Chūō Line (Rapid) Contents Basic data Services Station list Rolling stock History Future...

JR JY line symbol.svgYamanoteJR JK line symbol.svgKeihin-TōhokuNegishiJR JB line symbol.svgChūō-Sōbu LocalJR JC line symbol.svgChūō RapidJR JO line symbol.svgYokosukaSōbu RapidJR JU line symbol.svgUtsunomiyaTakasakiJR JT line symbol.svgTōkaidōUeno–TokyoJR JA line symbol.svgSaikyoJR JS line symbol.svgShonan–ShinjukuJR JJ line symbol.svgJōban RapidJR JL line symbol.svgJōban LocalJR JE line symbol.svgKeiyōToei Asakusa line symbol.svgAsakusaToei Oedo line symbol.svgŌedoToei Mita line symbol.svgMitaToei Shinjuku line symbol.svgShinjukuJR JM line symbol.svgMusashinoJR JH line symbol.svgYokohamaJR JN line symbol.svgNambuJR JI line symbol.svgTsurumiSagamiHachikōKawagoeRyōmōKarasuyamaNikkōChūō MainJR JC line symbol.svgItsukaichiJR JC line symbol.svgŌmeSōbu MainSotobōUchibōKururiTōganeMitoNaritaJR JT line symbol.svgJR JT line symbol.svgItōJR Central Gotemba Line.svgGotembaJR logo (central).svgJR CentralNumber prefix Keiō.PNGKeioKeiō NewDōbutsuenKeibajōSagamiharaTakaoNumber prefix Inokashira.PNGInokashiraOdakyu odawara.svgOdawaraOdakyu enoshima.svgEnoshimaOdakyu tama.svgTamaSotetsu line symbol.svgSotetsu MainIzuminoTokyu DT line symbol.svgDen-en-toshiTokyu IK line symbol.svgIkegamiTokyu MG line symbol.svgMeguroTokyu OM line symbol.svgOimachiTokyu TM line symbol.svgTokyu TamagawaTokyu TY line symbol.svgToyokoTokyu KD line symbol.svgKodomonokuniChiba Urban Monorail Logo.pngChiba MonorailMickey Mouse head and ears.svgDisney ResortSHONAN MONORAIL LOGO.pngShōnan MonorailTama Toshi Monorail Logo.pngTama MonorailTokyo Monorail Line symbol.svgTokyo MonorailSaitama New Urban Transit Logomark.svgNew ShuttleYokohama Seaside Line Symbol.svgKanazawa SeasideNippori-Toneri Liner symbol.svgNippori-ToneriSeibuYamaguchi.svgSeibu YamaguchiYūkarigaokaYurikamome line symbol.svgYurikamomeNumber prefix Enoden.PNGEnodenTokyu SG line symbol.svgSetagayaTokyo Sakura Tram symbol.svgArakawaOdakyuGroup logo2.svgŌyama Cable CarHodosan RopewayKeioRailway logo.svgTakao Tozan RailwayMitake Tozan Cable CarKeisei Logo.svgNokogiriyama RopewayMount Tsukuba Cable CarMount Tsukuba RopewayAkechidaira RopewayIkaho RopewayTokyo-Wan FerryTokyo Cruise ShipTokyo Mizube LineKeihin Ferry BoatThe Port ServiceShinkansen-E.svgShinkansen jrc.svgShinkansenPasmoSuicaTransport in Greater TokyoRail transport in JapanList of named passenger trains of JapanList of through trains in JapanTokyo subway rolling stockList of East Japan Railway Company stationsList of Toei Subway stationsList of Tokyo Metro stationsStation NumberingHokurikuJōetsuTōhokuAkitaYamagataAgatsumaAterazawaBan'etsu EastBan'etsu WestEchigoGonōHachikōHachinoheHakushinHanawaIiyamaIshinomakiItōItsukaichiJōbanJōetsuKamaishiKarasuyamaKashimaKawagoeKeiyōKesennumaKitakamiKoumiKururiMitoMusashinoNambuNaritaNegishiNikkōŌfunatoOgaŌitoŌmeŌminatoRikuu EastRikuu WestRyōmōSagamiSensekiSenzanShinonoiSotobōSuigunTadamiTakasakiTazawakoTōganeTsugaruTsurumiUchibōUtsunomiyaYahikoYamadaYamanoteYokohamaYokosukaYonesakaAizuAshioIwaizumiKiharaMarumoriMōkaNagaiShinanoEchigo TokimekiAoimoriIwate Galaxy


