Enoshima Electric Railway

The Enoshima Electric Railway or Enoshima Dentetsu Line (江ノ島電鉄), also known by the abbreviation Eno-den (江ノ電), is a Japanese railway which connects Kamakura Station in Kamakura with Fujisawa Station in Fujisawa, Kanagawa. Stations en route include Hase, the stop closest to Kōtoku-in, the temple with the colossal outdoor statue of Amida Buddha. The railway is fully owned by the Odakyu Group of companies.



Route and operations
The route is 10 km long and has a rail gauge of. It is single-track; however, five of the route's fifteen stations are equipped with passing loops, allowing for the operation of bi-directional traffic. Included in the route is a short (450 m) section of street running between Koshigoe and Enoshima stations. However, the entire line is governed under the Railway Business Act (鉄道事業法) of the Japanese government, being granted an exception to allow for street running (the only other examples of street-running 'railways' being the Keihan Keishin Line, Keihan Ishiyama-Sakamoto Line and the Kumamoto Electric Railway). Trains are electrically powered from 600 V DC overhead lines. The section from Kamakura Station to Koshigoe is in the city of Kamakura; that from Enoshima to Fujisawa Station is in the city of Fujisawa.

Stations
The entire line is in Kanagawa Prefecture

Rolling stock
, Enoden operates a fleet of 15 two-car electric multiple unit (EMU) train types as shown below.

Former rolling stock

 * 500 series

Buses
Enoden also operates bus service in the area.

History
The original Enoshima Electric Railway opened the line on 1 September 1902.

The company subsequently went through a series of ownership changes: Yokohama Electric Railway Co. in 1911, Tokyo Electric Power Co. in 1921, (second) Enoshima Electric Railway Co. in 1926, Tokyu Corporation in 1938, Enoshima Kamakura Tourist Co. in 1949, and Odakyu Electric Railway Co. in 1953. The (third) Enoshima Electric Railway Co. was formed on 1 September 1981 as a subsidiary of Odakyu.

Popular culture
Gokurakuji Station is one of the settings for the 2015 film Our Little Sister.

Japanese alternative rock band Asian Kung-Fu Generation's fifth studio album, Surf Bungaku Kamakura (released 2008), had each track named after a stop on the railway line starting with Fujisawa and ending with Kamakura. The band has since announced a continuation of this album for the rest of the stations that did not originally have a song, starting withYanagikōji Parallel Universe releasing as a B-side track in 2022.

Anime
The Enoshima Electric Railway and its rolling stock painted in the company's green-and-yellow colours have made numerous appearances in Japanese animated series, including those adapted from manga and light novel series such as:
 * Slam Dunk (1993)
 * Sweet Blue Flowers (2009)
 * A Channel (2011)
 * Tsuritama (2012)
 * Tari Tari (2012)
 * Ping Pong: the Animation (2014)
 * Hanayamata (2014)
 * Myriad Colors Phantom World (2016)
 * Minami Kamakura High School Girls Cycling Club (2017)
 * Rascal Does Not Dream of Bunny Girl Senpai (2018)
 * Super Cub (2021)

Video games

 * Enoden's railway line was entirely simulated in a train simulator Densha de Go! Ryojōhen.