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List of railway lines in Japan lists existing railway lines in Japan alphabetically. The vast majority of Japanese railways are classified under two Japanese laws, one for railways (鉄道, tetsudō) and another for trams (軌道, kidō). The difference between the two is a legal, and not always substantial, one.
Ban'etsu-Sai Line (East Japan Railway Company) Ban'etsu-To Line (East Japan Railway Company) Bantan Line (West Japan Railway Company) Beppu Rakutenchi Cable Line (Okamoto MFG) Bessho Line (Ueda Electric Railway) Bisai Line (Nagoya Railroad) Biwako Line (Nickname. West Japan Railway Company) Blue Line (Nickname. Yokohama City Transportation Bureau)
Sankō Line (West Japan Railway Company) (Closed on march 2018) Sano Line (Tobu Railway) San'yō Main Line (West Japan Railway Company, Kyushu Railway Company) San'yō Shinkansen (West Japan Railway Company) Sasaguri Line (Kyushu Railway Company) Sasebo Line (Kyushu Railway Company) Sassho Line (Hokkaido Railway Company) Sawara Line (Common name.
Sanyo Electric Railway Aboshi Line: 7 8.5 Total 49 63.2 53,144,000 2011 [40] J: West Japan Railway Company (JR West) [k] A Akō Line (Aioi ‒ Banshū Akō) 4 10.5 A Biwako Line (Kyōto ‒ Nagahama) 23 75.4 H Gakkentoshi Line (Kyōbashi ‒ Kizu) 24 55.4 Hagoromo Line (Ōtori ‒ Higashi-Hagoromo) 2 1.7 R Hanwa Line (Tennōji ‒ Wakayama) 35 ...
N700S series Shinkansen train E235 series train on the Yamanote Line Tokyo Station in Tokyo Hiroden Tram in Hiroshima. Rail transport in Japan is a major means of passenger transport, especially for mass and high-speed travel between major cities and for commuter transport in urban areas.
This is the name for the concept of using a single train that is designed to travel on both 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) narrow-gauge railway lines and the 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) standard gauge used by Shinkansen train services in Japan. The trucks/bogies of the Gauge Change Train (GCT) allow the wheels to be unlocked from the axles, narrowed ...
Ōfunato Line (East Japan Railway Company) Oga Line (East Japan Railway Company) Oga Namahage Line (Nickname. East Japan Railway Company) Ogose Line (Tōbu Railway) Ōigawa Main Line (Oigawa Railway) Ōimachi Line (Tokyo Kyuko Electric Railway) Ōito Line (East Japan Railway Company, West Japan Railway Company) Ōkawa Branch Line (Common name.
1927: Tokyo Underground Railway Co., Ltd. (東京地下鉄道株式会社, Tōkyō Chika Tetsudō Kabushiki Gaisha) opens Japan's first underground line of the subway Ginza Line on 30 December 1927, publicizing it as "the first underground railway in the Orient." The distance of the line is only 2.2 km between Ueno and Asakusa.