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Kesennuma Line

Kesennuma Line
Eki-Motoyoshi.JPG
North and southbound trains at Motoyoshi Station, April 2005
Overview
Termini Maeyachi Station
Kesennuma Station
Stations 23
Operation
Operator(s) JR East
Technical
Line length 72.8 km (45.2 mi)
Track gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification Not electrified
Route map
JR Kesennuma Line linemap.svg

The Kesennuma Line (気仙沼線, Kesennuma-sen?) is a local rail line in Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). It connected Maeyachi Station in Ishinomaki, Miyagi to Kesennuma Station in Kesennuma, Miyagi. The route links the north-eastern coast of Miyagi Prefecture, with the Ishinomaki Line (and the Tohoku Main Line a few stops farther) available for transfer in the south, and the Ōfunato Line in the north.

A large section of the railway infrastructure between Minami-Kesennuma Station and Rikuzen-Togura Station, including tracks, stations, and railway bridges, were badly damaged or completely destroyed by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. Destroyed stations include Minami-Kesennuma (except for the platform) and Shizugawa Station, as well as various others. As a result of the catastrophic damage to the line and prohibitive costs of restoration as a railway, JR East officially proposed the line's conversion into a dedicated bus rapid transit (BRT) route on 27 December 2011. At present only the Maeyachi to Yanaizu section is operated as a railway, with services on the balance of the route provided by buses.

Although the Kesennuma Line's south end is Maeyachi, its operational south end should be considered Kogota Station in Misato, as the majority of Kesennuma Line trains either have Kogota as their south terminus or go through it on the way to Sendai. Trains going this far also stop at Kami-Wakuya (local only) and Wakuya Stations in Wakuya, Miyagi on the Ishinomaki Line.


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Wikipedia

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