Senseki Line

Senseki Line
Senseki Line 205-3100 series in September 2021
Overview
Native name仙石線
StatusOperating
OwnerJR East
LocaleMiyagi Prefecture
Termini
Stations32
Service
TypeHeavy rail
SystemJR East
Operator(s)JR East, JR Freight
Rolling stock205 series
History
OpenedJune 5, 1925; 98 years ago (1925-06-05)
Technical
Track length50.2 km (31.2 mi)
Number of tracks2 (Aoba-dōri — Higashi-Shiogama), 1 (Higashi-Shiogama — Ishinomaki)
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification1,500 V DC
Operating speed95 km/h (59 mph)
Route map

0.0
Aoba-dōri
Sendai Subway Namboku Line
Sendai
(1) -1952
Sendai
(2) 1952–2000 Sendai Tram 1926–76
0.5
Sendai
(3) 2000– Sendai Subway Namboku Line
1.3
Tsutsujigaoka
2.4
Miyaginohara
Rikuzen-Haranomachi Depot
3.2
Rikuzen-Haranomachi
Tōhoku Main Line(Miyagino Freight Line)
former line
-2000
4.0
Nigatake
4.6
Shinden Stop
-1944
5.6
Kozurushinden
6.8
Miyagino Signal
Sendai Rail Yard
Miyagino branch Yard
7.7
Fukudamachi
Nanakita River
8.6
Rikuzen-Takasago
10.3
Nakanosakae
Sendai Rinkai Railway:Rinkai Main Line
12.6
Tagajō
14.4
Geba
Shiogama Line
15.2
Nishi-Shiogama
Shiogamakō
16.0
Hon-Shiogama
Shiogama Line
Higashi-Shiogama
(1) -1981
Shiogama Uoichiba
17.2
Higashi-Shiogama(2)
1981–
Tōhoku Main Line
20.3
Rikuzen-Hamada
Koishihama Amusement Park
23.2
Matsushima-Kaigan
Matsushima
Shin-Tomiyama Stop
-1944
Matsushima Densha (1922–44)
25.5
Takagimachi
27.3
Tetaru
28.6
Rikuzen-Tomiyama
30.8
Rikuzen-Ōtsuka
former line
-2015
32.2
Tōna
33.4
Nobiru
Naruse River
36.0
Rikuzen-Ono
37.6
Kazuma
40.2
Yamoto
41.6
Higashi-Yamoto
43.1
Rikuzen-Akai
45.2
Ishinomakiayumino
2.9#
Ishinomakifutō
46.6
Hebita
49.7
Ishinomakikō Freight Terminal
(2)
47.6
52.5
Ishinomakikō Freight Terminal
(1) -1971
49.0
Ishinomaki

The Senseki Line (仙石線, Senseki-sen) is a railway line in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan, owned and operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). It connects Aoba-dōri Station in Sendai to Ishinomaki Station in Ishinomaki, and provides access to the central coast areas of Miyagi Prefecture, significantly the Matsushima area. It connects with the Sendai Subway Nanboku Line at Aoba-dōri Station; the Tōhoku Shinkansen, the Tōhoku Main Line and the Senzan Line at Sendai Station; and the Ishinomaki Line in Ishinomaki. The name Senseki (仙石) comes from the combination of the first kanji of Sendai (台) and Ishinomaki (巻), the two cities that the Senseki Line connects. It is also the only line in Sendai area that is powered by DC overhead power line.

Basic data

Services

"Mangattan Liner" 205 series train, July 2006
"Mangattan Liner II" 205 series train, January 2009

Prior to the partial suspension of services by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, all trains originated from Aoba-dōri Station, with most running to Tagajō or Higashi-Shiogama. Local trains and rapid service trains that ran the entire length of the line operated at 30-minute intervals. When the line was fully recovered in 2015, rapid services were switched to the route via the Senseki-Tōhoku Line. Therefore, under the 2015 timetable, the section between Aoba-dōri and Takagimachi is served only by local trains.

