Tobu Urban Park Line

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Tobu Urban Park Line
Tobu Noda Line (TD) symbol.svg
TOBURAILWAY SERIES60000(61601F)・SERIES10030(11632F)・SERIES8000(8101F) NODALINE.JPG
A lineup of Tobu Urban Park Line rolling stock at the line's Nankodai Depot, June 2013
Overview
Native name 東武アーバンパークライン
Type Commuter rail
Locale Kantō Region
Termini Ōmiya
Funabashi
Stations 35
Daily ridership 448,528 (FY2010)[1]
Operation
Opened 1911
Owner Tobu Railway
Depot(s) Nanakōdai
Rolling stock Tobu 8000 series, Tobu 10000 series, Tobu 60000 series
Technical
Line length 62.7 km (39.0 mi)
Track gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification 1,500 V DC, overhead catenary
Operating speed 100 km/h (60 mph)
Route map
New ShuttleRight
LeftJoetsu Shinkansen, Tohoku Shinkansen Right
LeftSaikyo Line / Kawagoe LineRight
LeftTohoku Main Line / Takasaki LineRight
LeftKeihin-Tohoku Line
0.0 Ōmiya
1.2 Kita-Ōmiya
UpTohoku Main LineRight
2.2 Ōmiya-kōen
4.0 Ōwada
5.6 Nanasato
Kakuraabandoned in 1950
8.5 Iwatsuki
Shibue
10.9 Higashi-Iwatsuki
12.2 Toyoharu
14.1 Yagisaki
DownTobu Skytree LineRight
15.2 Kasukabe
LeftSkytree LineUp
Doiabandoned in 1947
17.8 Fujino-ushijima
Naganumaabandoned in 1956
20.6 Minami-Sakurai
Edo River
22.9 Kawama
Nanakōdai depot
25.1 Nanakōdai
26.6 Shimizu-kōen
27.7 Atago
28.6 Nodashi
30.9 Umesato
33.2 Unga
35.1 Edogawadai
36.8 Hatsuishi
LeftTsukuba ExpressRight
Nagareyama-Ōtakanomori
39.7 Toyoshiki
Kita-Kashiwaabandoned in 1955
42.9 Kashiwa
LeftJōban LineRight
LeftJōban LineRight
45.8 Shin-Kashiwa
47.1 Masuo
48.0 Sakasai
50.2 Takayanagi
51.9 Mutsumi
53.3 Shin-Kamagaya
LeftHokusō LineRight
LeftShin-Keisei LineRight
Hatsutomi
55.2 Kamagaya
57.7 Magomezawa
60.1 Tsukada
61.3 Shin-Funabashi
KaijinBypass abandoned in 1934
LeftKeisei Main LineDown
LeftTōyō Rapid LineRight
62.7 Funabashi
LeftSōbu Main LineRight
LeftChūō-Sōbu LineRight
UpKeisei Main LineRight
Keisei-Funabashi

The Tobu Urban Park Line (東武アーバンパークライン Tōbu Ābanpāku-rain?), formally known as the Tobu Noda Line (東武野田線 Tōbu Noda-sen?), is a 62.7 km (39.0 mi) long railway line in Saitama and Chiba Prefectures operated by the Japanese private railway company Tobu Railway. It connects the satellite cities of Tokyo, such as Saitama, Kasukabe, Noda, Nagareyama, Matsudo, Kamagaya, Kashiwa, and Funabashi.[2]

Description

  • Track
    • Double: Ōmiya - Kasukabe, Unga - Sakasai, Mutsumi - Funabashi
    • Single: the rest

Operation

All trains are operated as all-stations "Local" services. Most trains, excluding a few from/to train depots, originate or terminate at Kashiwa Station which has a switchback. During the daytime, six trains run per hour. All trains stop at all stations.

From spring 2016, limited-stop "Express" services are scheduled to be introduced on the line. During the daytime off-peak, these will run at 30-minute intervals, stopping only at Iwatsuki between Ōmiya and Kasukabe, and all-stations between Kasukabe and Funabashi. The journey timebetween Omiya and Kasukabe will be reduced by 6 minutes compared with all-stations "Local" services.[3]

