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, referred to as , is a Japanese passenger railway company, managing infrastructure and operating passenger train service. Its railway system is the largest in Japan, excluding Japan Railways Group. The railway network connects
Osaka is a designated city in the Kansai region of Honshu in Japan. It is the capital of and most populous city in Osaka Prefecture, and the third most populous city in Japan, following Special wards of Tokyo and Yokohama. With a population of ...
, Nara,
Kyoto Kyoto (; Japanese: , ''Kyōto'' ), officially , is the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture in Japan. Located in the Kansai region on the island of Honshu, Kyoto forms a part of the Keihanshin metropolitan area along with Osaka and Kobe. , the c ...
, Nagoya, Tsu,
Ise Ise may refer to: Places *Ise, Mie, a city in Japan ** Ise Grand Shrine, a Shinto shrine located in Ise, Mie * Ise Ekiti, a city in Nigeria * Ise, Norway, a village in Norway * Ise Province, an ancient province of Japan * River Ise, a tributary of ...
, and Yoshino. Kintetsu Railway Co., Ltd. is a wholly owned subsidiary of
Kintetsu Group Holdings , referred to as , is a Japanese railway holding company which primarily owns the Kintetsu Railway as well as Kintetsu World Express, Kintetsu Department Store, and its other 141 corporations, which are collectively known as Kintetsu Group. ...
Co., Ltd.


History

On September 16, 1910, was founded and renamed a month after. Osaka Electric Tramway completed Ikoma Tunnel and started operating a line between Osaka and Nara (present-day
Nara Line The is a commuter rail line in the Osaka–Kobe–Kyoto metropolitan area, operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West). Its official termini are Kizu Station in Kizugawa and Kyōto Station in Kyoto, within Kyoto Prefecture; howe ...
) on April 30, 1914. The modern Kashihara, Osaka, and Shigi lines were completed in the 1920s, followed by the Kyoto Line (a cooperative venture with Keihan Electric Railway). Daiki founded in 1927, which consolidated on September 15, 1936. In 1938, Daiki teamed up with its subsidiary to operate the first private railway service from Osaka to Nagoya. Another subsidiary Sankyū bought Kansai Express Electric Railway on January 1, 1940 and continued the service on its own. Then, Sankyū consolidated on August 1. Daiki consolidated its largest subsidiary ''Sankyū'' on March 15, 1941 and was renamed . ''Kankyū'' consolidated on February 1, 1943 and moved its headquarters from Uehommachi to Osaka Abenobashi. Kankyū was renamed after it consolidated Nankai Railway in June 1944: it maintained the name when Nankai regained its independence in 1947. After
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
, Kintetsu branched out and became one of the world's largest travel agencies, Kinki Nippon Tourist Co., Ltd., opening offices in the United States of America (Kintetsu International Express, Inc.) and other countries. The first charged limited express train service started between Uehommachi and Nagoya in 1947, and this is the start of the present Kintetsu limited express trains. The rail network was mostly completed by consolidating , , and other companies. Kintetsu moved its headquarters again from Osaka Abenobashi to Osaka Uehommachi on December 5, 1969. On June 28, 2003, Kinki Nippon Railway Co., Ltd. was renamed Kintetsu Corporation. The corporation was split on April 1, 2015. Its railway business division was succeeded by Kintetsu Split Preparatory Company, Ltd. (founded on April 30, 2014), while its real estate business division by Kintetsu Real Estate Co., Ltd., its hotel business division by Kintetsu Hotel Systems, Inc., and its retail business by Kintetsu Retail Service Corporation, respectively. On the same day Kintetsu Corporation was split, it was renamed as Kintetsu Group Holdings Co., Ltd. as a holding company, while Kintetsu Split Preparatory Company, Ltd. was renamed as Kintetsu Railway Co., Ltd.


