Shonan Monorail


The is a suspended, SAFEGE-type monorail in the cities of Kamakura and Fujisawa in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by the which is a subsidiary of Michinori Holdings. The line opened on 7 March 1970, the first suspended monorail in Japan. Trains run on a line called the Enoshima Line. It is a mostly single-track railway with passing loops at most stations. The line is used by locals commuting to jobs in Tokyo or Yokohama and by tourists visiting the resort area of Enoshima.

History

During the 1960s, several monorail systems were tested across Japan. The Shonan Monorail was developed as a demonstration line for Mitsubishi Heavy Industries' suspended-type monorail system, which competed with Hitachi’s straddle-beam design. The project built upon data collected from the Higashiyama Park Monorail, a short suspended test line that operated within the Higashiyama Zoo and Botanical Gardens in Nagoya from 1964 to 1974. The route between Ōfuna station and the resort area of Enoshima was selected for its steep gradients and sharp curves, which could showcase suspended system’s performance. Mitsubishi also had an interest in the area, as the line could serve its nearby manufacturing plants and offices.
Construction utilized the combined resources of the Mitsubishi Group: the track and support towers were produced at the Yokohama Shipyard, rolling stock at the Mihara Machinery Works, electrical equipment by Mitsubishi Electric, and overall coordination by Mitsubishi Estate. The Shonan Monorail Company was established as a joint venture between Mitsubishi, the Keihin Kyuko Electric Railway, and Seibu Railway.
The company applied for a construction license on 6 October 1965, which was approved later that month. The line was built above the former Keihin Kyuko Expressway, Japan’s first automobile-only road. Originally intended to host a conventional train from the Keihin Kyuko Electric Railway, the corridor was repurposed as a toll road and later transferred to the cities of Kamakura and Fujisawa. The route includes steep grades and tight curves—up to an 8.8% gradient and minimum radius along the road. To balance performance and passenger comfort, the monorail’s design limited the gradient to 7.4%, and set a minimum curve radius of on the main line, except for a single curve near Ōfuna Station and curves in station areas. Two tunnels were also constructed along the route: the Kamakurayama Tunnel, which has a straight alignment where trains reach their top speed of and allows trains to bypass the steepest grades of the Keihin Kyuko Expressway; and the Kataseyama Tunnel near the southern terminus. The line’s undulating profile has been compared to a roller coaster.
Construction on the first section between Ōfuna and Nishi-Kamakura began in 1967 and it opened on 7 March 1970 with two-car 300 series trains, followed by the extension to Shōnan-Enoshima on 1 July 1971. Due to growing ridership, three-car trains were introduced on 30 January 1975.
On 20 February 1990, a train collided with an aerial lift vehicle beneath the track near Kataseyama, seriously injuring the train operator but causing no passenger fatalities. Another incident occurred on 24 February 2008, when a train overran Nishi-Kamakura station due to a brake malfunction; no injuries occurred, and service resumed after safety modifications were made. Another collision with an aerial lift vehicle occurred on 7 November 2008, also without injuries.
In May 2015, majority ownership of the Shonan Monorail transferred from the Mitsubishi Group to Michinori Holdings. In 2018, the line began accepting IC fare cards such as Pasmo and Suica, and was twinned with Germany’s Wuppertal Schwebebahn, another suspended monorail and a popular tourist attraction.

Stations

The Shonan Monorail Enoshima Line travels every seven to eight minutes between Ōfuna Station and Enoshima, making six stops. The average length of a single trip is 14 minutes. The line includes two tunnels. The line's maintenance workshop is located at the Shonan Monorail Headquarters in Kamakura City.
* Station with passing loop

Rolling stock

Since 2004, the line has been operated using a fleet of seven three-car aluminium-bodied 5000 series trainsets. The 5000 series is equipped with a variable voltage variable frequency AC motor drive system, which controls speed and torque by varying the input electricity. Compared to prior DC motor drive systems, VVVF allows for regenerative braking, smooth acceleration and deceleration, and requires fewer inspections and less maintenance because, unlike a DC motor, it has no commutator brush or contact switch.

Former

Services were initially operated using a fleet of six two-car 300 series trainsets built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. Two sets were increased to three cars from February 1975 to provide additional capacity. The last of the 300 series sets were withdrawn by July 1992, following the introduction of new 500 series trains.
The three-car 400 series trains were introduced in 1980 and operated until July 2004.
The 500 series trains, introduced in 1988, were the first air-conditioned trains on the line. The last 500 series train was withdrawn from service on 26 June 2016.