The Nambu Line (Japanese: 南武線, romanized:Nanbu-sen) is a Japanese railway line which connects Tachikawa Station in Tachikawa, Tokyo and Kawasaki Station in Kawasaki, Kanagawa. For most of its length, it parallels the Tama River, the natural border between Tokyo and Kanagawa prefectures. It lies along the Tama Hills. It is part of the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) network. The line forms part of what JR East refers to as the "Tokyo Mega Loop" (Japanese: 東京メガループ) around Tokyo, consisting of the Keiyo Line, Musashino Line, Nambu Line, and the Yokohama Line. The name refers to the southern (Japanese: ) part of the ancient province of Musashi (Japanese: 蔵) (now Tokyo and northern Kanagawa prefecture), through which the Nambu Line runs.

Basic data

  • Operators, distances: Total: 45.0 km (28.0 mi) Passenger: 39.6 km (24.6 mi) Freight: 39.4 km (24.5 mi) East Japan Railway Company (JR East) (Services and tracks) Kawasaki – Tachikawa: 35.5 km (22.1 mi) Shitte – Hama-Kawasaki: 4.1 km (2.5 mi) Shitte – Shin-Tsurumi Signal Station – Tsurumi: 5.4 km (3.4 mi) (no regular service) Japan Freight Railway Company (JR Freight) (Services only) Shitte – Tachikawa: 33.8 km (21.0 mi) Shitte – Hama-Kawasaki: 4.1 km (2.5 mi) Shitte – Shin-Tsurumi Signal Station: 1.5 km (0.9 mi)
  • Stations: 29 Main line: 26 Branch line: 3
  • Double-tracking: Kawasaki – Tachikawa
  • Railway signalling: Automatic Block System

Station list

Main line

"Rapid" service trains (two trains per hour between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m) do not stop at Shitte, Yakō, Hirama, Mukaigawara, Tsudayama, Kuji, Shukugawara, Nakanoshima, Yanokuchi, Minami-Tama, Nishifu, Yaho, Yagawa, or Nishi-Kunitachi. All other trains except for some seasonal services are "Local" services, stopping at all stations.

No.StationJapaneseDistance (km)RapidTransfersLocationPrefecture
Between stationsTotal
KWSJN01Kawasaki川崎-0.0Tōkaidō Line (JR East) Tōkaidō Main Line Keihin–Tōhoku Line Keihin-Tōhoku Line Keikyū Main Line Keikyu Main Line Keikyū Daishi Line Keikyu Daishi Line (Keikyū Kawasaki)Kawasaki-ku, KawasakiKanagawa
JN02Shitte尻手1.71.7Nambu Line Nambu Branch Line (for Hama-Kawasaki)Saiwai-ku, Kawasaki
JN03Yakō矢向0.92.6Tsurumi-ku, Yokohama
JN04Kashimada鹿島田1.54.1Yokosuka Line Yokosuka Line Shōnan–Shinjuku Line Shonan-Shinjuku Line (Shin-Kawasaki).Saiwai-ku, Kawasaki
JN05Hirama平間1.25.3Nakahara-ku, Kawasaki
JN06Mukaigawara向河原1.36.6
MKGJN07Musashi-Kosugi武蔵小杉0.97.5Yokosuka Line Yokosuka Line Shōnan–Shinjuku Line Shōnan-Shinjuku Line Tōyoko Line Tokyu Toyoko Line Meguro Line Tokyu Meguro Line
JN08Musashi-Nakahara武蔵中原1.79.2
JN09Musashi-Shinjō武蔵新城1.310.5
JN10Musashi-Mizonokuchi武蔵溝ノ口2.212.7Den-en-toshi Line Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line Ōimachi Line Tokyu Oimachi Line (Mizonokuchi)Takatsu-ku, Kawasaki
JN11Tsudayama津田山1.213.9
JN12Kuji久地1.014.9
JN13Shukugawara宿河原1.316.2Tama-ku, Kawasaki
JN14Noborito登戸1.117.3Odakyū Odawara Line Odakyu Odawara Line
JN15Nakanoshima中野島2.219.5
JN16Inadazutsumi稲田堤1.320.8Keiō Sagamihara Line Keio Sagamihara Line (Keiō-Inadazutsumi)
JN17Yanokuchi矢野口1.622.4InagiTokyo
JN18Inagi-Naganuma稲城長沼1.724.1
JN19Minami-Tama南多摩1.425.5Seibu Tamagawa Line (Koremasa)
JN20Fuchū-Hommachi府中本町2.427.9Musashino Line Musashino LineFuchū
JN21Bubaigawara分倍河原0.928.8Keiō Line Keiō Line
JN22Nishifu西府1.230.0
JN23Yaho谷保1.631.6Kunitachi
JN24Yagawa矢川1.433.0
JN25Nishi-Kunitachi西国立1.334.3Tachikawa
JN26Tachikawa立川1.235.5Chūō Main Line Chūō Line (Rapid) Ōme Line Tama Toshi Monorail Line (Tachikawa-Kita, Tachikawa-Minami)

