EAST JAPAN RAILWAY COMPANY


is the largest passenger railway company in the world and one of the seven JR companies. It is often known as .

Contents
History
Lines
Shinkansen
KantÅ regional lines
Greater Tokyo Area
Other lines in KantÅ
TÅkai and KÅshinetsu regional lines
TÅhoku regional lines
Subsidiaries
Miscellaneous
External links

History


JR East was incorporated on April 1, 1987 after being spun off from the government-run Japanese National Railways. Although this was a nominal "privatization," the company was actually a wholly owned subsidiary of the government-owned JNR Settlement Corporation for several years, and was not completely sold to the public until 2002.
Following the JNR breakup, JR East assumed responsibility for passenger operations on former JNR lines in the Greater Tokyo Area, the TÅhoku region and surrounding areas.

Lines


Its railway lines serve KantÅ and TÅhoku regions primarily, along with adjacent parts of Niigata, Nagano, Yamanashi and Shizuoka prefectures.
JR East's operating area is shown in dark green; it includes the Greater Tokyo Area and the TÅhoku region.

Shinkansen

JR East operates all of the Shinkansen (high speed rail lines) north of Tokyo.

Akita Shinkansen (秋田新幹線)(Morioka - Akita)

Hokuriku Shinkansen (北陸新幹線)(Tokyo - Nagano)

JÅetsu Shinkansen (上越新幹線)(Tokyo - Niigata)

TÅhoku Shinkansen (æ±åŒ—新幹線)(Tokyo - Sendai - Hachinohe)

Yamagata Shinkansen (山形新幹線)(Fukushima - ShinjÅ)
Note that the Tokyo-Osaka TÅkaidÅ Shinkansen is owned and operated by the Central Japan Railway Company, although it stops at several JR East stations.
KantÅ regional lines

Yamanote Line, Tokyo.

JR Yamanote Line train in Tokyo, Japan.

Above YūrakuchŠin Tokyo.

Automated Train Ticket Machine.

Greater Tokyo Area

These lines have sections inside ''Tokyo Suburban Area'' (), officially set by JR East. It does not necessarily mean the lines are fully inside Greater Tokyo Area.

Akabane Line (赤羽線) (Ikebukuro - Akabane)

â–  ChūŠMain Line (中央本線) (Tokyo - HachiÅji - KÅfu)

â–  ChÅ«Å-SÅbu Line (ä¸­å¤®ãƒ»ç·æ­¦ç·©è¡Œç·š) (Mitaka - Shinjuku - Chiba)

â–  HachikÅ Line (八高線) (HachiÅji - Takasaki)

■ Itsukaichi Line (五日市線) (Haijima - Musashi Itsukaichi)

â–  JÅban Line (常ç£ç·š) (Ueno - Hitachi)

â–  Kawagoe Line (å·è¶Šç·š) (ÅŒmiya - Kawagoe - Komagawa)

â–  Keihin-TÅhoku Line (京浜æ±åŒ—ç·š) (ÅŒmiya - Tokyo - Yokohama)

■ KeiyŠLine (京葉線) (Tokyo - Soga)

■ Mito Line (水戸線) (Oyama - Tomobe)

■ Musashino Line (武蔵野線) (Tokyo - Fuchū Hommachi) (Tokyo outer loop)

â–  Nambu Line (å—æ­¦ç·š) (Kawasaki - Tachikawa; Shitte - Hamakawasaki)

â–  Narita Line (æˆç”°ç·š) (Sakura - ChÅshi; Abiko - Narita; Narita - Narita Airport)

■ Negishi Line (根岸線) (Yokohama - Ōfuna)

â–  ÅŒme Line (é’æ¢…ç·š) (Tachikawa - ÅŒme - Okutama)

â–  RyÅmÅ Line (両毛線) (Oyama - Shin Maebashi)

■ Sagami Line (相模線) (Hashimoto - Chigasaki)

■ SaikyŠLine (埼京線) (Ōsaki - Ōmiya)

â–  ShÅnan-Shinjuku Line (æ¹˜å—æ–°å®¿ãƒ©ã‚¤ãƒ³) (ÅŒmiya - Shinjuku - ÅŒfuna)

â–  SÅbu Main Line (ç·æ­¦æœ¬ç·š) (Tokyo - ChÅshi)

■ SotobŠLine (外房線) (Chiba - Mobara - Awa Kamogawa)

■ Takasaki Line (高崎線) (Ōmiya - Takasaki)

â–  TÅgane Line (æ±é‡‘ç·š) (NarutÅ - ÅŒami)

â–  TÅhoku Main Line(Utsunomiya Line) (æ±åŒ—本線(宇都宮線)) (Ueno - Kuroiso)

â–  TÅkaidÅ Main Line (æ±æµ·é“本線) (Tokyo - Yokohama - Atami)

■ Tsurumi Line (鶴見線) (Tsurumi - Ōgimachi; Anzen - Ōkawa; Asano - Umishibaura)

■ UchibŠLine (内房線) (Soga - Kisarazu - Awa Kamogawa)

■ Yamanote Line (山手線) (Tokyo inner loop)

