Expanding across the archipelago amid rising expectations
Hokkaido Shinkansen Tohoku Shinkansen
Construction for the Tohoku Shinkansen Line began in 1971 together with the Joetsu Shinkansen Line. Initially, the plan was to connect Tokyo and Iwate Prefecture's Morioka in the northeast without passing through Ueno Station, which at that time was well known as the terminal station for those heading to the northeastern region from the capital.
Changes were made to the route later on to go through Ueno, in reflection of the strong requests from residents in the station's neighborhood.
The Tohoku Shinkansen Line began operations in June 1982, starting with the section running between Saitama Prefecture's Omiya, near Tokyo, and Morioka. The line later extended to Ueno Station in 1985 and then further to Tokyo Station in 1991, making transit to the Tokaido Shinkansen much easier.
The "200 series" shinkansen train introduced on the Tohoku line resembles the "0 (zero) series" on the Tokaido and Sanyo lines with its look, featuring the same round nose, but is in fact equipped with small snowplows fitted to the front to enable it to navigate the snowy region.
Following the privatization of Japan National Railways in 1987, the Tohoku Shinkansen Line came to be operated by East Japan Railway Co., commonly known as JR East.
In 1998, in hopes of selling shinkansen trains to China, JR East prepared a chartered bullet train run for then Chinese President Jiang Zemin during his visit to Japan.
Jiang is said to have been delighted and remarked that it was a comfortable ride. Years later, a high speed train developed based on the Tohoku Shinkansen's "Hayate" design began service in mainland China in 2007.
The Tohoku region in Japan's northeast has long been called "michinoku," meaning "the far end of the road," and many people tended to have the impression of it being far away from Tokyo.
But this all changed as the shinkansen significantly reduced the travel time. Thus, for residents of Aomori Prefecture in the northernmost of Japan's Honshu main island, it became a strong desire for the Tohoku Shinkansen Line to be extended further north beyond Morioka.
In 2002, the bullet train line reached Hachinohe, and then Shin-Aomori in 2010. Nowadays, the fastest service between Tokyo and Shin-Aomori takes less than three hours.
Over the years, the shinkansen network continued to extend further north, with the Hokkaido Shinkansen Line launched in 2016 between Shin-Aomori and Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto. For the first time, shinkansen trains were able to reach Hokkaido by running through the 54-kilometer Seikan Tunnel under the sea in the Tsugaru Strait.
With the Kyushu Shinkansen having linked Kagoshima and Hakata in 2011, the network now stretches all the way from Hokkaido in the north to Kagoshima in the southwest, all in just half a century since the launch of the Tokaido Shinkansen.
That is not the end of the network, however, with plans underway for shinkansen service to reach Hokkaido's Sapporo by 2031.
In the Tohoku region, there are also two "mini shinkansen" lines -- the Yamagata Shinkansen, which runs between Fukushima and Shinjo stations, and the Akita Shinkansen, between Morioka and Akita stations.
Unlike the regular bullet trains, these two lines do not run on shinkansen tracks but ordinary local train rails. Their maximum speeds are therefore capped at the same limits as local lines.
So strictly speaking, they do not fall under the legal definition of shinkansen, which requires an "arterial railway that runs at 200 kilometers-per-hour or faster in its major sections," although these two are commonly still known as such.
For these two lines, trains run on high speed from Tokyo attached to the Tohoku Shinkansen, and then decouple at Fukushima or Morioka stations to continue their journey.
Joetsu Shinkansen
Coming on the heels of the Tohoku Shinkansen's launch, the Omiya-Niigata section of the Joetsu Shinkansen began operations five months later in November 1982.
The line was then extended to Ueno Station in 1985 and finally to Tokyo Station in 1991, sharing the same tracks with Tohoku Shinkansen between Omiya and Tokyo stations. It has been operated by JR East since the 1987 privatization of Japan National Railways.
Initially, the Joetsu Shinkansen also began service with the 200 series bullet trains just like the Tohoku Shinkansen. But in 1994, JR East introduced the double-decker "E1 series" on both lines to meet the increasing number of commuters. The successor "E4 series" made its debut on the Tohoku line in 1997 and the Joetsu line in 2001.
Both the E1 and E4 series became popular trains, nicknamed "Max" for "multi amenity express." The E4 series, in particular, boasted the world's largest maximum capacity for high-speed trains, accommodating 1,634 passengers when two 8-car trains were connected. The Max trains made the final run in 2021 on the Joetsu Shinkansen Line before retiring.
The first time a shinkansen derailed while in service was during the Niigata Chuetsu Earthquake in October 2004, when a magnitude 6.8 temblor hit the central Japan region. None of the 151 passengers and crew members aboard the Joetsu Shinkansen train was injured, but the rails were bent and wheel marks were left on the concrete slabs in between the rails, showing the impact of the derailment. The line resumed full service two months later in December 2004.
On other occasions, an out-of-service Kyushu Shinkansen train derailed during the 2016 Kumamoto Earthquake, when quakes of M6.5 and M7.3 devastated the southwestern Japan prefecture, while a Tohoku Shinkansen train with passengers aboard derailed in 2022 when an M7.4 quake hit Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures in the northeast. None of the trains overturned and no injuries were reported in any of the derailments.
Kyushu Shinkansen
-Kagoshima route-
-Nishi-Kyushu route-
The Kyushu Shinkansen Line comprises two routes: the Kagoshima route and the Nishi Kyushu route, which was also known as the Nagasaki route.