Chūō Main Line1067 mm gauge railways in Japan


Chūō Main LineEast Japan Railway CompanyTokyoTakaoOtsukiChuoline rapid.svgChūō Main LineChūō-Sōbu LineChuoRapidLineStations.pngShinkansen-E.pngShinkansen-E.pngShinkansen-E.pngShinkansen-E.pngShinkansen-E.pngYokosuka LineSōbu Line (Rapid)Keiyō LineUeno-Tokyo LineUtsunomiyaTakasaki LineJōban LineTokaido LineShinkansen jrc.svgTokaido ShinkansenTokyo Metro Marunouchi LineTokyo Metro Ginza LineTokyo Metro Chiyoda LineShin-OchanomizuTokyo Metro Namboku LineSaikyō LineShōnan-Shinjuku LineOdakyū Odawara LineKeiō LineKeiō New LineTokyo Metro Marunouchi LineToei Shinjuku LineToei Ōedo LineSeibu Shinjuku LineSeibu-ShinjukuNambu LineTama Toshi Monorail LineTachikawa-KitaTachikawa-MinamiHachikō LineKeiō LineKeiō-HachiōjiKōbu RailwayJapanese Government Railwayselectric multiple unit209-1000 seriesJōban Line (Local)suicides
































































Chūō Line (Rapid)
JC

JR East E233-0.jpg
A Chūō Line (Rapid) E233 series (right) and A Chūō-Sōbu Line E231 series (June 2007)

Overview
Native name 中央線快速
Locale Tokyo
Termini
Tokyo
Takao
Stations 24
Daily ridership 2,259,559 (daily 2015)[1]
Operation
Opened 1932
Operator(s) JR East
Depot(s) Mitaka, Toyoda
Rolling stock
E233-0 series, 209-1000 series
Technical
Line length 53.1 km (33.0 mi)
Track gauge
1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification 1,500 V DC overhead catenary
Operating speed 100 km/h (60 mph)

The Chūō Line (Rapid) (中央線快速, Chūō-sen kaisoku) is the name given to rapid services on the eastern section of the Chūō Main Line operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) between Tokyo and Takao stations. The official map shows services travel as far as Otsuki.




Contents






  • 1 Basic data


  • 2 Services


  • 3 Station list


  • 4 Rolling stock


    • 4.1 Rolling stock used in past




  • 5 History


  • 6 Future developments


  • 7 High suicide rate


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





Basic data



  • Operator: East Japan Railway Company (Services and tracks)
    • Tokyo – Takao: 53.1 km (33.0 mi)


  • Double-tracked section: Entire line


  • Railway signalling: ATS


  • CTC center: Tokyo Operations Control Center



Services


Chuoline rapid.svg


Although the Chūō Line (Rapid) designation only refers to the section between Tokyo and Takao stations, many trains continue on past Takao to Ōtsuki, with some trains operating through services to other lines. These include both limited express and various special rapid services. For details, see the Chūō Main Line article. In addition, Chūō Line (Rapid) trains do not stop at some stations between Ochanomizu and Nakano stations; for information on those services, see the Chūō-Sōbu Line article.


The Chūō Line (Rapid) uses the two express tracks on the four-track section between Ochanomizu and Mitaka stations. Past Mitaka, trains use both tracks on the remaining double-track section. Since the express tracks do not have platforms at several stations in central Tokyo, even the slowest services of the Chūō Line (Rapid) skip such stations and are therefore called "Rapid" (快速). In addition to the basic type of "Rapid", there are some variations of the service types with fewer stops.





Rapid (快速)

This service is the most common on the Chūō Line (Rapid) route. They stop at all stations west of Nakano. After Nakano, it stops at Shinjuku, Yotsuya, Ochanomizu, and Kanda stations before arrival in Tōkyō Terminal. On weekends and holidays, trains do not stop at Asagaya, Kōenji, and Nishi-Ogikubo stations.

They run between Tokyo on the east side, and Takao/Otsuki on the west side, though some westbound services terminate at stations before Takao, such as Musashi-Koganei, Tachikawa, Toyoda and Hachioji.

