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Keihan Main Line
Railway line in Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Keihan Main Line (京阪本線, Keihan-honsen) is a railway line in Japan operated by Keihan Electric Railway. The line runs between Sanjō Station in Kyoto and Yodoyabashi Station in Osaka. There are through services to the Keihan Ōtō Line and the Keihan Nakanoshima Line. Trains from Kyoto to Osaka are treated as "down" trains, and from Osaka to Kyoto as "up" trains.
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Train services
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As of March 2022, the following services are operated.[1]
- Liner (ライナー, Liner) (Ln)[2]
- All cars reserved seating. Trains run "down" in the morning, and "up" in the evening. Weekdays Only.
- Rapid Limited Express "Rakuraku" (快速特急"洛楽", Kaisoku Tokkyū "Rakuraku") (RLE)
- Premium car is reserved seating only
- Limited Express (特急, Tokkyū) (LE)
- Premium car is reserved seating only
- Commuter Rapid Express (通勤快急, Tsūkin Kaikyū) (CRE) - "down" trains only, on weekday mornings
- Rapid Express (快速急行, Kaisoku Kyūkō) (RE) - premium car is reserved seating
- Midnight Express (深夜急行, Shinya Kyūkō) (ME) - "up" trains only (Discontinued in 7/2021)
- A train departs from Yodoyabashi for Kuzuha at 0:20 a.m. and passes Moriguchishi and Hirakata-kōen.
- Express (急行, Kyūkō) (Ex)
- Commuter Sub-express (通勤準急, Tsūkin Junkyū) (CSbE) - "down" trains only, on weekday mornings
- Trains are operated from Demachiyanagi, Kuzuha, Hirakatashi to Yodoyabashi or Nakanoshima in the morning and pass Moriguchishi.
- Sub-express (準急, Junkyū) (SbE)
- Semi-express (区間急行, Kukan Kyūkō) (SmE)
- Local (普通, Futsū)
- Trains stop at all stations.
- Operation in non-rush hours per hour
- Limited express: 6 round trips between Yodoyabashi and Demachiyanagi
- Express: 3 round trips between Yodoyabashi and Kuzuha
- Sub. express: 3 round trips between Yodoyabashi and Demachiyanagi
- Local: 6 round trips between Nakanoshima and Kayashima, of which 3 extend to Demachiyanagi
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Stations
- S: Trains stop.
- s: limited stop
- |, ↑, ↓: Trains pass.
- ↑, ↓: Only one direction.
- ▼: Boarding only in "up" direction.
- ▲: Boarding only in "down" direction.
- (M): Stations using melodies composed by musician Minoru Mukaiya in train departure announcements.
- For train abbreviations, see above.
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Rolling stock
- Keihan 3000 series express in January 2018
- Keihan 13000 series express in August 2017
History
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The Temmabashi to Kiyomizu-Gojo section opened as dual track, electrified at 1,500 V DC, in 1910, and was extended to Sanjo in 1915. The Temmabashi to Yodoyabashi section opened in 1963.[citation needed]
The section from Temmabashi to Gamo Signal Box was quadruple-tracked and elevated in 1970. Quadruple-tracking and elevation was continued northwards, with the Doi to Neyagawa Signal Box section completed in 1982. In 1987, in Kyoto, the street-level section from Tōfukuji to Sanjo was replaced by a tunnel section, which was extended to the current terminus, Demachiyanagi, in 1989. Hirakatashi Station was elevated in 1993, Neyagawashi Station in 1999, and Yodo Station (along with the line section next to the new Yodo Depot) in 2011.
Works to elevate the remaining at-grade section between Neyagawashi Station and Hirakatashi Station, including Kōrien Station, Kozenji Station and Hirakata-kōen Station, began in September 2022.[3] Preliminary works such as land acquisition had already been in progress since 2013.[3] The project aims to eliminate 21 level crossings in the affected section, some of which are closed for up to 40 minutes per hour during the morning and afternoon rush hour. Work is expected to finish by 2027 with the transition of train services to the elevated tracks planned to be completed in 2028.[3]
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External links
- Keihan Nakanoshima Line website Archived 22 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in Japanese)
See also
References
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