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Meitetsu Mikawa Line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Railway line in Aichi prefecture, Japan
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Meitetsu Mikawa Line
An image of a Meitetsu 6000 series EMU on the Meitetsu Mikawa Line.
A 6000 series EMU on the Meitetsu Mikawa Line
Overview
Native name名鉄三河線
OwnerMeitetsu
LocaleAichi Prefecture
Termini
Stations23
Service
TypeCommuter rail
Daily ridership73,556 (FY2003)[1]
History
Opened1914; 112 years ago (1914)
Technical
Line length39.8 km (24.73 mi)
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification1,500VDC,overhead catenary
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph)
Route map

Up arrow Nishi Nakagane
0.0
Sanage (猿投)
1.1
Hiratobashi (平戸橋)
Up arrowMeitetsu Toyota Line toAkaike (赤池)
2.2
Koshido (越戸)
Aikan-Umetsubo (愛環梅坪駅)
4.2
Umetsubo (梅坪)
Shin-Toyota (新豊田駅)
5.6
Toyotashi (豊田市)
7.4
Uwa Goromo (上挙母)
10.2
Tsuchihashi (土橋)
10.2
Tsuchihashi (土橋)
12.8
Takemura (竹村)
15.1
Wakabayashi (若林)
17.5
Mikawa Yatsuhashi (三河八橋)
20.6
Mikawa Chiryū (三河知立)
21.3
Chiryū (知立)
23.5
Shigehara (重原)
25.2
Kariya (刈谷)
26.8
Kariyashi (刈谷市)
29.4
Ogakie (小垣江)
31.4
Yoshihama (吉浜)
33.3
Mikawa Takahama (三河高浜)
34.3
Takahama Minato (高浜港)
36.1
Kitashinkawa (北新川)
37.1
Shinkawamachi (新川町)
38.2
Hekinan Chūō (碧南中央)
39.8
Hekinan (碧南)

TheMeitetsu Mikawa Line (名鉄三河線,Meitetsu Mikawa-sen) is a 39.8 km (24.7 mi) railway line inAichi Prefecture, Japan, operated by the private railway operatorNagoya Railroad (Meitetsu) connectingSanage Station inToyota andHekinan Station inHekinan. It originally extended beyond Hekinan toKira Yoshida, and beyond Sanage to Nishi Nakagane, with a proposed extension to Asuke substantially constructed but subsequently abandoned (see History section below).

All trains on this line operate as Local trains and stop at every station. Some smaller stations have only a single platform and no passing loop.

History

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The Mikawa Railway opened the Ōhama-minato (now Hekinan) to Kariya-shin (now Kariya) section in 1914, and extended the line to Chiryū (old, now Mikawa Chiryū) the following year, to Koromo (now Toyotashi) in 1920 and Sanage in 1924.

In 1926, the Sanage to Hekinan section was electrified at 1,500 V DC, and in the same year the (now closed) Hekinan to Matsukijima section opened as an electrified section, as were all subsequent extensions.

The (now closed) Sanage to Nishi Nakagane section opened between 1927 and 1928, and the Matsukijima - Mikawa Yoshida section also opened in the latter year.

The company merged with Nagoya Railroad (Meitetsu) in June 1941,[2] and the Mikawa Yoshida - Kira Yoshida section opened in 1943, connecting to theGamagōri Line and theNishio Line.

Construction of an ~8 km (5 mi) extension from Nishi Nakagane to Asuke had commenced in the 1930s, with the roadbed completed when thePacific War commenced. Shortage of materials resulted in the rail line never being laid, and the proposed extension was formally abandoned in 1958, with the roadbed being converted to a public road, which is readily identifiable on aerial photographs.

Freight services ceased in 1984, and as a result of declining patronage, the electrification on the Sanage - Nishi Nakagane section was decommissioned in 1985, and on the Hekinan to Kira Yoshida section in 1990, DMUs then providing the passenger service. Patronage continued to decline, and both sections were closed in 2004.

Double-tracking

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The Chiryū to Shigehara section was double-tracked in 1976, the Kariya to Kariyashi section in 1980, and the Umetsubo to Toyotashi section in 1986. The doubling of the Toyotashi to Chiryū section is proposed, and some works have been undertaken, but funding issues with the local governments has stalled further work at present. The land has been acquired to double the Shigehara to Kariya section, but Meitetsu does not consider the patronage levels on this section justify duplication at this stage.[citation needed]

Former connecting lines

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  • Uwagoromo Station: The Okazaki Electric Railway opened a 7 km (4.3 mi) line, electrified at 600 V DC, from Okazaki-Ida to Modachi in 1924. The line was proposed to continue to Matsudaira, but the company encountered financial difficulties and merged with the Mikawa Railway in 1927, which opened the Uwa Goromo to Mikawa Iwawaki section two years later, and converted the line to 1,500 V DC. In 1939, the Mikawa Iwawaki to Modachi section closed (Modachi Branch Line), and in 1941, the company merged with Meitetsu. The Okazaki-Ida to Daijuji section closed in 1962, and as a result of flood damage caused by torrential rain, the balance of the line closed in 1972. At Okazaki-Ida, there was a connection to a 6 km (3.7 mi) tram line that connected to theTokaido Main Line at Okazaki station, the tramway also closing in 1962.

Stations

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No.NameJapaneseDistance
(km)
ConnectionsLocation
MY11Sanage猿投0.0ToyotaAichi
MY10Hiratobashi平戸橋1.1
MY09Koshido越戸2.2
MY08Umetsubo梅坪4.2 Meitetsu: TT Toyota Line (some through connections)
MY07Toyotashi豊田市5.6Aichi Loop Line (viaShin-Toyota)
MY06Uwa Goromo上挙母7.4 Aichi Loop Line (viaShin-Uwagoromo)
MY05Tsuchihashi土橋10.2
MY04Takemura竹村12.8
MY03Wakabayashi若林15.1
MY02Mikawa Yatsuhashi三河八橋17.5
MY01Mikawa Chiryū三河知立20.6Chiryū
NH19Chiryū知立21.3 Meitetsu: NH Nagoya Main Line
MU01Shigehara重原23.5
MU02Kariya刈谷25.2JR Central:Tokaido Main LineKariya
MU03Kariyashi刈谷市26.8
MU04Ogakie小垣江29.4
MU05Yoshihama吉浜31.4Takahama
MU06Mikawa Takahama三河高浜33.3
MU07Takahama Minato高浜港34.3
MU08Kitashinkawa北新川36.1Hekinan
MU09Shinkawamachi新川町37.1
MU10Hekinan Chūō碧南中央38.2
MU11Hekinan碧南39.8

See also

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References

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

  1. ^(4)路線別1日当たり輸送人員 (Report). Aichi Prefecture. 2007. Retrieved17 December 2010.{{cite report}}:|archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^佐藤信之 (19 June 2004),地下鉄の歴史首都圏・中部・近畿圏 (in Japanese), グランプリ出版, p. 129,ISBN 4-87687-260-0
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The logo of the Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central).JR Central
The logo of the Nagoya Municipal Subway.Nagoya Municipal Subway
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