Kansai Main Line



























































Kansai Main Line

JR Central Kansai Line.svg V   Q 

JR West Kiha 120 DMU 005.JPG

KiHa 120 diesel car on a rural section in March 2007

Overview
Other name(s)
Yamatoji Line (Kamo - JR Namba)
Native name 関西本線
Type Heavy rail
Locale


  • Aichi Prefecture

  • Mie Prefecture

  • Kyoto Prefecture

  • Nara Prefecture

  • Osaka Prefecture


Termini
Nagoya
JR Namba
Stations 52
Operation
Opened 1889
Owner
JR Central
JR West
Technical
Line length 179.6 km (111.6 mi)
Track gauge
1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification 1,500 V DC, overhead line
(Nagoya–Kameyama, Kamo–JR Namba)
Operating speed 120 km/h (75 mph)
(Nagoya–Kawarada, Nara–Tennoji)
95 km/h (59 mph)
(Kawarada–Nara, Tennoji–JR Namba)



Old Nara Station building in March 2007




A Kasuga limited express train in a rural section. The photo was taken in March 2006, shortly before the service was canceled.


The Kansai Main Line (関西本線, Kansai-honsen, also called the "Kansai Line") is a railway line in Japan, which connects Nagoya Station with JR Namba Station in Osaka. It is jointly run by the Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) and West Japan Railway Company (JR West), with the boundary between both companies being located at Kameyama Station in Kameyama, Mie.


The section from Kamo Station west to JR Namba Station is electrified and a part of the JR West "Urban Network", and is nicknamed the Yamatoji Line. The JR Central section from Nagoya to Kameyama is also electrified.


Despite its name, for much of its length it is a very local line with mainly single track sections and no regular express services. The line was originally built in the 1890s by Kansai Railway (later under the Japanese Government Railways and Japanese National Railways) as an alternate route from south Osaka to Nara and Nagoya, but competition from the Kintetsu lines and declining ridership forced the line to become two commuter lines to Osaka and Nagoya respectively, with a less-used section in the middle.


Formerly a Kasuga limited express train went the whole of the Kansai Main Line, but this service was discontinued in March 2006.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Duplication


    • 1.2 Electrification


    • 1.3 Other matters of note


    • 1.4 Former connecting lines




  • 2 Stations


    • 2.1 JR Central (Nagoya–Kameyama)


    • 2.2 JR West (Kameyama–Kamo)


    • 2.3 JR West (Kamo–JR Namba)




  • 3 Rolling stock


    • 3.1 JR Central


      • 3.1.1 EMU


      • 3.1.2 DMU




    • 3.2 JR West


      • 3.2.1 EMU


      • 3.2.2 DMU




    • 3.3 Former




  • 4 References





History


The Osaka Railway Co. opened the Minato-Machi (now Namba) to Nara section between 1889 and 1892. The company merged with the Kansai Railway Co. in 1900.


The Nara Railway Co. opened the Nara to Kizu section in 1896. It merged with the Kansai Railway Co. in 1905.


The Kansai Railway Co. opened the Nagoya to Kizu section between 1890 and 1897, completing the line. The company was nationalised in 1907.



Duplication


The Minato-Machi to Tennoji section was duplicated in 1903 and extended to Kashiwabara in 1908. The Nara to Kizu section was duplicated in 1914, and the Kashiwabara to Nara section between 1923 and 1926. In 1944 the Oji to Nara section was returned to single track and the materials recycled for the Japanese war effort. The section was re-duplicated in 1961.


The Tomita to Kuwana section (except for the bridge over the Inabegawa) was duplicated in 1973, and the Kuwana to Yatomi section between 1977 and 1980. The Yokkaichi to Tomidahama section was duplicated in 1993.



Electrification


The Minato-Machi to Nara section was electrified in 1973, and extended to Kizu in 1984, and Kamo in 1988.


The Nagoya - Hatta section was electrified in 1979, and extended to Kameyama in 1982.



Other matters of note


CTC signalling was commissioned between Kizu and Kameyama in 1983, and extended to Nagoya in 2001.


Freight services ceased in 1987, and in 1994 Minato-Machi Station was renamed JR Namba to coincide with the opening of the JR line to Kansai Airport. In 1996 Namba Station and the approach line were relocated underground to eliminate a number of level crossings. Plans to extend the line from Namba to Osaka Station have not eventuated as yet.



Former connecting lines



  • Kamo Station - In 1898 the Kansai Railway Co. opened an 8 km branch to a station beside the Daibutsu (Great Buddha), and in 1899 extended the line 2 km to Nara. Following the nationalisation of the Kansai Railway Co. in 1907, the 10 km line was closed.

  • Horyuji Station - The 4 km 1435mm gauge Kintetsu line to Hirahata operated between 1915 and 1945.