Abbreviations

;From its founding to present :*September 16, 1910—April 14, 1941: :*April 15, 1941—May 31, 1944: :*June 1, 1944—1948: or :*Present: — used for the official corporate name in English since 2003. ;Acquired or merged companies :*Sangu Express Electric Railway Co., Ltd.: :*Ise Electric Railway Co., Ltd.: :*Osaka Railway Co., Ltd.: :*Nara Electric Railway Co., Ltd.: :*Mie Electric Railway Co., Ltd.:


Lines


Owned and operated lines (Type I Railway Business), funiculars, and aerial tramway

Following lines belong to Kintetsu's and Business under the Railway Business Act. This means that Kintetsu is the owner and operator of the lines.


lines

All lines operate with 1,500 V DC overhead catenary except for the Keihanna Line, which operates on 750 V DC third rail. *Osaka Line and its branch ** Osaka Line (Osaka Uehommachi - Ise-Nakagawa) *** Shigi Line (Kawachi-Yamamoto - ShigiSangūchi) *Nagoya Line and its branches ** Nagoya Line (Kintetsu Nagoya - Ise-Nakagawa) ***
Yunoyama Line The is a railway line of the Rail transport in Japan#Major private railways, Japanese private railway company Kintetsu Railway, connecting Kintetsu-Yokkaichi Station (Yokkaichi, Mie, Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture) and Yunoyama-Onsen Station (Komono, ...
(Kintetsu Yokkaichi - Yunoyama-Onsen) ***
Suzuka Line The is a railway line of the Japanese private railway company Kintetsu Railway, connecting Ise-Wakamatsu Station (Suzuka, Mie) and Hiratachō Station (Suzuka, Mie Prefecture) in Japan. The line connects with the Nagoya Line at Ise-Wakamatsu ...
(Ise-Wakamatsu - Hiratacho) *Yamada/Toba/Shima Line ** Yamada Line (Ise-Nakagawa - Ujiyamada) **
Toba Line The is a railway line operated by the Japanese private railway company Kintetsu Railway, connecting Ujiyamada Station in Ise, Mie with Toba Station in Toba, Mie. The line runs parallel to JR Central's Sangū Line. The line connects with the ...
(Ujiyamada - Toba) ** Shima Line (Toba - Kashikojima) *Namba/Nara Line and its branch ** Namba Line (Ōsaka Namba - Ōsaka Uehommachi) **
Nara Line The is a commuter rail line in the Osaka–Kobe–Kyoto metropolitan area, operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West). Its official termini are Kizu Station in Kizugawa and Kyōto Station in Kyoto, within Kyoto Prefecture; howe ...
(Fuse - Kintetsu-Nara) *** Ikoma Line (Ikoma - Oji) * Keihanna Line (Nagata - Gakken Nara-Tomigaoka)** *Kyoto/Kashihara Line and its branches ** Kyoto Line (Kyoto - Yamato-Saidaiji) ** Kashihara Line (Yamato-Saidaiji - Kashiharajingu-mae) ***
Tenri Line The is a railway line of Kintetsu Railway in Nara Prefecture, Japan connecting Hirahata Station in Yamato-Kōriyama and Tenri Station in Tenri. The line has four stations including the terminal Tenri and the transfer station Hirahata. It is ma ...
(Hirahata - Tenri) ***
Tawaramoto Line The is a railway line owned and operated by the Kintetsu Railway, a Japanese private railway company, connecting Ōji Station (Nara) ( Ōji, Nara Prefecture) and Nishi-Tawaramoto Station ( Tawaramoto, Nara Prefecture) in Japan. The line does ...
(Shin-Oji - Nishi-Tawaramoto)


narrow gauge lines

*Minami Osaka/Yoshino Line and its branches ** Minami Osaka Line (Osaka Abenobashi - Kashiharajingu-mae) ***
Domyoji Line The is a single-tracked, 2.2 km short railway line operated by Kintetsu Railway, connecting Dōmyōji Station in the city of Fujiidera and Kashiwara Station in Kashiwara, both in Osaka Prefecture. History The line is the oldest in the K ...
(Domyoji - Kashiwara) *** Nagano Line (Furuichi - Kawachi-Nagano) *** Gose Line (Shakudo - Kintetsu Gose) ** Yoshino Line (Kashiharajingu-mae - Yoshino)


