Wakasa Line Explained

Box Width:auto
Wakasa Line
Status:Operational
Locale:Tottori Prefecture
Stations:9
Open:20 January 1930
Owner:Wakasa Railway Company
Operator:Wakasa Railway Company
Character:Rural
Tracklength Km:19.2
Tracks:Entire line single tracked
Minradius:300 m
Electrification:None
Speed:65round=5NaNround=5
Map State:collapsed

The is a Japanese railway line in Tottori Prefecture operated by the third-sector operating company . The line connects Kōge Station in Yazu with Wakasa Station in Wakasa. It is the only railway line operated by the Wakasa Railway. The third-sector company took over operations of the former West Japan Railway Company (JR West) line in 1987.

Owners and operator

The line is operated by Wakasa Railway Co., Ltd. Although the company originally owned the railway line, on April 1, 2009, the ownership was transferred to the municipalities (towns) where the line exists and the company became a pure operator of the railway as a Category 2 Railway Operator. The town of Yazu owns 16.5 km of track and the town of Wakasa owns 2.7 km of track as Category 3 Railway Operators.[1]

Stations

NameJapaneseDistance (km)TransfersLocation
Through service to on the Inbi Line
郡家0.0 Inbi LineYazuTottori
八頭高校前0.9 
因幡船岡2.4 
4.4 
安部7.1 
八東9.8 
徳丸11.6 
丹比13.5 
若桜19.2 Wakasa

Rolling stock

Diesel railcars

From the start of third-sector operations in 1987, the line was operated using a fleet of four WT2500 series diesel cars. Three of these were subsequently refurbished, becoming WT3000 series, and a new stainless steel WT3300 series diesel car, WT3301, was also added to the fleet.

Locomotives

The railway owns a former JNR Class DD16 diesel locomotive, number DD16 7, previously used at the Railway Technical Research Institute in Kokubunji, Tokyo, and former JNR Class C12 2-6-2T steam locomotive number C12 167.[2]

History

The line opened on 20 January 1930 as the 4.5 km Wakasa Line from Kōge to Hayabusa. The entire line to Wakasa opened on 1 December 1930.[3] The original plan was to extend the line beyond Wakasa to the Sanin Main Line, near Yōka Station, but this was never realized.[3]

Freight services were discontinued from 1 October 1974.[4]

With the privatization of JNR in April 1987, the Wakasa Line was transferred to the ownership of West Japan Railway Company (JR West). However, JR West ceased operations on the line on 13 October 1987, with operations taken over by the third-sector Wakasa Railway Company from 14 October.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tetsudō Kyoku, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Tetsudō Yōran (Heisei 21 Nendo). 2009. Japanese. 166–167. Denkisha Kenkyūkai. Tokyo. 978-4-88548-113-0.
  2. Book: Sasada, Masahiro . ja: 国鉄&JR保存車大全 . JNR & JR Preserved Rolling Stock Complete Guide. Ikaros Publications Ltd.. September 2012 . Tokyo, Japan . Japanese . 127, 132. 978-4863206175.
  3. Ikeguchi. Eiji. ja: 若桜鉄道「SL走行社会実験」を振り返って. Looking back on Wakasa Railway's "steam train operation social experiment". Tetsudō Daiya Jōhō Magazine . 44. 375 . 12–19 . Kōtsū Shimbun . Japan . Japanese . July 2015.
  4. Book: Terada, Hirokazu . ja: データブック日本の私鉄 . Databook: Japan's Private Railways . Neko Publishing . 19 January 2013 . Japan . Japanese . 162. 978-4-7770-1336-4.