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The Bullet Train: How Japan Showed the World What Trains Could Be

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, science, geography, art, citizenship
Core question How does one country, just nineteen years after losing a devastating war and being reduced to ruin, build the world's first high-speed rail system — a piece of engineering so good that it has shaped train transport everywhere ever since — and what does the Shinkansen teach us about national recovery, engineering ambition, and the way one bold project can change what people think is possible?
A modern Tōkaidō Shinkansen at a station around the 60th anniversary of the system's opening in 2024. The first Shinkansen ran on 1 October 1964, just before the Tokyo Olympics, and inspired high-speed rail systems around the world. Photo: 電車(新幹線)でゴー! / Wikimedia Commons / CC0
Introduction

On 1 October 1964, just nine days before the start of the Tokyo Olympic Games, a new kind of train began operating between Tokyo and Osaka. It was called the Shinkansen — Japanese for 'new trunk line' — and it was unlike anything the world had seen. Its top speed was 210 km/h. Its journey time between Japan's two largest cities was just four hours, cut from the previous six and a half. It was sleek and futuristic-looking, with a pointed aerodynamic nose. Western journalists nicknamed it 'the bullet train' because of its shape and its speed. The opening was a major event for Japan. The country was hosting the Olympic Games — the first ever held in Asia — and the Shinkansen was meant to show the world what post-war Japan had become. Just nineteen years earlier, in 1945, Japan had been devastated by war. Tokyo had been firebombed and many of its districts destroyed. Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been hit by atomic bombs. The country had surrendered, been occupied, and been reduced to extreme poverty. Most Japanese people had not had enough food. Industry had collapsed. The economy was in ruins. By 1964, less than two decades later, Japan was opening the world's first high-speed rail system. The contrast was extraordinary, and it was deliberate. The Shinkansen was meant to be a statement: Japan was back. Japan could do this. Japan was now a country of advanced engineering and ambitious planning. The Olympic Games gave the world a chance to see it. The trains immediately worked beautifully. The Shinkansen was on time, every time, with average annual delays measured in seconds. It was extraordinarily safe — no passenger has ever been killed by a Shinkansen collision or derailment in over 60 years of operation. It carried millions of passengers every year, growing to billions over the decades. It became part of how Japanese people lived. Salarymen took the Shinkansen between Tokyo and Osaka in the morning and back at night. Families took it for holidays. Students took it to visit grandparents. Workers commuted. The bullet train was not a luxury — it was a normal everyday way of getting around Japan. The Shinkansen also changed the world's idea of what trains could be. Before 1964, fast rail had been pursued in many countries, but no one had built dedicated high-speed track with custom-designed trains running at consistently high speeds. After 1964, every developed country wanted one. France started building the TGV in the 1970s; the first line opened in 1981. Germany's ICE followed in 1991. Spain's AVE in 1992. South Korea's KTX in 2004. China began building high-speed rail in the early 2000s and now has the world's largest network — over 40,000 km of track, more than the rest of the world combined. All of these systems descend, directly or indirectly, from the Shinkansen. Japan invented the format and the world copied it. This lesson asks what the Shinkansen is, why Japan built it when they did, how it works, and what it teaches us about post-war recovery, engineering ambition, and big infrastructure projects.