Cable car (Funicular) lines

* Ikoma Line (Toriimae - Ikoma-Sanjo) * Nishi-Shigi Line (ShigiSangūchi - Takayasuyama)


Ropeway (aerial tramway)

*
Katsuragisan Ropeway The , legally referred to as , is an aerial tramway line in Gose, Nara, Japan. The line is the only aerial tramway line in Japan that is directly owned and operated by a major private railway company, the Kintetsu Railway. Opened in 1967, the lin ...
(Katsuragi-tozanguchi - Katsuragi-sanjo)


Operated lines owned by other entities (Type II Railway Business)

Following line belongs to Kintetsu's under the Railway Business Act. This means that Kintetsu operates trains on the line, but the owner of the railway trackage is a separate company. * line ** Keihanna Line (Ikoma - Gakken-Nara-Tomigaoka, trackage owned by Nara Ikoma Rapid Transit Railway Co., Ltd.)


Owned lines operated by other entities (Type III Railway Business)

Following lines belong to Kintetsu's under the Railway Business Act. This means that Kintetsu is the owner of the railway facility, but the trains are operated by separate companies. * narrow gauge lines ** Iga Line (Iga-Ueno - Iga-Kambe, trains operated by Iga Railway Co., Ltd.) ** Yōrō Line (Kuwana - Ogaki - Ibi, trains operated by Yōrō Railway Co., Ltd.) Until September 30, 2007, those lines were part of the Category 1 railway business.


Through-train services

Kintetsu trains also run on the Osaka Metro Chūō Line (all Keihanna Line trains), the Kyoto Municipal Subway Karasuma Line, and the Hanshin Railway
Hanshin Namba Line The is a railway line operated by the private railway operator Hanshin Electric Railway connecting Amagasaki Station in Amagasaki, Hyogo Prefecture, and Ōsaka Namba Station in Chuo-ku, Osaka, Osaka Prefecture, Japan. History The , the pre ...
, but such lines are not Kintetsu lines.


Abandoned lines and transferred lines

*Hase Line (長谷線) (Sakurai - Hase, abandoned ) *Sanjo Line (山上線) (Takayasuyama - Shigizammon, discontinued on January 7, 1944 and abandoned on ) *Horyuji Line (法隆寺線) (Shin-Horyuji - Hirahata, discontinued on February 11, 1945 and abandoned on ) *Obusa Line (小房線) (Unebi - Kashiharajingu-eki, discontinued on June 1, 1950 and abandoned on ) *Ise Line (伊勢線) (Edobashi - Shin-Matsusaka - Daijingu-mae) **Shin-Matsusaka - Daijingu-mae: abandoned on **Edobashi - Shin-Matsusaka: abandoned on *Iga Line (伊賀線) (Nishi-Nabari - Iga-Kambe, abandoned on ) *Shima Line (志摩線) (Kashikojima - Shinjuko, abandoned on ) *Hachioji Line (八王子線) (Nishihino - Ise-Hachioji, discontinued on July 25, 1974 and abandoned on ) *Higashi-Shigi Cable Line (東信貴鋼索線) (Shigisanshita - Shigisan, abandoned on ) * Hokusei Line (Nishi-Kuwana - Ageki, transferred to Sangi Railway Co. on April 1, 2003) * Utsube Line (Kintetsu Yokkaichi - Utsube, transferred to Yokkaichi Asunaro Railway Company on April 1, 2015) * Hachioji Line (Hinaga - Nishi-Hino, transferred to Yokkaichi Asunaro Railway Company on April 1, 2015)


