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  2. Cassiopeia (train) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassiopeia_(train)

    Hakodate Main Line, Shiroishi – Sapporo; The train changed direction at Aomori and Hakodate. Northbound trains to Sapporo departed from Ueno after 16:00, and called at Ōmiya, Utsunomiya, Kōriyama, Fukushima, Sendai, Ichinoseki, and Morioka. The first stop in Hokkaido was at Hakodate at 05:00 the following day, with arrival in Sapporo around ...

  3. Hayabusa (train) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayabusa_(train)

    The Hayabusa service commenced on 1 October 1958, operating between Tokyo and Kagoshima. [4] From 20 July 1960, the train was upgraded with 20 series sleeping cars, and extended to run to and from Nishi-Kagoshima (now Kagoshima-Chūō). [4] From 9 March 1975, the train was upgraded with 24 series sleeping cars. [4]

  4. Hokutosei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hokutosei

    Plans to operate a direct sleeping car service between Tokyo and Sapporo were officially announced on 24 April 1987, with the timetable for three trains daily in each direction unveiled in July 1987. [4] A public ballot was held to decide on the name for the new train service, and approximately 24,000 votes were received.

  5. List of named passenger trains of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_passenger...

    Tokyo – Ōita: 1964 – Mar 2009 Hayabusa: JR Kyushu Tokyo – Kumamoto: 1958 – Mar 2009 Hokuriku: JR East Ueno – Kanazawa: 1947 – Mar 2010 Hokutosei: JR East / JR Hokkaido: Ueno – Sapporo 1988 – August 2015 Izumo: JR East Tokyo – Izumoshi (via Tottori) 1972 – Mar 2006 Marimo: JR Hokkaido Sapporo – Kushiro: 2001–2008 Naha ...

  6. Seikan Tunnel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seikan_Tunnel

    However, for passenger transport, 90% of people use air travel due to the speed and cost. For example, to travel between Tokyo and Sapporo by train takes eight hours (Tokyo station and Shin-Sapporo station), with transfer from Shinkansen to narrow-gauge express train at Hakodate. By air, the journey is 1 hour and 45 minutes, or 3 hours and 30 ...

  7. Blue Train (Japan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Train_(Japan)

    The first Blue Train was known as the Asakaze.It ran between Hakata and Tokyo beginning in 1956; air-conditioned cars were added two years later. As was the case with sleeper train services in other parts of the world, the Blue Trains acquired a romantic aspect and, at the peak of their popularity in the late 1970s, appeared in many novels.