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     Tokyo Metro Ginza Line

An 01 series train for Shibuya departing Asakusa
Info
Type Rapid transit
Locale Tokyo
Termini Shibuya
Asakusa
Stations 19
Operation
Opened 1927
Owner Tokyo Metro
Depot(s) Shibuya, Ueno
Rolling stock Tōkyō Metro 01 series
Technical
Line length 14.3 km
Track gauge 1,435 mm
Electrification 600 V DC, third rail
Operating speed 80 km/h
Route map

Tokyo metro Ginza line.png

Route diagram
BSicon .svg
Keiō Inokashira Line
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg tSTR
Tōkyū Den-en-toshi Line
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg
TUNNELe tSTR
Shibuya Depot
BSicon .svg HUB63
tSTR
0.0 G-01 Shibuya Fukutoshin Line
STRq
hKRZ
tKRZ
Yamanote Line
hKRZ
tKRZ
Saikyō Line
STRq
HUB72
Tōkyū Tōyoko Line
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg TUNNELa-ELEV tÜWcru tÜWor
Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon LineTokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg tSTR tÜWo+l tÜWclo
BSicon .svg tCPICl tCPICr
1.3 G-02 Omotesandō Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon LineTokyo Metro Chiyoda Line
BSicon .svg tBHF tSTR
2.0 G-03 Gaiemmae
BSicon .svg
2.7 G-04 Aoyama-itchōme Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon LineToei Ōedo Line
BSicon .svg tSTR tSTRlf
Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon LineTokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line→
BSicon .svg tSTR tSTRrg
Tokyo Metro Marunouchi LineTokyo Metro Marunouchi Line
BSicon .svg tCPICl tCPICr
4.0 G-05 Akasaka-mitsuke Station Tokyo Metro Marunouchi LineTokyo Metro Namboku LineTokyo Metro Yūrakuchō LineTokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line
BSicon .svg tABZrg tABZrf
BSicon .svg tSTR tSTRlf
Tokyo Metro Marunouchi LineTokyo Metro Marunouchi Line→
tBHF
4.9 G-06 Tameike-Sannō Tokyo Metro Namboku LineTokyo Metro Chiyoda LineTokyo Metro Marunouchi Line
tBHF
5.5 G-07 Toranomon
HUB63
BSicon .svg
6.3 G-08 Shimbashi Toei Asakusa Line
tKRZ BSicon .svg
←Yamanote Line→
tKRZ BSicon .svg
Keihin-Tōhoku Line
tKRZ BSicon .svg
Tōkaidō Main Line
tKRZ BSicon .svg
Tokaido Shinkansen
tSTR BSicon .svg
uSTRrf tSTR BSicon .svg
Yurikamome
tBHF
7.2 G-09 Ginza Tokyo Metro Marunouchi LineTokyo Metro Hibiya Line
tKRZt
Keiyō Line
tBHF
7.9 G-10 Kyōbashi
tBHF
8.6 G-11 Nihombashi Toei Asakusa LineTokyo Metro Tozai Line
tWSTR
Nihombashi River
HUB63
BSicon .svg
9.2 G-12 Mitsukoshimae Tokyo Metro Hanzōmon Line
tKRZt BSicon .svg
Shin-Nihombashi
tSTR
Sōbu Main Line
STRrg tKRZ BSicon .svg
↓Yamanote Line / Keihin-Tōhoku Line / Chūō Line (Rapid)
BSicon .svg
9.9 G-13 Kanda
ABZlf tKRZ BSicon .svg
↑Chūō Line (Rapid)→
WBRÜCKE tWSTR BSicon .svg
Kanda River
STR tSTR BSicon .svg
Chuo-Sobu Line
TBHFu tKRZ BSicon .svg
Akihabara
STR tBHF BSicon .svg
11.0 G-14 Suehirochō
STR tSTR BSicon .svg
↓←Okachimachi
BSicon .svg
11.6 G-15 Ueno-hirokōji Tokyo Metro Hibiya LineToei Ōedo Line
STR tSTR
Keisei Ueno Keisei Main Line
STRlf tKRZ
↑Yamanote Line / Keihin-Tōhoku Line
BSicon .svg tSTR
 Jōban Line / Utsunomiya Line / Takasaki Line
BSicon .svg
HUB61
12.1 G-16 Ueno Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line
BSicon .svg BSicon .svg tABZlf TUNNELru KDSTr
Ueno Depot
tBHF
12.8 G-17 Inarichō
tBHF
13.5 G-18 Tawaramachi
BSicon .svg tKRZt tHSTq
Asakusa
tSTR
Tsukuba Express
14.3 G-19 Asakusa Toei Asakusa Line
Tōbu Isesaki Line
WBRÜCKE
Sumida River
One of the original 1000 series cars operated on the Tokyo Underground Railway between Ueno and Asakusa. The last car was retired in 1968.

The Ginza Line (銀座線 Ginza-sen?) is a metro line of Tokyo Metro in Tokyo, Japan. The official name is Line 3 Ginza Line (3号線銀座線 3-gōsen Ginza-sen?). It is 14.3 km long, and serves the wards of Shibuya, Minato, Chūō, Chiyoda, and Taitō.

