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Keikyu

Keikyu Corporation
Native name
京浜急行電鉄株式会社
FormerlyKeihin Electric Express Railway Company, Ltd. (1948-2010)
Company typePublic
TYO: 9006
IndustryPublic transport
Real estate
Retail
Predecessor
Headquarters,
Japan
Key people
Kazuyuki Harada (Chairman)[1]
Yukihiro Kawamata (President)[2]
SubsidiariesKeihin Kyuko Bus
etc
Websitekeikyu.co.jp

Keikyu Corporation (京浜急行電鉄株式会社, Keihin Kyūkō Dentetsu Kabushiki-gaisha) (TYO: 9006), also known as Keihin Kyūkō (京浜急行) or, more recently, Keikyū (京急), is a private railroad that connects inner Tokyo to Kawasaki, Yokohama, Yokosuka and other points on the Miura Peninsula in Kanagawa Prefecture. It also provides rail access to Haneda Airport in Tokyo. Keihin (京浜) means the Tokyo () - Yokohama () area. The company's railroad origins date back to 1898, but the current company dates to 1948. The railway pioneered Kantō region's first electric train and the nation's third, after Hanshin Electric Railway and Nagoya Electric Railway (Meitetsu) with the opening of a short 2 km (1.2 mi) long section of what later became the Daishi Line in January 1899.[3]

Keikyu's formal logo, adopted in 1964, rarely used in publicity since 1983; today it is mostly found in Keikyu maintenance worker headgear. It is a stylized version of the katakana ヶ

It is a member of the Fuyo Group and has its headquarters in Yokohama. The company changed its English name from Keihin Electric Express Railway Co., Ltd. to Keikyu Corporation on 21 October 2010.[4]

Trains on the Main Line have a maximum operating speed of 120 km/h (75 mph), making it the third fastest private railroad in the Tokyo region after the Keisei Skyliner and the Tsukuba Express. The track gauge is 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) (Standard gauge), differing from the more common Japanese track gauge of 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in).

  1. ^ "Board of Officers". Retrieved 2024-01-09.
  2. ^ "Management Message". Retrieved 2024-01-09.
  3. ^ Yoshikawa, Fumio (1989). Nippon Densha Hattatsu-shi [The History of Development of Electric Trains in Japan]. Color Books No.778 (in Japanese). Osaka: Hoikusha. p. 99.
  4. ^ 京急、英文会社名を「KEIKYU」に=21日から変更、ブランド浸透で (in Japanese). Jiji Press. October 19, 2010. Retrieved October 23, 2010.[permanent dead link]

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Keikyū German شرکت راه‌آهن کیکیو FA Keikyū-rautatiet Finnish Keikyū French Keikyu Italian 京浜急行電鉄 Japanese Keikyu JV 게이힌 급행 전철 Korean Keikyu Corporation Russian เคกีว Thai

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