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Nishi-Nippon Railroad

西日本鉄道株式会社

Nishi-Nippon Railroad Co., Ltd. (西日本鉄道株式会社), known as Nishitetsu and abroad as NNR, is one of Japan's 16 major private railways — the only one based outside the three great metropolitan areas, the only one operating railways outside Honshu, and the westernmost in service area. Headquartered in Tenjin in Fukuoka, it runs four railway lines in Fukuoka Prefecture together with local and highway bus operations among the largest in Japan, plus international logistics, real estate and leisure businesses; it is the core company of the Nishitetsu Group, and the Chikuhō Electric Railroad is a subsidiary. The company traces its founding to the Kyushu Electric Tramway, incorporated on 17 December 1908 in present-day Kitakyushu and opened in 1911. Other predecessors were forming around it: a horse tramway linked Futsukaichi and Dazaifu from 1902; streetcars ran in Fukuoka city from 1910, their tram operations taken over by Fukuhaku Densha in 1934; and in 1924 the Kyushu Railway opened a high-speed interurban line from Fukuoka to Kurume, ancestor of today's Tenjin Ōmuta Line, followed about a month later by the Hakata Bay Railway & Steamship, whose Shin-Hakata–Wajiro line became today's Kaizuka Line.

History

The modern company was created by wartime consolidation. To comply with the Land Transport Business Coordination Law, five companies — the Kyushu Electric Tramway, Fukuhaku Densha, the Kyushu Railway, the Hakata Bay Railway & Steamship and the Chikuzen Sangū Railway — merged on 19 September 1942; legally the Kyushu Electric Tramway, headquartered in Kokura, absorbed the other four, and on 22 September the merged company took the name Nishi-Nippon Railroad, coined by Ōta Seizō, president of the Hakata Bay Railway & Steamship. Fearing war damage to Kokura, the head office moved to Nishijin in Fukuoka at the same time; the company counts 1908 as its founding year but 22 September as its anniversary day. On 1 May 1944 the Kasuya and Umi lines were nationalized as the JNR Kashii and Katsuta lines, and on 19 June 1945 the head office burned down in the Fukuoka air raid.

After the war Nishitetsu diversified. On 5 November 1948 it signed an agency contract with Pan American Airways and set up an air-cargo division — the seed of an international freight-forwarding business still run in-house as NNR Global Logistics, whose sales of 231.8 billion yen in the year ended March 2023 came to nearly half of group revenue. In baseball, after fielding the Nishitetsu-gun club in 1943, the company founded the Nishitetsu Clippers in 1949; merged with the Nishi-Nippon Pirates in 1951, they became the Nishitetsu Lions, sold after the 1972 season and surviving as the Saitama Seibu Lions. The bus business, enlarged by wartime purchases of operators across Fukuoka Prefecture, grew to be among the largest in Japan: the Fukuoka–Kumamoto 'Hinokuni' became its first expressway bus in 1973, the overnight 'Moonlight' to Osaka followed in 1983 with Hankyu Bus, and in 1990, with Keio, Nishitetsu launched the Fukuoka–Shinjuku 'Hakata-gō', the longest-distance highway bus in Japan.

On rails the postwar decades brought concentration. Nishitetsu had inherited two large tram systems, the Fukuoka City Line and the Kitakyushu Line. As the municipal subway was built the Fukuoka network closed in stages, disappearing entirely on 11 February 1979; the Kitakyushu Line closed almost completely on 26 November 2000, only the Kumanishi–Kurosaki-Ekimae section being retained formally as a Category-3 business for the subsidiary Chikuhō Electric Railroad until it, too, was transferred in 2015. The centre of gravity shifted to the former Ōmuta Line interurban, which became the trunk artery and chief profit source of the rail and bus operations; on 1 January 2001 it was renamed the Tenjin Ōmuta Line and its terminal became Nishitetsu Fukuoka (Tenjin) Station. The Miyajidake Line lost its Nishitetsu-Shingū–Tsuyazaki section in 2007 and was renamed the Kaizuka Line.

