Hokuriku Railroad Asanogawa Line

Asanogawa Line
Hokuriku Railway 03 series train, in July 2022
Overview
OwnerHokuriku Railway
LocaleIshikawa Prefecture
Termini
Stations12
Websitehttp://www.hokutetsu.co.jp/en
Service
TypeHeavy rail
History
Opened1925
Technical
Line length6.8 km (4.23 mi)
Track gauge3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Electrification1500 V DC
Route map

6.8
Uchinada (内灘駅)
6.3
Awagasaki (粟ヶ崎駅)
River Ono
5.5
Kagatsume (蚊爪駅)
5.1
Kitama (北間駅)
4.5
Okobata (大河端駅)
3.9
Mitsuya (三ツ屋駅)
3.3
Mitsukuchi (三口駅)
2.8
Waridashi (割出駅)
2.2
Isobe (磯部駅)
1.5
Kami-Moroe (上諸江駅)
0.6
Nanatsuya (七ツ屋駅)
0.0
Kanazawa (金沢駅)

The Asanogawa Line (浅野川線, Asanogawa-sen) is a Japanese railway line which connects Kanazawa Station in Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture with Uchinada Station in Uchinada, Ishikawa Prefecture. It is owned and operated by Hokuriku Railroad. Due to its history as the former Asanogawa Electric Railway, the line is often referred to as the Asaden (浅電).

Service

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All trains make the run from Hokutetsu-Kanazawa to Uchinada once every 30 minutes during the day, and once every 22–24 minutes during peak periods. The trip takes 17 minutes.

Until December 2006, there was an express service which stopped at Kami-Moroe, Waridashi, Mitsuya, and Kagatsuma; the trip took 14 minutes.

History

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  • May 10, 1925: Asanogawa Electric Railway opens Nanatsuya — Shin-Susaki section, electrified at 600 VDC
  • May 18, 1926: Kanazawa-Ekimae (now Hokutetsu-Kanazawa) — Nanatsuya section opens
  • July 14, 1929: Shin-Sumachi — Awagasaki-Yūen-Mae (now Uchinada) — Awagasaki-Kaigan section opens
  • February 11, 1945: Awagasaki-Yūen-Mae — Awagasaki-Kaigan section closes
  • October 1, 1945: Hokuriku Railway absorbs Asanogawa Electric Railway; line becomes Asanogawa Line
  • April 21, 1946: Mitsuya Station renamed Tsuribashi Station
  • 1952: Awagasaki-Yūen-Mae — Awagasaki-Kaigan section reopens
  • July 5, 1956: Hokutetsu-Kanazawa Station moved due to expansion of Kanazawa Station plaza
  • May 14, 1960: Awagasaki-Yūen-Mae Station moves 0.1 km, renamed to Uchinada Station
  • June 30, 1961: Shin-Susaki Station closes
  • April 1, 1972: Freight operations end
  • July 8, 1974: Uchinada — Awagasaki-Kaigan section closes
  • November 26, 1974: Tsuribashi Station renamed Mitsuya Station
  • December 19, 1996: Catenary voltage increased from 600 V to 1500 V DC; Driver-only operation begins
  • March 28, 2001: Hokutetsu-Kanazawa — Nanatsuya section moved underground; ATS system begins operation
  • December 1, 2006: Express service abolished

Former connecting lines

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  • Kanazawa Station: The 5 km 762 mm gauge Jinshi horse-drawn tramway opened in 1898, being converted to 1,067 mm gauge and electrified at 600 V DC in 1914. In 1920, the line was extended to Ono Port, and a further 2 km to Ono Minato in 1923. A 400m branch to Ryokuchi Park opened in 1930, passenger services on the branch ceasing in 1945 though the line remained to service a paper mill. The entire system closed in 1970.

Rolling stock

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Hokuriku Railway uses ten 8000 series (formerly Keio 3000 series) railcars on the Asanogawa Line. They are typically run in paired sets.

Former Tokyo Metro 03 series trains entered service on the line on December 21, 2020.[1]

Stations

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All stations are located in Ishikawa Prefecture.

No Station Japanese Distance (km) Transfers Location
Between
Stations
Total
A01 Hokutetsu-Kanazawa 北鉄金沢駅 - 0.0 JR West and IR Ishikawa Railway (Kanazawa Station): Hokuriku Shinkansen, Nanao Line, IR Ishikawa Railway Line Kanazawa
A02 Nanatsuya 七ツ屋駅 0.6 0.6  
A03 Kami-Moroe 上諸江駅 0.9 1.5  
A04 Isobe 磯部駅 0.7 2.2  
A05 Waridashi 割出駅 0.6 2.8  
A06 Mitsukuchi 三口駅 0.5 3.3  
A07 Mitsuya 三ツ屋駅 0.6 3.9  
A08 Okobata 大河端駅 0.6 4.5  
A09 Kitama 北間駅 0.6 5.1  
A10 Kagatsume 蚊爪駅 0.4 5.5  
A11 Awagasaki 粟ヶ崎駅 0.8 6.3   Uchinada, Kahoku District
A12 Uchinada 内灘駅 0.5 6.8  

See also

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References

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This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia.

  1. ^ "元日比谷線「03系」北陸鉄道でデビュー 元井の頭線車両の引退とあわせてイベント開催". trafficnews.jp (in Japanese). Mediavague Co., ltd. December 1, 2020. Archived from the original on December 6, 2020. Retrieved December 6, 2020.