Nambu Branch Line

  • All stations are located in Kanagawa Prefecture.
  • Trains can pass each other only at Kawasaki-Shinmachi.
No.StationJapaneseDistance (km)TransfersLocation
Between stationsTotal
JN02Shitte尻手-0.0Nambu Line Nambu Line (main line) Nambu Line (freight branch)Saiwai-ku, Kawasaki
JN51Hatchōnawate八丁畷1.11.1Keikyū Main Line Keikyu Main Line Tokaido Main Line freight branch (for Tsurumi)Kawasaki-ku, Kawasaki
JN52Kawasaki-Shinmachi川崎新町0.92.0
JN53Odasakae小田栄0.72.7
JN54Hama-Kawasaki浜川崎1.44.1Tsurumi Line Tsurumi Line Tokaido Main Line freight branch (for Kawasaki Freight Terminal)

Freight branch

The "Shitte crossover"(尻手短絡線, Shitte-tanraku-sen) connects Shitte Station and Shin-Tsurumi Yard on the Tōkaidō Main Line (Hinkaku Line) and the Musashino Line. Freight trains operating between Tokyo Freight Terminal and northern Japan operate on both branch lines.

Rolling stock

Nambu Line rolling stock at Nakahara Depot

As of 1 October 2016[update] the following fleet of electric multiple unit (EMU) trains is used on Nambu Line services, with all trainsets based at Nakahara Depot.

From 15 March 2017, the last remaining 209 series trainset, set 53, was replaced by a six-car Ome Line and Itsukaichi Line E233-0 series set 670 modified and renumbered to become E233-8500 series set N36.

  • A Nambu Branch Line 205-1000 series in May 2023
  • A Nambu Branch Line E127-0 series in January 2024
  • A Nambu Line E233-8000 series in October 2020

Previously used

  • 72/73 series 4/6-car EMUs (from 1963 until 1978)
  • 101 series 4/6-car EMUs (from 1969 until January 1991)
  • 103 series 6-car EMUs (from 1982 until December 2004)
  • 101 series 2-car EMUs (Nambu Branch line services, until November 2003)
  • 205-0 series 6-car EMUs from (March 1989 until December 2015)
  • 205-1200 series 6-car EMUs (from 2004 until January 2016)
  • 209-0 series 6-car EMUs (from April 1993 until February 2015)
  • 209-2200 series 6-car EMUs (from 2010 until March 2017)
  • A 73 series EMU on the Nambu Line in January 1975
  • Nambu Branch Line 101 series in July 2002
  • A Nambu Line 103 series in June 2001
  • Nambu Line 205-0 series set 36 in April 2011
  • A Nambu Line 205-1200 series in October 2014
  • A Nambu Line 209-0 series in January 2008
  • A Nambu Line 209-2200 series in April 2011

History

The private Nambu Railway opened the line in five stages between 1927 and 1930 (freight branches are omitted):

  • 27 March 1927: Kawasaki – Noborito
  • 1 November 1927: Noborito – Ōmaru (near Minami-Tama)
  • 11 December 1928: Ōmaru – Bubaigawara (then called Yashikibun)
  • 11 December 1929: Bubaigawara – Tachikawa
  • 25 March 1930: Shitte – Hama-Kawasaki

Passenger trains utilised electric multiple units (EMUs) from the beginning. Freight initially consisted primarily of gravel hauled from the Tama River. When the railway reached Tachikawa and made connection with the Ōme Electric Railway, limestone became one of the main freight commodities. The railway was controlled by Asano zaibatsu, which enabled the transport of limestone from its own quarry in Western Tokyo to its cement plant in Kawasaki without using the government railways.

On 1 April 1944, the railway was nationalised by the imperial government and became the Nambu Line of Japanese Government Railways. After the end of World War II, there were several calls for the privatisation of the line, but the line remained a part of the Japanese National Railways (JNR) until its privatization in 1987.

The postwar growth of the Tokyo urban area resulted in the conversion of most of the farmlands along the Nambu Line into residential areas and increased the passenger traffic on the line. Freight traffic reduced after the opening of the Musashino Line (parallel to the Nambu Line) in 1976 and the discontinuance of the limestone freight in 1998, except for the Nambu Branchline, which remains a major freight route.

Limited-stop "Rapid" services between Kawasaki and Noborito with stops at Musashi-Kosugi and Musashi-Mizonokuchi started on 15 December 1969, but were discontinued by the timetable revision on 2 October 1978. After 33 years, Rapid services between Kawasaki and Tachikawa with more stops started on 9 April 2011, postponed from the originally scheduled 12 March due to the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.

On 20 August 2016, station numbering was introduced with Nambu line stations being assigned station numbers between JN01 and JN26. Numbers increase towards in the westbound direction towards Tachikawa. In addition, station numbers JN51 to JN54 were assigned to the branch line stations with numbers increasing in the direction of Hama-Kawasaki.

From 15 March 2025, Nambu line started operation as "wanman" (One-man) driver-only operation.

See also

External links

  • (JR East) (in Japanese)