â–  Yokohama Line (横浜線) (Higashi Kanagawa - HachiÅji)

■ Yokosuka Line (横須賀線) (Tokyo - Kurihama)
Other lines in KantÅ


Karasuyama Line (çƒå±±ç·š) (Karasuyama - HÅshakuji)

■ Kashima Line (鹿島線) (Katori - Kashima Soccer Stadium)

■ Kururi Line (久留里線) (Kisarazu - Kazusa Kameyama)

NikkÅ Line (日光線) (Utsunomiya - NikkÅ)
TÅkai and KÅshinetsu regional lines


â–  Agatsuma Line (å¾å¦»ç·š) (Shibukawa - ÅŒmae)

â–  ChūŠMain Line (中央本線) (KÅfu - Shiojiri)

■ Echigo Line (越後線) (Niigata - Kashiwazaki)

■ Hakushin Line (白新線) (Niigata - Shibata)

■ Iiyama Line (飯山線) (Toyono - Echigo Kawaguchi)

ItÅ Line (伊æ±ç·š) (Atami - ItÅ) (treated as ''Tokyo Suburban Area'' lines)

â–  JÅetsu Line (上越線) (Takasaki - Miyauchi; Echigo Yuzawa - Gala Yuzawa)

Koumi Line (å°æµ·ç·š) (Kobuchisawa - Komoro)

■ Ōito Line (大糸線) (Matsumoto - Minamiotari)

■ Shin'etsu Main Line (信越本線) (Takasaki - Yokokawa; Shinonoi - Nagano - Niigata)

■ Shinonoi Line (篠ノ井線) (Shinonoi - Shiojiri)

■ Yahiko Line (弥彦線) (Higashi SanjŠ- Yahiko)
TÅhoku regional lines


Aterazawa Line (左沢線) (Kita Yamagata - Aterazawa)

â–  East Ban'etsu Line (ç£è¶Šæ±ç·š) (Iwaki - KÅriyama)

â–  East Rikuu Line (陸羽æ±ç·š) (Kogota - ShinjÅ)

GonŠLine (五能線) (Higashi Noshiro - Kawabe)

Hachinohe Line (八戸線) (Hachinohe - Kuji)

â–  Hanawa Line (花輪線) (ÅŒdate - KÅma)

■ Ishinomaki Line (石巻線) (Kogota - Onagawa)

■ Iwaizumi Line (岩泉線) (Moichi - Iwaizumi)

â–  JÅban Line (常ç£ç·š) (Hitachi - Iwanuma)

■ Kamaishi Line (釜石線) (Hanamaki - Kamaishi)

■ Kesennuma Line (気仙沼線) (Maeyachi - Kesennuma)

■ Kitakami Line (北上線) (Kitakami - Yokote)

■ Ōfunato Line (大船渡線) (Ichinoseki - Sakari)

Oga Line (男鹿線) (Oiwake - Oga)

Ōminato Line (大湊線) (Noheji - Ōminato)

Ōu Main Line (奥羽本線) (Fukushima - Yamagata - Akita - Aomori)

â–  Senseki Line (仙石線) (AobadÅri - Ishinomaki)

■ Senzan Line (仙山線) (Sendai - Uzen Chitose)

■ Suigun Line (水郡線) (Mito - Asaka Nagamori; Kamisugaya - Hitachi Ōta)

â–  Tadami Line (åªè¦‹ç·š) (Aizu Wakamatsu - Koide)

■ Tazawako Line (田沢湖線) (Morioka - Ōmagari)

â–  TÅhoku Main Line (æ±åŒ—本線) (Kuroiso - Morioka; Hachinohe - Aomori; Iwakiri - Rifu)

Tsugaru Line (津軽線) (Aomori - Mimmaya) (a part of Tsugaru-KaikyŠLine)

Tsugaru-KaikyŠLine (津軽海峡線) (Aomori - Nakaoguni)

■ Uetsu Main Line (羽越本線) (Niitsu - Akita)

â–  West Ban'etsu Line (ç£è¶Šè¥¿ç·š) (KÅriyama - Niitsu)

â–  West Rikuu Line (陸羽西線) (ShinjÅ- Amarume)

■ Yamada Line (山田線) (Morioka - Kamaishi)

â–  Yonesaka Line (ç±³å‚ç·š) (Yonezawa - Sakamachi)

Subsidiaries


JR East headquarters, located near Shinjuku Station in Tokyo


★ Higashi-Nihon Kiosk - provides newspapers, drinks and other items in station kiosks and operates the NEWDAYS convenience store chain

★ JR Bus KantÅ / JR Bus TÅhoku - intercity bus operators

★ Nippon Restaurant Enterprise - provides bentÅ (box lunches) on trains and in train stations

Tokyo Monorail - waterfront monorail line in Tokyo (70% owned)

Miscellaneous



★ JR East co-sponsors the JEF United Ichihara Chiba J-League soccer club, which was formed by a merger between JR East and Furukawa Electric company teams.

External links



East Japan Railway Company Web Site (in English)

JR East official apology for "Inaho No.14" accident on December 25th, 2005

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves
East Japan Railway Company Travel Deals