Toyohashi Railroad

Railroad company in Japan
Toyohashi Rail Road Company Ltd
豊橋交通株式会社
Company typesubsidiary
IndustryTransportation
FoundedMarch 17, 1924
Headquarters
Toyohashi, Aichi
,
Japan
Area served
eastern Aichi Prefecture, Japan
Revenue5.6 billion Yen (2005)
Total equity225 million Yen
ParentMeitetsu Group
Websitehttp://www.toyotetsu.com/
Type 800 tram of Azumada Main Line.
Type 3700 tram of Azumada Main Line, active from 1927
Type Mo3100 HanaDensha

The Toyohashi Railroad (豊橋鉄道, Toyohashi Tetsudō) is a private railroad company in Japan, and a subsidiary of the Meitetsu Group. The company or its lines are commonly known as Toyotetsu (豊鉄). The company operates the Atsumi Line train service on Atsumi Peninsula in Aichi Prefecture and a tram system in Toyohashi City, and has subsidiary operations involved in taxi and bus services.

Company history

The Toyohashi Railway was incorporated on March 17, 1924, as the Toyohashi Electric Railway Company (豊橋電気軌道株式会社, Toyohashi Denki Kidō K.K.), with its tram operations beginning on July 14, 1925. The company expanded into bus services from 1935. From September 1939, the company came under the umbrella of the Nagoya Railway (the forerunner to modern Meitetsu). The company established a subsidiary for taxicab operations on September 1, 1949. The company name was officially changed to its current name on July 22, 1954. On October 1, 1954, Meitetsu turned over operations and assets from its Atsumi Line to the new Toyohashi Railway Corporation.

On October 1, 1956, the Toyohashi Railway acquired the local Taguchi Railway Company, which continued to operate as the Toyohashi Railway Taguchi Line until September 1, 1968. In October, 1988 the company opened a hotel at Toyohashi Station.

From February 2011, the Manaca Smart Card system was implemented on the Toyohashi Railway network.

Railway Lines

Bus Lines

Toyotetsu Bus operates local lines in and around Toyohashi, as well as the highway bus linking the city and Chūbu Centrair International Airport, the night bus linking the city and Tokyo.

See also

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Toyohashi Railroad.
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