JR Kyōto Line explained

JR Kyōto Line
Native Name:JR京都線
Native Name Lang:ja
Color:0072bc
Image Alt:local service
Type:Heavy rail
System:Urban Network
Start:Kyoto (Tōkaidō Line)
End:Osaka (Tōkaidō Line)
Stations:17
Open:July 26, 1876 (as part of Tōkaidō Main Line)
March 13, 1988 (renamed as JR Kyōto Line)
Linelength Km:42.8
Electrification: (overhead lines)
Speed:outer tracks:
inner tracks:

The is a commuter rail line in the Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto Metropolitan Area owned and operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West). The name applies to the section of the Tōkaidō Main Line between Kyōto Station and Ōsaka Station.

The Kyōto Line operates in combination with the Biwako Line and the JR Kobe Line, and offers through service trains to the Kosei Line and the JR Takarazuka Line.

Basic data

Automatic

Services

Commuter trains are classified in three types:

In addition to the three types of commuter trains, long-distance limited express trains connecting the Kyoto-Osaka region with Kansai International Airport (Haruka services), Hokuriku region (Thunderbird services) and other areas also frequently operate on the line. Freight trains also operate on the line except for the section near Osaka Station where freight trains use separate freight lines.

Stations

Legend:

Local trains stop at all stations. Rapid trains in the morning skip some stops between Kyoto and Takatsuki.

Official Line NameNo.StationJapaneseDistance (km)StopsTransfersLocation
RapidSpecial RapidWard, CityPrefecture
Through services from Biwako Line and Kosei Line
Tōkaidō Main Line京都0.0Shimogyō-ku, KyotoKyoto
西大路2.5||| rowspan="2" |Minami-ku, Kyoto|-||||桂川
(久世)| style="text-align:right" |5.3|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||||-||||向日町| style="text-align:right" |6.4|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||
Mukō
長岡京10.1|||Nagaokakyō|-||||山崎| style="text-align:right" |14.1|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||||Ōyamazaki|-||||島本| style="text-align:right" |16.3|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|▲|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||ShimamotoOsaka
高槻21.6Takatsuki
摂津富田24.5||style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||||-||[1] ||JR総持寺| style="text-align:right" |26.2|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|||style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|||| rowspan="2" |Ibaraki|-||||茨木| style="text-align:right" |28.2|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||
千里丘31.1||style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||||Settsu|-||||岸辺| style="text-align:right" |32.8|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|||style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|||| rowspan="2" |Suita|-||||吹田| style="text-align:right" |35.2|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|||style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"||||-||||東淀川| style="text-align:right" |38.3|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|||style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|||| rowspan="2" |Yodogawa-ku, Osaka|-||||新大阪| style="text-align:right" |39.0|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●|
    |-||||大阪| style="text-align:right" |42.8|style="background-color:#ffc966;" align="center"|●|style="background-color:#cdf;" align="center"|●||Kita-ku, Osaka|- style="text-align: center; "! colspan="10" |Through services on JR Kobe Line Through services on JR Takarazuka Line (Local only)|}

    Closed station

    From September 5, 1876 to the opening of Kyoto Station on February 6, 1877, was the station for the city of Kyoto. The temporary station was located at 40 chains (0.80 km) west of Kyoto Station construction site, or 3 miles and 47 chains (5.77 km) away from Mukōmachi Station.

    Rolling stock

    Local

    • 207 series (from 1991, through service with Fukuchiyama Line)
    • 321 series (from 2005, through service with Fukuchiyama Line)

    Special Rapid and Rapid

    • 221 series (from 1989, through service with Kosei and Biwako Lines, until 2023)
    • 223-1000/2000/6000 series (from 1995, through service with Kosei and Biwako Lines, until 2030)
    • 225-0/100 series (from 2010, through service with Kosei and Biwako Lines, until 2030)

    Limited express

    Former

    History

    The line now called the JR Kyoto Line opened in 1876, only four years after the opening of the first railway in Japan. On 26 July 1876, the Japanese Government Railways opened the section between Ōsaka and Mukōmachi with an intermediate station at Takatsuki. On 9 August 1876, Yamazaki Station, Ibaraki Station and Suita Station opened. Kyoto Station opened on 6 February 1877.

    On 1 June 1949, operation of the line was taken over by Japanese National Railways (JNR).

    • 1 October 1964 – Shin-Ōsaka Station opens with a Tōkaidō Shinkansen connection
    • 1 October 1970 – Operation of Special Rapid Service starts
    • 1 April 1987 – JR West becomes the operator of the line following privatization of JNR
    • 13 March 1988 – JR West starts the use of the line name JR Kyōto Line

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Jr京都線、摂津富田~茨木駅間新駅の駅名が「Jr総持寺駅」に決定:Jr西日本 .