Lines transferred to Nankai Electric Railway

To separate both former Kankyū lines and Nankai Railway lines, on June 1, 1947, the following lines were transferred to Nankai Electric Railway Co. Ltd. that was renamed from Kōyasan Electric Railway Co., Ltd. * Nankai Main Line (Namba - Wakayamashi) **Tennoji Branch Line (天王寺支線) (Tengachaya - Tennoji) ***Tengachaya - Imaikecho: abandoned on ***Imaikecho - Tennoji: abandoned on ** Takashinohama Line (Hagoromo - Takashinohama) ** Tanagawa Line (Misakikoen - Tanagawa) ** Kada Line (Kinokawa - Kada) **Kitajima Branch Line (北島支線) (Wakayamashi - Higashi-Matsue, abandoned on ) *
Koya Line The is a railway line in Osaka Prefecture and Wakayama Prefecture, Japan, owned and operated by the Nankai Electric Railway, a private railway operator. It connects Osaka and Koyasan, the capital of the Japanese Buddhist sect Shingon, via the ...
(Shiomibashi - Koyashita) * Hankai Line (Ebisucho - Hamadera-eki-mae) (transferred to Hankai Tramway Co., Ltd. on December 1, 1980) **Ohama Branch Line (大浜支線) (Shukuin - Ohama-kitaguchi - Ohamakaigan) ***Ohama-kitaguchi - Ohamakaigan: abandoned on ***Shukuin - Ohama-kitaguchi: closed on July 10, 1945, abandoned on ** Uemachi Line (Tennoji-eki-mae - Sumiyoshikoen) (transferred to Hankai Tramway Co., Ltd. on December 1, 1980) **Hirano Line (平野線) (Imaike - Hirano) (abandoned on )


Unbuilt lines

*Gifu Line (岐阜線) (Ogaki - Gifu or Hashima), planned by Yoro Electric Railway Co. *Shijonawate Line (四条畷線) (Sakuranomiya - Nukata), planned by Osaka Electric Railway Co.


Rolling stock

, Kintetsu operates a fleet of 1,905 electric multiple unit (EMU) vehicles, the second largest fleet for a private railway operator in Japan after Tokyo Metro (2,766 vehicles). The newest ''Hinotori'' 80000 series EMU trainsets entered revenue service on limited express services between Osaka Namba and Kintetsu Nagoya in spring 2020. Eight six-car sets and three eight-car sets, 72 vehicles in total, will enter service by 2021. The end cars in each set will be designated "High Grade cars" with 1+2 abreast seating and a seat pitch of . The intermediate "Regular" cars will have 2+2 abreast seating and a seat pitch of . Seating in both types of accommodation will consist of fixed-back shell seats. File:Kintetsu 21020.jpg, 21020 series ''Urban Liner next'' File:Kintetsu-30000 001 JPN.JPG, 30000 series ''Vista EX'' File:Kintetsu1400Series02.jpg, 1400 series File:Kintetsu 5820 series 001.JPG, 5820 series File:Kintetsu7000Series01.jpg, 7000 series File:Kintetsu 80000 series Nagoya Station (49703548326).jpg, alt=Kintetsu 80000 series Hinotori train at Kintetsu Nagoya station, 80000 series ''Hinotori''


Future

In May 2022 Kintetsu announced that new commuter trainsets would be in service for 2024.


Fare cards

Kintetsu accepts ICOCA, PiTaPa, and other compatible nation-wide IC cards throughout their network except on the Ikoma cable car and Katsuragi ropeway. Various discount tickets are also available from their website or ticket machines, with varying valid areas and usage periods. Surutto Kansai passes can be used in the Keihanshin area, west of Aoyamachō and north of Tsubosakayama stations.


Offices of Kintetsu

*Headquarters and Osaka Transportation Department, Railway Headquarters, Railway Headquarters: 1-55, Uehommachi Rokuchome, Tennoji-ku, Osaka *Nagoya Transportation Department, Railway Headquarters: 16-11, Unomori Itchome, Yokkaichi, Mie


See also

*
Yamato Bunkakan is a museum of Asian art in Nara, Nara. The museum was established in 1960Martin, John ''et al.'' (1993) ''Nara: a Cultural Guide to Japan's Ancient Capital,'' p. 139./ref> to preserve and display the private collection of Kintetsu Corporation ( ...


References


External links

*
about Kintetsu
{{Authority control Companies listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange * Railway companies of Japan Railway companies established in 1910 Companies based in Osaka Prefecture Holding companies of Japan Companies listed on the Nagoya Stock Exchange Holding companies established in 1910 Japanese companies established in 1910