Taketoyo Line
Taketoyo Line | |||
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300px
A KiHa 75 DMU at Taketoyo Station, August 2006
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Overview | |||
Native name | 武豊線 | ||
Type | Regional rail | ||
Locale | Aichi Prefecture | ||
Termini | Ōbu Taketoyo |
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Stations | 10 | ||
Operation | |||
Owner | JR Central | ||
Rolling stock | KiHa 25/KiHa 75 DMUs | ||
Technical | |||
Line length | 19.3 km (12.0 mi) | ||
Track gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) | ||
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The Taketoyo Line (武豊線 Taketoyo-sen?) is a Japanese railway line which connects Ōbu Station in Ōbu, Aichi Prefecture with Taketoyo Station in Taketoyo, Aichi Prefecture. It is owned and run by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central).
The line is due to be electrified, with electric services commencing on 1 March 2015.[1]
Stations
Name | Distance (km) |
Connections | Location | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ōbu | 大府 | 0.0 | Tōkaidō Main Line | Ōbu | Aichi |
Owari-Morioka | 尾張森岡 | 1.7 | Higashiura, Chita District |
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Ogawa | 緒川 | 3.1 | |||
Ishihama | 石浜 | 4.6 | |||
Higashiura | 東浦 | 6.8 | Kinuura Rinkai Railway Hekinan Line | ||
Kamezaki | 亀崎 | 10.2 | Handa | ||
Okkawa | 乙川 | 12.8 | |||
Handa | 半田 | 14.6 | |||
Higashi-Narawa | 東成岩 | 16.3 | Kinuura Rinkai Railway Handa Line | ||
Taketoyo | 武豊 | 19.3 | Taketoyo, Chita District |
Rolling stock
2-car KiHa 75 diesel multiple unit (DMU) trains are used on this line in two- or four-car formations.
New 2-car KiHa 25 DMUs were introduced on the line from 1 March 2011.[2]
History
The entire line opened in 1886, becoming a branch when the Obu to Hamamatsu section of the Tokaido Main Line opened two years later. A 1 km freight-only line extended to Taketoyo Minato between 1930 and 1965.[citation needed]
DMUs commenced service on the line in 1933, although passenger services were suspended from 1944 until 1955. Steam locomotives ceased operating on the line in 1970, and freight services ceased in 1984.[citation needed]
CTC signalling was commissioned in 2001.[citation needed]
Work started in March 2010 to electrify the line.[3]
Future plans
With the start of electric services on 1 March 2015, through services will also operate to and from Nagoya.[4]
References
This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia
- Articles with dead external links from September 2014
- Use dmy dates from March 2011
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles that mention track gauge 1067 mm
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2015
- Rail transport in Aichi Prefecture
- Lines of Central Japan Railway Company
- 1067 mm gauge railways in Japan