  • Kyuhoji Station - A branchline to serve the Taisho airfield opened in 1942, and was extended to Sugimotocho Station on the Hanwa Line in 1952 to provide an electrified (1500 V DC) freight bypass between Wakayama and Nagoya. Passenger services were introduced in 1965 but ceased two years later, and the line closed in 2009 after being out of service for five years.

  • Tennoji Station - The 2.4 km Nankai line to Tengachaya, electrified at 1500 V DC, operated between 1901 and 1993.



Stations



JR Central (Nagoya–Kameyama)



  • S: Trains stop

  • |: Trains pass

  • Local trains stop at all stations.
























































































































































































No.
Station
Japanese
Semi Rapid
Rapid
Rapid Mie
Transfers
Location

CJ00

Nagoya
名古屋
S
S
S



  • Tokaido Shinkansen,  CA  Tokaido Main Line,  CF  Chuo Main Line


  • Nagoya Subway Higashiyama Line (H08), Sakuradori Line (S02)


  • Aonami Line (AN01)


  • Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line (Meitetsu Nagoya Station)


  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Nagoya Station)



Nakamura-ku, Nagoya

Aichi Prefecture

CJ01

Hatta
八田
|
|
|



  • Nagoya Subway Higashiyama Line (H02)

  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Hatta Station)



CJ02

Haruta
春田
|
|
|


Nakagawa-ku, Nagoya

CJ03

Kanie
蟹江
S
|
|


Kanie, Ama District

CJ04

Eiwa
永和
|
|
|


Aisai

CJ05

Yatomi
弥富
S
|
|


  • Meitetsu Bisai Line

  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Yatomi Station)



Yatomi

CJ06

Nagashima
長島
|
|
|

  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Nagashima Station)


Kuwana

Mie Prefecture

CJ07

Kuwana
桑名
S
S
S


  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line

  • Yōrō Railway Yōrō Line


  • Sangi Railway Hokusei Line (Nishi-Kuwana Station)



CJ08

Asahi
朝日
S
|
|


Asahi, Mie District

CJ09

Tomida
富田
S
|
|



  • Sangi Railway Sangi Line (Kintetsu Tomida Station)

  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Tomida Station)



Yokkaichi

CJ10

Tomidahama
富田浜
S
|
|


CJ11

Yokkaichi
四日市
S
S
S



  • JR Freight Kansai Main Line (for Shiohama)

  • Kintetsu Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Yokkaichi Station) connected by bus



CJ12

Minami-Yokkaichi
南四日市
S
S
|


CJ13

Kawarada
河原田
S
S
|

  • Ise Railway Ise Line


CJ14

Kawano
河曲
S
S
Ise Railway Ise Line


Suzuka

CJ15

Kasado
加佐登
S
S


CJ16

Idagawa
井田川
S
S


Kameyama

CJ17

Kameyama
亀山
S
S


  • Kisei Main Line


  •  V  JR West Kansai Main Line (for Kamo and Nara)




JR West (Kameyama–Kamo)


All stations between Kameyama and Kamo featured passing double tracks.












































































Station
Japanese
Transfers
Location

Kameyama
亀山
JR Central:


  •  CJ  Kansai Main Line (for Nagoya)

  • Kisei Main Line



Kameyama

Mie Prefecture

Seki



Kabuto
加太


Tsuge
柘植

 C  Kusatsu Line

Iga

Shindō
新堂


Sanagu
佐那具


Iga-Ueno
伊賀上野

Iga Railway Iga Line

Shimagahara
島ヶ原


Tsukigaseguchi
月ケ瀬口


Minamiyamashiro, Soraku District

Kyoto Prefecture

Ōkawara
大河原


Kasagi
笠置


Kasagi, Soraku District

Kamo
加茂
( Q  Yamatoji Line)

Kizugawa


JR West (Kamo–JR Namba)



See the Yamatoji Line article for the train types and stopping patterns on this section.

Stations on this section



  • Kamo - Kizu - Narayama - Nara - Kōriyama - Yamato-Koizumi - Hōryūji - Ōji - Sangō - Kawachi-Katakami - Takaida - Kashiwara - Shiki - Yao - Kyūhōji - Kami - Hirano - Tōbu-shijō-mae - Tennōji - Shin-Imamiya - Imamiya - JR Namba


Rolling stock



JR Central



EMU



  • 211 series

  • 313 series



DMU



  • KiHa 75

  • KiHa 85

  • Ise Railway Ise III



JR West



EMU




DMU


  • KiHa 120


Former



  • 101 series

  • 113 series

  • 165 series

  • 213-5000 series

  • KiHa 17

  • KiHa 35

  • KiHa 50

  • KiHa 51

  • KiHa 55

  • KiHa 58

  • KiHa 65

  • KiHa 81

  • KiHa 82

  • Ise Railway Ise I

  • Ise Railway Ise II



References






This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia












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