Keifuku Electric Railroad
Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd. is a railroad company based in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan in operation since March 2, 1942. It is a parent company of Keifuku Bus and Kyoto Bus, and an affiliated company of Keihan Electric Railway, which owns 42.89% of the company stock. The company's stock is traded on the second section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Lines
This railway started service in 1910, operated at that time by Arashiyama Electric Tram Railway. It was transferred to the Kyoto-based electric power generation company Kyoto Dento. Later it built the Kitano Line.Formerly the company operated several railway lines in Fukui Prefecture. Some of them are now operated by Echizen Railway.
The Eizan Electric Railway also belonged to Keifuku until 1985.
Randen
The Randen is a small network of light rail lines classified legally as tramways in Kyoto.Arashiyama Line
The Arashiyama Line connects Kyoto's city center and scenic Arashiyama area in the western suburb.Kitano Line
The Kitano Line is from Kitano Hakubaicho Station near Kitano Tenmangū to Katabiranotsuji Station in the midst of Arashiyama Line.Eizan Cable
Eizan Cable, officially the Cable Line, is a funicular line in Sakyo-ku, Kyoto.Eizan Ropeway
is an aerial tramway in Sakyo-ku, Kyoto. The line length is.The cable and ropeway lines are for visitors to Mount Hiei on the northeastern edge of the city, together with Eizan Electric Railway's Eizan Main Line.
History
Arashiyama Line
The Arashiyama Tram opened the line in 1910, with gauge and electrified at 600 V DC. The Kyoto Electric Light Company acquired the line in 1918, and double-tracked the track between 1925 and 1928. Keifuku acquired the line in 1942.Kitano Line
The Kyoto Electric Light Company opened the line between 1925 and 1926, and double-tracked the Tokiwa to Narutaki section in 1930. Plans to double-track the rest of the line were abandoned as a result of the economic depression. Keifuku acquired the line in 1942.Former connecting lines
- Arashiyama Station: A line electrified at 600 V DC and dual track except for the Kiyotaki tunnel operated to Kiyotaki between 1929 and 1944. It connected to a funicular which climbed to Atago Jinja on Mount Atago, Kosaku line which operated for the same period. Closed due to war time austerity measures, efforts to re-establish the incline in the 1950s were unsuccessful.