王子線の鉄路廃止、跡地にバス運行 三重. Mainichi jp (in Japanese). Japan: The Mainichi Newspapers. 22 August 2012. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  2. 小佐野カゲトシ (April 1, 2015). "四日市あすなろう鉄道がスタート…近鉄内部・八王子線を引き継ぎ". Response (in Japanese). Retrieved April 4, 2015.
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