At Sendai Station, the line crosses under the Tōhoku Main Line and its platforms, similar to the situation with the Keiyō Line in Tokyo and the Chikuhi Line in Hakata (which connects via the Fukuoka Airport Subway Line).

The segment from Aoba-dōri to Higashi-Shiogama is a key part of Sendai's transportation system, and becomes very crowded during peak periods, and headways are as short as 4 minutes. During non-peak times 3–5 trains run per hour. Between Higashi-Shiogama and Ishinomaki two trains run per hour.

In addition to all-stations "local" trains, there are limited-stop "rapid" and "special rapid" services on the Senseki Line section between Takagimachi and Ishinomaki. Between Sendai and Takagimachi, the "rapid" and "special rapid" services operate on the Senseki-Tōhoku Line. The special rapid services make only stop at Yamoto in the Senseki Line section, while the rapid services also stop at Nobiru, Rikuzen-Ono, Rikuzen-Akai, Hebita and Rikuzen-Yamashita.

A "Mangattan Train" operates on the Senseki Line, with a livery featuring Ishinomori Manga characters.

Disaster and reconstruction, 2011–2015

Service was halted since the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, as several trains, stations, and sections of the line were destroyed, heavily damaged, or flooded. Service for the first 16 miles of the line from Sendai was expected to be restored by the end of May 2011.[1] By mid-July, the Sendai – Matsushima-Kaigan and Yamoto – Ishinomaki sections had service restored, although the latter segment was with diesel trains due to the loss of the power substation.[2] The remainder of the line between Matsushima-Kaigan and Yamoto was obliterated by the tsunami.[2]

From March October 2012, services resumed on all but the Takagimachi to Rikuzen-Ono section,[3] with services on that section restored on 30 May 2015, and a new 400m link was constructed from between Shiogama Station and Matsushima Station on the Tohoku Main Line to a point between Matsushima-Kaigan and Takagimachi Station on the Senseki Line. Costing approximately 2 billion yen to build, the new link allows through-running services from the Tohoku Main Line to the Senseki Line, and cut approximately 10 minutes off the journey time between Sendai and Ishinomaki.[4] On 26 March 2016, a new station located between Rikuzen-Akai Station and Hebita Station, called Ishinomakiayumino Station was opened.

Stations

Name Japanese Station (km) Distance (km) Rapid
Service
Special
Rapid
Service
Transfers Location
Aoba-dōri あおば通 0.0 No service Sendai Subway Namboku Line, Sendai Subway Tōzai Line Aoba-ku, Sendai
Sendai 仙台 0.5 0.5 Tohoku Shinkansen, Akita Shinkansen, Tohoku Main Line, Senzan Line, Joban Line, Sendai Subway Namboku Line, Sendai Subway Tōzai Line Miyagino-ku, Sendai
Tsutsujigaoka 榴ヶ岡 0.8 1.3 Via Senseki-Tōhoku Line
Miyaginohara 宮城野原 1.1 2.4
Rikuzen-Haranomachi 陸前原ノ町 0.8 3.2
Nigatake 苦竹 0.8 4.0
Kozurushinden 小鶴新田 1.6 5.6
Fukudamachi 福田町 2.1 7.7
Rikuzen-Takasago 陸前高砂 0.9 8.6
Nakanosakae 中野栄 1.7 10.3
Tagajō 多賀城 2.3 12.6 Tagajo, Miyagi
Geba 下馬 1.8 14.4
Nishi-Shiogama 西塩釜 0.8 15.2 approx. 1 km from Tohoku Main Line Shiogama Station. Shiogama, Miyagi
Hon-Shiogama 本塩釜 0.8 16.0
Higashi-Shiogama 東塩釜 1.2 17.2
Rikuzen-Hamada 陸前浜田 3.1 20.3 Rifu, Miyagi
Matsushima-Kaigan 松島海岸 2.9 23.2 approx. 2 km from Tohoku Main Line Matsushima Station. Matsushima, Miyagi
Takagimachi 高城町 2.3 25.5 approx. 1 km from Tohoku Main Line Matsushima Station.
Tetaru 手樽 1.8 27.3 | |
Rikuzen-Tomiyama 陸前富山 1.3 28.6 | |
Rikuzen-Ōtsuka 陸前大塚 2.2 30.8 | | Higashimatsushima, Miyagi
Tōna 東名 1.4 32.2 | |
Nobiru 野蒜 1.2 33.4 |
Rikuzen-Ono 陸前小野 2.6 36.0 |
Kazuma 鹿妻 1.6 37.6 | |
Yamoto 矢本 2.6 40.2
Higashi-Yamoto 東矢本 1.4 41.6 | |
Rikuzen-Akai 陸前赤井 1.5 43.1 |
Ishinomakiayumino 石巻あゆみ野 2.1 45.2 | Ishinomaki, Miyagi
Hebita 蛇田 1.4 46.6 |
Rikuzen-Yamashita 陸前山下 1.0 47.6 |
Ishinomaki 石巻 1.4 49.0 Ishinomaki Line