Some trains operate through services to the Ōme Line (to as far as Ōme/from Okutama) , Itsukaichi Line (to/from Musashi-Itsukaichi, via Haijima on the Ōme Line), Hachiko Line (to/from as far as Komagawa, via Haijima on the Ōme Line) or the Fuji Kyuko Line (to/from Kawguchiko, via Ōtsuki).

The service's signature color on service diagrams is orange ().




Local (各駅停車)

This service only operates during early morning and late night, where Rapid service trains would enter Chūō-Sōbu Line tracks within Nakano and Ochanomizu, stopping at all stations where regular Rapid services would skip, namely Higashi-Nakano, Ōkubo, Yoyogi, Sendagaya, Shinanomachi, Ichigaya, Iidabashi and Suidobashi.

They run between Tokyo on the east side and as far as Takao on the west side, though, like Rapid services, some westbound services terminate at stations before Takao, such as Musashi-Koganei, Tachikawa, Toyoda and Hachioji. A few services operate through services to Ōme on the Ōme Line.

The service's signature color on service diagrams is yellow ().




Chūō Special Rapid (中央特快)  • Ōme Special Rapid (青梅特快)

Four services per hour in off-peak hours make limited stops between Tokyo and Tachikawa. These two services stop at the same stations that Rapid services would stop between Tokyo and Nakano. After Nakano, these services only stop at Mitaka, Kokubunji and Tachikawa, and stop at all stations west of Tachikawa. Eastbound services continue from Nakano as a rapid service.

Chūō Special Rapid stays on the Chūō Main Line to Takao and Ōtsuki, and some services operate beyond Ōtsuki to the Fuji Kyuko Line towards Kawaguchiko.

Ōme Special Rapid spurs to the Ōme Line towards Ōme, stopping at all stations within the line.

The service's signature color on service diagrams is blue () for Chūō Special Rapid and green () for Ōme Special Rapid.




Commuter Rapid (通勤快速)

Commuter Rapid services operates weekday evening. It starts service in Tokyo heading west, and stops at Ogikubo and Kichijōji in addition to the stops of the two Special Rapids. They mostly terminate at Takao, though a few trains go further to Ōtsuki, or operate through services to Kawaguchiko on the Fuji Kyuko Line, or to Ōme on the Ōme Line. Again, through services to the Ōme Line or the Fuji Kyuko Line stops at all stations on their respective lines.

The service's signature color on service diagrams is purple ().




Commuter Special Rapid (通勤特快)

This service only operates on weekday towards Tokyo, where two originates from Ōtsuki, two from Ōme on the Ōme Line, and one from Takao. It stops at all stations until Takao, Hachiōji, Tachikawa, Kokubunji, and Shinjuku and continues as a rapid service from Shinjuku. Again, services from Ōme stop at all stations on the Ōme Line.

The service's signature color on service diagrams is pink ().





Musashino (むさしの号)


The Musashino is a local service train linking Ōmiya to Hachiōji via the Musashino Line. Services enter/exit the Chūō Line at Kunitachi by the freight branch, and stops at all stops from Kunitachi to Hachiōji.



Holiday Rapid (ホリデー快速)

A variety of Holiday Rapid services running on the Chūō Rapid Line operate during the weekends and holidays to serve passengers.




  • The Holiday Rapid Okutama (ホリデー快速おくたま), which runs through the Ōme Line, and Holiday Rapid Akigawa (ホリデー快速あきがわ), which runs through the Itsukaichi Line, are two of them. They couple together, running through the Chūō Rapid Line, from Tokyo / Shinjuku to Tachikawa, through the Ōme Line to Haijima, and decouple. The former heads to Okutama, and the latter heads to Musashi-Itsukaichi.

  • The Holiday Rapid Mount Fuji (ホリデー快速富士山) and Holiday Rapid View Yamanashi (ホリデー快速ビューやまなし) are two holiday rapid services that, though nominally called 'Rapid', they stop at stations not less than the Special Rapids (Stops at Shinjuku, Mitaka, Tachikawa, Hachiōji, Takao within the Chūō Rapid Line, and skips stations such as Nakano, Kokubunji, Hino, Toyoda, Nishi-Hachiōji, and also some stations west of Takao.)




