Ohmi Railway Main Line

An Ohmi Railway 800 series EMU running between Hikoneguchi and Takamiya

The Ohmi Railway Main Line (近江鉄道本線 Ōmi Tetsudō hon-sen) is a regional railway line in Shiga Prefecture operated by the private railway operator Ohmi Railway. It connects the cities of Maibara and Koka. Its alignment is parallel with the Tōkaidō Shinkansen between Takamiya and Gokasho.

The line is 47.7 kilometres (29.6 mi) long, extending from Maibara to Kibukawa. The line connects with the JR Central Tōkaidō Main Line and Tōkaidō Shinkansen, and the JR West Hokuriku Main Line and Biwako Line at Maibara, and the JR West Kusatsu Line and the Shigaraki Kōgen Railway Shigaraki Line at Kibukawa.

Stations

Rapid Service: + = stop; - = pass;
Local trains make all stops
Station Distance
(km)
Rapid Connections Location
Maibara 0.0 + Tōkaidō Shinkansen
Tōkaidō Main Line
Biwako Line
Hokuriku Main Line
Maibara Shiga Prefecture
Fujitec-mae 2.3 +   Hikone
Toriimoto 3.4 +  
Hikone 5.8 + Tōkaidō Main Line (Biwako Line)
Hikone-Serikawa 7.0 -  
Hikoneguchi 7.8 -  
Takamiya 9.9 - Ohmi Railway Taga Line
Amago 12.7 -   Kōra
Toyosato 15.0 -   Toyosato
Echigawa 17.9 -   Aisho
Gokashō 20.9 -   Higashiomi
Kawabe-no-mori 23.0 -  
Yōkaichi 25.3 + Ohmi Railway Yōkaichi Line
Nagatanino 27.5 -  
Daigaku-mae 28.4 -  
Kyocera-mae 29.9 -  
Sakuragawa 31.2 +  
Asahi Ōtsuka 32.8 -  
Asahino 35.2 -  
Hino 37.8 +   Hino
Minakuchi Matsuo 42.7 -   Kōka
Minakuchi 43.8 +  
Minakuchi Ishibashi 44.4 +  
Minakuchi Jōnan 45.1 +  
Kibukawa 47.7 + Kusatsu Line
Shigaraki Kōgen Railway Shigaraki Line

History

The Hikone to Yokaichi section opened in 1898, reaching Kibukawa in 1900. The Hikone to Takamiya section was electrified at 600 V DC in 1925, with the Takamiya to Kibukawa section electrified at 1,500 V DC in 1928, and the Hikone to Takamiya section raised to that voltage at the same time. The Hikone to Maibara section opened in 1931 following the construction of the 340 m Sawayama Tunnel, electrified from opening.

Transport of postal items ceased in 1984, and freight services ceased in 1988.

Timeline

See also

References

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

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/22/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.