The Kagoshima route began partial operations in March 2004, initially only running between Shin-Yatsushiro Station in Kumamoto Prefecture and Kagoshima-Chuo Station in Kagoshima Prefecture. At that time, it was not connected to Fukuoka's Hakata Station, the largest terminal in Kyushu, and passengers heading to Hakata had to change trains at Shin-Yatsushiro for the local limited express service instead.
Even so, the shinkansen section significantly reduced travel time to around two hours and 10 minutes between Hakata and Kagoshima-Chuo, compared to the minimum of three hours and 40 minutes when going entirely by local train.
Upon its partial launch, the train service name picked by Kyushu Railway Co. was "Tsubame," Japanese for swallows and a name with a long tradition of being used for limited express trains during the Japan National Railways era, with its first use dating back to 1930. The local limited express service between Shin-Yatsushiro and Hakata stations, meanwhile, was renamed "Relay Tsubame."
The "800 series" train used on the new shinkansen line was designed based on the "700 series," although it abandoned the 700's duckbill nose in favor of a sharper nose.
The 800 series featured an elaborate interior design, such as using camphorwood and cherry wood for its walls. The subsequent new 800 series went even further, incorporating gold leaves and gold lacquerware into its decorations.
The remaining shinkansen section between Shin-Yatsushiro and Hakata stations began operations on March 12, 2011, completing the route to enable direct services from Kagoshima-Chuo Station all the way to Shin-Osaka Station.
In addition to the all-stops Tsubame service, "Mizuho," the fastest category as well as "Sakura," the second fastest category that serves a few more stations than the Mizuho, were added.
The completion of the Kagoshima route allows travel between Hakata and Kagoshima-Chuo stations in just an hour and 20 minutes at the shortest. Unfortunately, as its launch date came just a day after Japan was devastated by the Great East Japan Earthquake, a scheduled launching ceremony and other commemorative events were all canceled.
Meanwhile, the Nishi Kyushu route of the Kyushu Shinkansen Line covering the Hakata to Nagasaki section launched its first portion -- between Takeo-Onsen and Nagasaki stations -- in September 2022.
Covering a distance of 69.6 kilometers, the Nishi Kyushu route is the shortest of all bullet train lines in Japan. Similar to the case of the Kagoshima route, passengers had to transfer to the local limited express for the portion between Takeo-Onsen and Hakata stations.
Nagasaki is a famous sightseeing destination, given its history as one of the few windows to the world in isolationist Japan during the Edo period.
Nagasaki Prefecture and the city of Nagasaki are moving forward with plans to develop the area near Nagasaki Station, such as building a football stadium there, and are pushing for the launch of full shinkansen service between Nagasaki and Hakata stations.
However, plans are not yet in sight for construction for the remaining portion between Takeo-Onsen and Hakata stations as of the time being.
Hokuriku Shinkansen
Construction for the Takasaki-Nagano section of the Hokuriku Shinkansen Line was carried out at rapid pace ahead of the 1998 Nagano Winter Olympics, managing to open in October 1997 -- four months ahead of the games.
Until the remaining portion of the Hokuriku line came into service, this section was known as the Nagano Shinkansen Line and it served numerous Olympics athletes, officials as well as spectators during the games.
The launch of the Hokuriku Shinkansen resulted in the scrapping of the local train service between Yokokawa and Karuizawa stations on the JR Shinetsu Line, which was greatly missed by some locals and railway fans.
This was because the scrapped section, long known as a perilous passage as it went through the steep Usui Passing, had used the Abt system rack railway since 1893, when the Shinetsu Line was first launched, until 1963 and was the only place where such toothed steep grade rail was used during the Japan National Railways era.
Eighteen years after the launch of the Nagano Shinkansen Line, the section between Nagano and Kanazawa stations came into service in March 2015.
Travel from Tokyo to Kanazawa, which used to take almost four hours, was shortened to about two-and-a-half hours. The line features four train service categories depending on the number of stops, such as "Kagayaki," which is the fastest type, and "Hakutaka."
A sumo wrestler hailing from Ishikawa Prefecture took up Kagayaki as his ring name, after the shinkansen train service.
Kanazawa Station underwent extensive renovation to showcase various aspects of the city's rich culture and history as a prosperous castle town of the Kaga clan during the Edo period.
The station's architecture, featuring a glass-and-steel dome and a giant wooden gate resembling a traditional Japanese "tsuzumi" drum, was chosen as one of the world's 14 most beautiful stations by Travel+Leisure magazine in 2011.
The Hokuriku Shinkansen Line extended further west, launching the section between Kanazawa and Fukui Prefecture's Tsuruga in March 2024.
The opening came two months after the New Year's Day earthquake that devastated Noto Peninsula and neighboring areas, and some affected residents performed traditional art in the launching ceremony at Kanazawa Station. Hopes are also high that the line's extension will help boost reconstruction in the region.
Prospects for construction for a section connecting Tsuruga and Shin-Osaka, however, remain unclear. Until then, travelers heading to Hokuriku from Osaka will need to transfer from limited express trains to shinkansen at Tsuruga.
Far from slowing down upon its 60th anniversary, Japan's shinkansen continues to run across the archipelago carrying the dreams of those onboard today.
Content director: Yuki Murayama
Text: Makoto Nishimura
Design: Motoki Akamine
Motion: Sakura Tsuchiya
Translation: Janice Tang
Production Support: Shiodome Railway Club
Fumine Tsutabayashi, Yukihiro Takahashi
Technical Support: Kevin Chow
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