On maps, diagrams and signboards, the line is shown with coloured circle or line of orange , and its stations are given numbers following the letter G.

Contents

[edit] History

The Ginza Line began as the brainchild of a businessman named Noritsugu Hayakawa (早川徳次?), who visited London in 1914, saw the London Underground and concluded that Tokyo needed its own underground railway. He founded the Tokyo Underground Railway (東京地下鉄道 Tōkyō Chika Tetsudō?) in 1920, and began construction in 1925.

The portion between Ueno and Asakusa was completed on December 30, 1927 and publicized as "the first underground railway in the Orient." It was actually the first fully underground railway in East Asia. Upon its opening, the line was so popular that a passenger often had to wait more than two hours to get on a train for a five-minute trip.

In January 1, 1930, the subway was extended by 1.7 km to temporary Manseibashi Station, abandoned on November 21, 1931 when the subway reached Kanda, 500 meters further down south the line. The capital crunch resulting from the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 slowed down construction, but the line finally reached its originally planned terminus of Shinbashi on June 21, 1934.

In 1938, the Tokyo Rapid Railway (東京高速鉄道 Tōkyō Kōsoku Tetsudō?), a company tied to the predecessor of today's Tokyu Corporation, began service between Shibuya and Toranomon, later extended to Shinbashi in 1939. The two lines began through-service interoperation in 1939 and were formally merged as the Teito Rapid Transit Authority ("Eidan Subway" or "TRTA") in July 1941.

The "Ginza Line" name was applied in 1953 to distinguish the line from the new Marunouchi Line. In the postwar economic boom, the Ginza Line became increasingly crowded. The new Hanzōmon Line began to relieve the Ginza Line's traffic in the 1980s. The Ginza Line still is one of the Tokyo's most crowded, however, because its train cars are not long in sizes and it stops at numerous major stations. According to the Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation, as of June 2009 the Ginza Line is the seventh most crowded subway line in Tokyo, running at 168% capacity between Akasaka-mitsuke and Tameike-Sannō stations.[1]

Tameike-Sannō Station opened in 1997 to provide a connection to the new Namboku Line.

[edit] Rolling stock

The Ginza Line uses a total of 38 six-car 01 series EMUs which have a maximum speed of 80 km/h. Each car is 16 m long and 2.6 m wide, with three doors on each side. Both the Ginza Line and the Marunouchi Line run on standard gauge (1,435 mm) rails powered by a 600 V DC third rail, while the other Tokyo Metro lines run on narrow gauge (1,067 mm) rails and use 1,500 V DC overhead.

Cars are stored and inspected at the Ueno Inspection Division (上野検車区 Ueno-kensha-ku?), a facility located northeast of Ueno Station with both above-ground and underground tracks. The facility is capable of holding up to 20 6-car formations. Major inspections are carried out at Tokyo Metro's Nakano on the Marunouchi Line forwarding over a connecting track at Akasaka-Mitsuke.

[edit] Former rolling stock

  • 1000 series (1927 - 1968)
  • 1500 series (1954 - 1986)
  • 2000 series (1958 - 1993)

[edit] Operation

Almost all Ginza Line trains operate on the line's full length from Asakusa to Shibuya. However, two trains depart in the early morning from Toranomon, and some late-night trains from Shibuya are taken out of service at Ueno.

On weekdays, trains run every two minutes in morning, and 2 minutes and 15 seconds in evening. It's same as holidays, the interval in afternoon is 3 minutes. This line is one of the most frequent served lines for passengers, like JR East Yamanote Line and Chūō Line. Its first trains start from Shibuya and Asakusa at 5:01 in early morning, and the last ones reach Shibuya at 0:37, and Asakusa at 0:39 in midnight.

[edit] Stations

Being the oldest line, stations of the line are also the closest to the surface, generally no more than one and a half stories underground. The western tip of the line emerges to the surface, then entering on the third-floor (in Japanese sense, second floor in European sense) of a building in Shibuya, located in a depression.

Station Transfers Location
G-01 Shibuya Shibuya
G-02 Omotesandō Minato
G-03 Gaienmae  
G-04 Aoyama-itchōme
G-05 Akasaka-mitsuke

At Nagatachō:

G-06 Tameike-Sannō

At Kokkai-gijidōmae:

Chiyoda
G-07 Toranomon   Minato
G-08 Shimbashi
G-09 Ginza Chūō
G-10 Kyōbashi  
G-11 Nihombashi
G-12 Mitsukoshimae

At Shin-Nihombashi:

G-13 Kanda Chiyoda
G-14 Suehirochō  
G-15 Ueno-hirokoji At Naka-okachimachi:

At Ueno-okachimachi:

Taitō
G-16 Ueno

At Keisei Ueno:

G-17 Inarichō  
G-18 Tawaramachi  
G-19 Asakusa

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Shaw, Dennis and Morioka, Hisashi, "Tokyo Subways", published 1992 by Hoikusha Publishing
  1. ^ Metropolis, "Commute", June 12, 2009, p. 07. Capacity is defined as all passengers having a seat or a strap or door railing to hold on to.



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