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Bantan Line

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Bantan Line
KiHa 189 series DMU on a Hamakaze limited express service
Overview
OwnerJR West
LocaleHyōgo Prefecture
Termini
  • Himeji
  • Wadayama
Stations18
Service
Rolling stock103 series EMU, 221 series EMU, 223-6000 series EMU, KiHa 40/41 DMU, KiHa 189 series DMU
History
Opened1894
Technical
Line length65.7 km (40.8 mi)
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification1,500 V DC, overhead lines (Himeji–Teramae)
Operating speed95 km/h (60 mph) (Himeji–Fukusaki, Teramae–Wadayama)
110 km/h (70 mph) (Fukusaki–Teramae)

The Bantan Line (播但線, Bantan-sen) is a railway line that connects Himeji and Wadayama station in Asago City, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. The line is operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West) and serves as a connector between the Sanyo Main Line and the Sanin Main Line. The name refers to the ancient provinces of Harima (磨) and Tajima (馬), which the line connects.

The line is 65.7 kilometres (40.8 mi) long, with 18 stations.

Service

Local train operation is divided into the electrified section between Himeji and Teramae, and the non-electrified section between Teramae and Wadayama. All local trains makes every stop on the line, and no local train runs the entire length of the line.

The Hamakaze limited express, which connects the Kinki region to the San'in region, uses the Bantan Line to access the Sanin Main Line.

Stations

Station Distance (km) Transfers Location
Himeji1 姫路 0.0 Himeji Hyōgo Prefecture
Kyōguchi 京口 1.7  
Nozato 野里 4.3  
Tohori 砥堀 6.0  
Nibuno 仁豊野 8.2  
Kōro 香呂 11.2  
Mizoguchi 溝口 13.2  
Fukusaki1 福崎 17.1   Fukusaki
Amaji 甘地 20.6   Ichikawa
Tsurui 鶴居 24.5  
Niino 新野 27.7   Kamikawa
Teramae1 寺前 29.6  
Hase 長谷 35.9  
Ikuno1 生野 43.6   Asago
Nii 新井 51.9  
Aokura 青倉 55.6  
Takeda1 竹田 59.9  
Wadayama1 和田山 65.7
Notes
  1. Hamakaze stop
  • Local trains stop at all stations. Local trains operate from Himeji to Teramae and from Teramae to Wadayama. Some rapid trains operate from Teramae to Wadayma, stopping at all stations except Hase.

Rolling stock

Former

History

The 29.6km section from Himeji north to Teramae was constructed by the private Bantan Railway (播但鉄道, Bantan Tetsudō) company and opened in 1894, with the 6.3km section to Hase opening in January the following year, and the 7.7km section to Ikuno three months later. The 8.3km section to Nii opened in 1901. The Bantan Railway was purchased by the Sanyō Railway (山陽鉄道, Sanyō Tetsudō) in 1903, which extended the line 13.8km to Wadayama, opening in April 1906, 8 months before the company was nationalised. Individual section opening dates are given below.

The line was named the Bantan Line in anticipation of the Sanyo Railway company being purchased by the Japanese government under the Railway Nationalisation Act of 1906.

The Bantan Railway Co. also built a ~15.7km line from Himeji east to Shikama-Kou (near Kakogawa), opened in 1895 and closed in 1986.

CTC signalling was commissioned between Himeji and Wadayama in 1978, and freight services ceased between 1984 and 1986. The Himeji - Teramae section was electrified in 1998.

Bantan Railway (north of Himeji)

  • July 26, 1894 Himeji - Teramae opens.
  • January 15, 1895 Teramae - Hase opens.
  • April 17, 1895 Hase - Ikuno opens.
  • August 19, 1896 Nibuno Station opens.
  • February 20, 1898 Kyoguchi Station opens.
  • March 28, 1898 Mizoguchi Station opens.
  • August 29, 1901 Ikuno - Nii opens.

Sanyō Railway

  • June 1, 1903 Sanyō Railway purchased Bantan Railway.
  • April 1, 1906 Nii - Wadayama opens.
  • October 12, 1906 Line renamed Bantan Line.

JNR/JR West

  • December 1, 1906 Sanyō Railway company nationalised.
  • October 15, 1925 Tofu-Machi Station closed.
  • August 10, 1934 Aokura Station opens.
  • November 20, 1935 Tohori Station opens.
  • October 15, 1951 Niino Station opens.
  • April 1, 1987 Japanese National Railways (JNR) was privatised and regionalised, with the line transferring to the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  • March 14, 1998 Himeji - Teramae electrified.

Bantan Railway (east of Himeji)

  • April 17, 1895 Himeji - Shikama Station (later Shikama-Kou Station) opened.
  • November 20, 1897 Tenjin Station (later Shikama Station) opened.
  • September 21, 1915 Shikama Station was renamed Shikama-Kou Station, and Tenjin Station was renamed Shikama Station.
  • November 1, 1986 Himeji - Shikama-Kou closed.

References