Stations

No. Station Japanese Distance (km) Transfers Location
TD-01 Ōmiya 大宮 0.0 <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> Ōmiya-ku, Saitama Saitama
TD-02 Kita-Ōmiya 北大宮 1.2  
TD-03 Ōmiya-kōen 大宮公園 2.2  
TD-04 Ōwada 大和田 4.0   Minuma-ku, Saitama
TD-05 Nanasato 七里 5.6  
TD-06 Iwatsuki 岩槻 8.5   Iwatsuki-ku, Saitama
TD-07 Higashi-Iwatsuki 東岩槻 10.9  
TD-08 Toyoharu 豊春 12.2   Kasukabe
TD-09 Yagisaki 八木崎 14.1  
TD-10 Kasukabe 春日部 15.2 Tobu Skytree Line
TD-11 Fujino-ushijima 藤の牛島 17.8  
TD-12 Minami-Sakurai 南桜井 20.6  
TD-13 Kawama 川間 22.9   Noda Chiba
TD-14 Nanakōdai 七光台 25.1  
TD-15 Shimizu-kōen 清水公園 26.6  
TD-16 Atago 愛宕 27.7  
TD-17 Nodashi 野田市 28.6  
TD-18 Umesato 梅郷 30.9  
TD-19 Unga 運河 33.2   Nagareyama
TD-20 Edogawadai 江戸川台 35.1  
TD-21 Hatsuishi 初石 36.8  
TD-22 Nagareyama-ōtakanomori 流山おおたかの森 38.4 Tsukuba Express
TD-23 Toyoshiki 豊四季 39.7   Kashiwa
TD-24 Kashiwa 42.9 Joban Line
TD-25 Shin-Kashiwa 新柏 45.8  
TD-26 Masuo 増尾 47.1  
TD-27 Sakasai 逆井 48.0  
TD-28 Takayanagi 高柳 50.2  
TD-29 Mutsumi 六実 51.9   Matsudo
TD-30 Shin-Kamagaya 新鎌ヶ谷 53.3 <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> Kamagaya
TD-31 Kamagaya 鎌ヶ谷 55.2  
TD-32 Magomezawa 馬込沢 57.7   Funabashi
TD-33 Tsukada 塚田 60.1  
TD-34 Shin-Funabashi 新船橋 61.3  
TD-35 Funabashi 船橋 62.7 <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>

Rolling stock

Trains are formed of 6-car (or 4+2-car) 8000 series EMUs, introduced from 1997. New 6-car 60000 series EMUs were introduced on the line from 15 June 2013, replacing the older 8000 series sets.[5][6] Eight sets are scheduled to be delivered by the end of fiscal 2013.[7]

From 3 March 2012, test running using 10030 series EMUs commenced on the line,[8] with the first reliveried set entering revenue service from 20 April 2013.[9]

Former rolling stock

  • 1000 series 16 m long electric cars (1001–1004, 1101–1104,1201–1202), built in 1929 by Nippon Sharyo[4]
  • 6300 series 20 m long electric cars (former JNR 63000 series), from March 1947 until 1950[4]
  • 3200 series[4]
  • 7800 series 20 m long electric cars, from February 1958[4]
  • 7300 series 20 m long electric cars (rebuilt from 6300 series), from 1963[4]
  • 3000 series 6-car (including 2+4-car) EMUs, rebuilt from 3200 series, from May 1965 until 1992[10]
  • 5400 series EMUs, from November 1967 until 1972[4]
  • 3050 series EMUs, rebuilt from 5400 series, from March 1971 until 1992[4]
  • 3070 series EMUs, rebuilt from 5300 series, from 1974 until 1992[4]
  • 5000 series 6-car (including 2+4-car) EMUs, rebuilt from 7800 series, from March 1983 until November 1994[4][10]
  • 2080 series 6-car EMUs x2, from May 1988 until November 1992[4]

History

The Chiba Prefectural Railway Noda Line

The line first opened as the Chiba Prefectural Railway Noda Line (千葉県営鉄道野田線 Chiba Ken'ei Tetsudō Noda-sen?) on 9 May 1911, from Kashiwa to Nodamachi (now Nodashi), a distance of 14.7 kilometres (9 miles 10 chains) using steam haulage.[2] In 1923, the line was privatized and the operator was named Hokusō Railway (北総鉄道 Hokusō Tetsudō?) (separate from the present Hokusō Railway), and also opened its own line from Funabashi Station to Kashiwa Station, a distance of 19.6 km (12 mi 14 ch).

The company gradually extended the line to Ōmiya, and changed its name in 1929 to Sōbu Railway (総武鉄道 Sōbu Tetsudō?) (not to be confused with the present Sōbu Main Line). The line was completed in 1930 with the completion of the bridge over the Edo River.

On 1 March 1944, the company merged with the Tobu Railway, and the line became the Tobu Noda Line.[4] 6-car trains were introduced from November 1972.[2]

Electrification was commenced in 1929 between Kasukabe and Ōmiya,[2] and while the section from Kashiwa to Funabashi was still unelectrified when the operation of the line was taken over by Tobu in 1944, the remaining section was electrified by 1 March 1947.[4]

The Omiya to Kasukabe section was double-tracked between 1957 and 2011, the Nodashi to Umesato section in 2011, the Unga to Sakasai section between 1960 and 1991, and the Mutsumi to Funabashi section between 1964 and 1999.[citation needed]

Six-car 8000 series EMUs were phased in from 1997, displaced by new 30000 series EMUs introduced on the Tobu Isesaki Line.[11] The last remaining 5070 series EMUs were withdrawn from the start of the revised timetable on 19 October 2004, and the line's maximum speed was raised from 90 km/h to 100 km/h at the same time.[11]

From 17 March 2012, station numbering was introduced on all Tobu lines, with Noda Line stations receiving numbers prefixed with the letters "TD".[12]

From 1 April 2014, the line received a nickname called Tobu Urban Park Line (東武アーバンパークライン?).[7]

See also

References

  1. Tobu ridership in 2010 Train Media (sourced from Tobu) Retrieved 28 May 2012.
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External links