The distances shown above are as of May 30, 2015 following the rerouting of the section between Rikuzen-Ōtsuka and Rikuzen-Ono, by which the section was shortened by 1.2 kilometers.[5]

Rolling stock

New HB-E210 series 2-car hybrid diesel multiple unit (DMU) trains are scheduled to be introduced on the line from 30 May 2015 between Takagimachi and Ishinomaki following the start of new Senseki-Tohoku Line services using a newly built link connecting with the Tohoku Main Line at Shiogama.[6]

Former Rolling Stock

History

The Miyagi Electric Railway opened the line in sections between 1925 and 1928. Individual opening dates are given in the timeline section below. The Rikuzen-Haranomachi to Nishi-Shiogama section was double-tracked between 1968 and 1969, and extended to Higashi-Shiogama in 1981.

In 2000, the surface section between Rikuzen-Haranomachi and Sendai was replaced by a double-track underground line, with a new section to Aoba-dori to connect to the Sendai subway.

Parts of the line were extensively damaged by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, and whilst service was restored on the majority of the line by March 2012, the Takagimachi – Rikuzen-Ono section was returned to service on 30 May 2015.

Timeline

Senseki Line 205 series EMU damaged by tsunami, March 2011

References

  1. ^ Slavin, Erik, "U.S. troops restore a train station, one dirt pile at a time", Stars and Stripes, 25 April 2011.
  2. ^ a b 津波被害のJR仙石線が部分開通 全線は見通し立たず [Partial reopening of tsunami-hit JR Senseki Line; No timeline for full restoration]. Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 16 July 2011. Retrieved 16 July 2011.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ JR Timetable October 2012 issue, P.9
  4. ^ 東北本線と仙石線を接続、直通運転へ [Tohoku Main Line and Senseki Line to be linked with through-running]. Tetsudo.com (in Japanese). Japan: Asahi Interactive Inc. 19 October 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  5. ^ Sendai Branch, East Japan Railway Company (January 29, 2015). "石巻線および仙石線の全線運転再開と仙石東北ライン開業に伴う営業キロの変更及び運賃の適用等について" (PDF) (in Japanese). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 9, 2015. Retrieved July 5, 2015.
  6. ^ "JR東日本に新型車両2形式 – E129系とディーゼルハイブリッド車両HB-E210系" [Two new train types for JR East: E129 series and diesel hybrid HB-210 series]. Mynavi News (in Japanese). Japan: Mynavi Corporation. 2 July 2013. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  7. ^ a b "JR East news release" (PDF) (in Japanese). Tokyo. 2009-10-09. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2011-03-12.
  8. ^ "Japanese Passenger Train Unaccounted for After Powerful Earthquake". Nobiru, Japan: Fox News. 2011-03-11.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Senseki_Line&oldid=1164693414"