Today Nishitetsu operates the standard-gauge Tenjin Ōmuta Line (74.8 km), Dazaifu Line (2.4 km) and Amagi Line (17.9 km) and the narrow-gauge Kaizuka Line (11.0 km), 106.1 km in all; by FY2022 figures its passenger volume is nonetheless the smallest among the 16 major private railways. Its terminal sits at the heart of Tenjin, Kyushu's largest shopping district; under the Tenjin Big Bang redevelopment the new ONE FUKUOKA BLDG. head office rose on the site of the old Fukuoka Building, and the head office returned there on 26 May 2025 after about six years in Hakata. The nimoca IC card, introduced on 18 May 2008, joined the nationwide transport-IC network in 2013, and station numbering was introduced at every station on 1 February 2017. Sakuranamiki Station, the Tenjin Ōmuta Line's first new station in 14 years, opened on 16 March 2024 in the centenary year of the railway's 1924 opening; open-loop touch payment entered full service across all four lines on 1 April 2025; and regular weekday paid-seat 'N Liner' trains began on 16 March 2026.

Timeline

  • 190817 December: the Kyushu Electric Tramway, the company's direct legal predecessor, was incorporated in present-day Kitakyushu; it opened its tram line in 1911.
  • 1924The Kyushu Railway (the second company of that name) opened a high-speed electric line between Fukuoka and Kurume — today's Tenjin Ōmuta Line; about a month later the Hakata Bay Railway & Steamship opened the Shin-Hakata–Wajiro section corresponding to today's Kaizuka Line.
  • 194219 September: under the Land Transport Business Coordination Law, the Kyushu Electric Tramway absorbed Fukuhaku Densha, the Kyushu Railway, the Hakata Bay Railway & Steamship and the Chikuzen Sangū Railway; on 22 September the merged company was renamed Nishi-Nippon Railroad, and the head office moved to Nishijin in Fukuoka.
  • 19441 May: the Kasuya Line and the Umi Line were nationalized under wartime acquisition, becoming the JNR Kashii Line (with the Tabiishi branch) and the Katsuta Line.
  • 19485 November: Nishitetsu signed an agency contract with Pan American Airways and established an air-cargo division, beginning the air-freight business that grew into today's international logistics arm.
  • 1949The professional baseball club Nishitetsu Clippers was founded and joined the Pacific League; in 1951 it merged with the Nishi-Nippon Pirates to become the Nishitetsu Lions.
  • 197228 October: after the end of the season, the Nishitetsu Lions were sold to Nagayoshi Nakamura (Fukuoka Yakyū); the franchise survives as today's Saitama Seibu Lions.
  • 197911 February: the remaining Loop Line and Kaizuka Line sections of the Fukuoka City Line were closed, completing the abolition of the entire Fukuoka city tram network.
  • 199014 October: jointly with Keio Teito Electric Railway, Nishitetsu launched the 'Hakata-gō' between Fukuoka and Shinjuku in Tokyo, the longest-distance highway bus in Japan (Keio later withdrew).
  • 200026 November: the Kitakyushu Line was closed except for the Kumanishi–Kurosaki-Ekimae section, retained only formally as a Category-3 railway business connected with the subsidiary Chikuhō Electric Railroad — in effect a complete abolition.
  • 20011 January: the Ōmuta Line was renamed the Tenjin Ōmuta Line, and Nishitetsu Fukuoka Station was renamed Nishitetsu Fukuoka (Tenjin) Station.
  • 20071 April: the Nishitetsu-Shingū–Tsuyazaki section of the Miyajidake Line was abolished and the line was renamed the Kaizuka Line.
  • 200818 May: the contactless IC fare card nimoca was introduced; from 13 March 2010 it became interoperable with SUGOCA, Hayakaken and Suica, and from 23 March 2013 with the nationwide transport-IC network.
  • 202416 March: Sakuranamiki Station opened on the Tenjin Ōmuta Line — the line's first new station in 14 years — in the year Nishitetsu marked the 100th anniversary of the opening of its railway.

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