Station list


ChuoRapidLineStations.png



  • This list will include stations from Tokyo to Ōtsuki, where most train services on this line serve.

  • For information on local services during early morning and late night, please see the Chūō-Sōbu Line article.

  • For information on the Chūō Line west of Otsuki, please see the Chūō Main Line article.

  • Information on the limited expresses Azusa, Kaiji, Narita Express, Fuji Excursion, Hachiōji, Ōme and seasonal trains can be found on their respective pages.


Legend


  • ● : All trains stop

  • |: All trains pass (↑ ↓ : Indicates the direction of trains passing)

  • ◆: All trains pass on weekends and holidays

  • ○ : Early morning and late night only (branches off from the Chūō-Sōbu Line at Ochanomizu and Mitaka)

























































































































































































































































































































































































Station No.
Name
Japanese
Distance (km)
Local
Rapid
Comm.
Rapid
Special
Rapid
Ōme
Special
Rapid
Comm.
Special
Rapid
Chūō Main Line Local
Transfers
Location
Between
stations
Total


TYOJC01


Tokyo
東京
-
0.0








Shinkansen-E.png Tohoku Shinkansen

Shinkansen-E.png Hokkaido Shinkansen


Shinkansen-E.png Yamagata Shinkansen


Shinkansen-E.png Akita Shinkansen


Shinkansen-E.png Joetsu Shinkansen


Shinkansen-E.png Hokuriku Shinkansen


JY Yamanote Line


JK Keihin-Tōhoku Line


JO Yokosuka Line.Sōbu Line (Rapid)


JE Keiyō Line


JU Ueno-Tokyo Line (Through to JU Utsunomiya.Takasaki Line/JJ Jōban Line)


JT Tokaido Line


Shinkansen jrc.svg Tokaido Shinkansen


M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line



Chiyoda

Tokyo


KNDJC02


Kanda
神田
1.3
1.3







JY Yamanote Line

JK Keihin-Tōhoku Line
G Tokyo Metro Ginza Line




JC03

Ochanomizu
御茶ノ水
1.3
2.6







JB Chūō-Sōbu Line (Local)
M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line

C Tokyo Metro Chiyoda Line (Shin-Ochanomizu)




JC04

Yotsuya
四ツ谷
0.8
6.6







JB Chūō-Sōbu Line (Local)
M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line

N Tokyo Metro Namboku Line



Shinjuku


SJKJC05


Shinjuku
新宿
0.7
10.3







JY Yamanote Line

JB Chūō-Sōbu Line (Local)


JA Saikyō Line


JS Shōnan-Shinjuku Line
Odakyū Odawara Line
Keiō Line


Keiō New Line
M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line
S Toei Shinjuku Line


E Toei Ōedo Line
Seibu Shinjuku Line (Seibu-Shinjuku)



JC06

Nakano
中野
1.9
14.7







T Tokyo Metro Tōzai Line

Nakano

JC07

Kōenji
高円寺
1.4
16.1






 

Suginami

JC08

Asagaya
阿佐ケ谷
1.2
17.3






 

JC09

Ogikubo
荻窪
1.4
18.7







M Tokyo Metro Marunouchi Line

JC10

Nishi-Ogikubo
西荻窪
1.9
20.6






 

JC11

Kichijōji
吉祥寺
1.9
22.5







Keiō Inokashira Line

Musashino

JC12

Mitaka
三鷹
1.6
24.1






 

Mitaka

JC13

Musashi-Sakai
武蔵境
1.6
25.7







Seibu Tamagawa Line
Musashino

JC14

Higashi-Koganei
東小金井
1.7
27.4






 

Koganei

JC15

Musashi-Koganei
武蔵小金井
1.7
29.1






 

JC16

Kokubunji
国分寺
2.3
31.4







Seibu Kokubunji Line, Seibu Tamako Line

Kokubunji

JC17

Nishi-Kokubunji
西国分寺
1.4
32.8







JM Musashino Line

JC18

Kunitachi
国立
1.7
34.5






 

Kunitachi

JC19

Tachikawa
立川
3.0
37.5








JC Ōme Line (some trains through to/from Tokyo)

JN Nambu Line
Tama Toshi Monorail Line (Tachikawa-Kita, Tachikawa-Minami)



Tachikawa

JC20

Hino
日野
3.3
40.8





Through to/
from Ōme Line



 

Hino

JC21

Toyoda
豊田
2.3
43.1






 

JC22

Hachiōji
八王子
4.3
47.4







JH Yokohama Line

Hachikō Line
Keiō Line (Keiō-Hachiōji)



Hachiōji

JC23

Nishi-Hachiōji
西八王子
2.4
49.8






 

JC24

Takao
高尾
3.3
53.1







Chūō Main Line (some trains through to Ōtsuki)
Keiō Takao Line




Rolling stock




E233 series on Rapid service




Chūō Line 201 series (June 1999)


Local・Rapid・Commuter Special Rapid・Chūō Special Rapid・Ōme Special Rapid ・Commuter Rapid



  • E233 series (from December 2006)


  • 209-1000 series x2 sets (from 16 March 2019)



Rolling stock used in past



  • 72 series


  • 101 series (1957-1985)


  • 103 series (1973-1983)


  • 201 series (1979-2010)



Chūō Liner / Ōme Liner



  • 183 series (March 14, 1991 - March 14, 2008)


  • E351 series 12-car EMUs (March 15, 2008 - March 16, 2018).



History


Most of the route of the Chūō Line (Rapid) was built by the Kōbu Railway and later acquired by the Japanese Government Railways in 1906.


Operation of electric multiple unit (EMU) trains on the Chūō Main Line began in 1904. By 1930, the EMU service had reached Tokyo to the east and Asakawa (now Takao) to the west. In 1933, two tracks were added to the existing double-tracked section between Ochanomizu and Iidamachi stations (later closed) to complete the four-track line between Ochanomizu and Nakano. On these additional tracks, express trains (急行電車, kyūkō densha), which skipped all stations except Yotsuya and Shinjuku, were introduced the same year. The express service was renamed "Rapid" (快速, kaisoku) service in March 1961.


Initially, the operation of express/rapid services was limited to weekday peak periods only. Express service began on weekends on March 5, 1944; daytime non-peak operation began on November 9, 1959, but it was limited to weekdays only until April 28, 1966.


Manseibashi Station, located between Kanda and Ochanomizu, was closed in 1943. On the section east of Takao, only Nishi-Kokubunji Station (opened in 1973) and Nishi-Hachiōji Station (opened in 1939) were opened after the start of rapid services.



  • August 20, 1979: 201 series EMUs introduced

  • March 16, 1991: Ohayō Liner Takao/Ōme and Home Liner Takao/Ōme begin operation

  • April 10, 1993: Kokubunji Station added to Ōme Special Rapid stops; Commuter Special Rapid begins operation

  • December 1, 1997: Chūō Main Line-bound 115 series EMUs no longer service Shinjuku Station

  • October 5, 2005: Women-only cars introduced

  • December 26, 2006: E233 series EMUs introduced



Future developments


JR East plans to introduce Green (first class) cars on Chuo Line (Rapid) and Ome Line services from fiscal 2021 or later.[2] This will involve adding two bilevel Green cars to 10-car E233 series EMU sets, forming 12-car sets. Work will be involved in lengthening station platforms and depot facilities to handle the longer trains.[2] In order to compensate the insufficient train sets for regular operations due to existing sets to be undergoing green car addition modifications, 2 209-1000 series train sets originally used on the Jōban Line (Local) will be transferred to the Chūō Line. Service commencement dates of these 2 train sets are currently unclear.



High suicide rate


The Chuo Rapid Line is known for a high number of suicides, primarily due to the high speed at which some trains pass through stations on the line.[3]



References





  1. ^ "平成27年 大都市交通センサス 首都圈報告書" (PDF). P.92. 国土交通省..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ ab JR東日本、中央線のグリーン車計画を延期 [JR East to postpone Chuo Line Green car plans]. Sankei News (in Japanese). Japan: The Sankei Shimbun & Sankei Digital. 24 March 2017. Archived from the original on 24 March 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2017.


  3. ^ French, Howard W. (6 June 2000). "Kunitachi City Journal; Japanese Trains Try to Shed a Gruesome Appeal". Health. The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-09-20.




External links



  • East Japan Railway Company (JR East) Official Website (in English)









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