The object
Origin
Japan. The first Shinkansen line — the Tōkaidō Shinkansen, running between Tokyo and Osaka — opened on 1 October 1964, nine days before the start of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. The system was designed and built by Japanese National Railways (now JR Central, JR East, and several other JR companies). The Shinkansen was the world's first dedicated high-speed rail system, with its own separate tracks, custom-designed trains, and unprecedented speeds. It immediately became a symbol of post-war Japan's recovery and engineering ambition.
Period
Continuous operation since 1 October 1964 — over 60 years. The original 0 Series trains ran at 210 km/h. Subsequent generations have continually improved: 100 Series, 300 Series, 500 Series, 700 Series, N700 Series, E5 Series, and many others, with current top speeds up to 320 km/h on regular service. Experimental maglev (magnetic levitation) Shinkansen trains have exceeded 600 km/h in tests. The basic concept — dedicated high-speed track with custom trains — has remained constant.
Made of
A Shinkansen train is a complex piece of engineering combining many materials: aluminium alloy body (lightweight and strong); steel running gear; specially designed pneumatic suspension; high-voltage electric motors (typically 25,000-30,000 volts AC overhead lines); regenerative braking systems; precision-engineered wheels and bogies; aerodynamic plastic and composite nose cones; safety glass windows; carefully designed interior fittings. The track itself is also custom-designed: standard gauge (1,435 mm), with continuous welded rails, no level crossings, and elaborate signal systems.
Size
A typical Shinkansen train is 16 cars long and 400 metres in total length (about four football pitches). Each car is about 25 metres long, 3.4 metres wide, and 4.5 metres tall. Trains seat 1,300-1,600 passengers. Modern trains weigh around 700 tonnes when empty. The Tōkaidō Shinkansen line itself is 515 km long; the entire Japanese Shinkansen network is over 3,000 km long, with multiple lines connecting most major Japanese cities.
Number of objects
Hundreds of Shinkansen trains in service across Japan today, with daily ridership of about 1 million passengers. Over 10 billion passengers have used the Shinkansen in its 60+ years of operation. JR Central operates the busiest Shinkansen line (Tōkaidō), with trains departing every few minutes during peak times. The Japanese network has inspired many other high-speed rail systems worldwide: France's TGV (1981), Germany's ICE (1991), Spain's AVE (1992), South Korea's KTX (2004), Taiwan's THSR (2007, using Japanese technology), China's CRH (now the world's largest network with over 40,000 km of high-speed track).
Where it is now
Across Japan, on dedicated Shinkansen tracks separate from regular train lines. Major Shinkansen stations include Tokyo Station, Shin-Osaka, Kyoto, Hakata (Fukuoka), Sendai, and many others. The Tōkaidō line connects Tokyo, Yokohama, Nagoya, Kyoto, and Osaka. The Sanyō line continues to Hiroshima and Hakata. The Tōhoku line runs north to Sendai and beyond. The Hokkaidō Shinkansen reaches Sapporo. The Kyūshū Shinkansen serves southern Japan. Major Shinkansen museums include the SCMaglev and Railway Park in Nagoya and the Kyoto Railway Museum.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The Shinkansen is one of the most successful pieces of post-war engineering in the world. How will you make the engineering achievement feel real for students who may take fast trains for granted?
  2. Japan's post-war recovery is a complex story involving both extraordinary effort and the legacy of the war. How will you handle the recovery context honestly without simplifying?
  3. The Shinkansen has inspired many other high-speed rail systems globally. How will you teach Japan's leadership without becoming triumphalist about Japan or dismissive of others?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
To understand the Shinkansen, you have to understand where Japan was in 1945. The Second World War had just ended in Japanese defeat. The country was in ruins. Tokyo had been firebombed in March 1945, with much of the city destroyed and over 100,000 people killed in a single night. Other major cities — Osaka, Nagoya, Yokohama, Kobe — had also been heavily bombed. Hiroshima had been hit by an atomic bomb on 6 August 1945, killing perhaps 140,000 people in total. Nagasaki was hit on 9 August 1945, killing perhaps 70,000. Japan surrendered on 15 August 1945. The country was occupied by Allied forces (mainly American) until 1952. The economy was wrecked. Industry was destroyed. Many people lacked food, shelter, and basic necessities. The Japanese empire — which had stretched across much of East Asia at its peak — was completely dismantled. Japan was reduced to its four main islands and Okinawa, with no military forces of its own (under the new constitution, written largely by American occupation authorities, that took effect in 1947). In 1945, no one would have expected Japan to be opening the world's most advanced rail system in 1964. Japan was, in 1945, nearly the poorest of the developed countries. But Japan recovered remarkably fast. Several factors helped. American occupation policy after 1948 (sometimes called the 'reverse course') shifted from punishment to economic rebuilding, partly because the Cold War made an industrially strong Japan an American strategic ally. American aid and trade preferences helped Japan rebuild. The Japanese government invested heavily in infrastructure and industry. The Korean War (1950-1953) created enormous demand for Japanese-made goods to supply American forces, providing a major economic boost. Perhaps most importantly, Japan made deliberate choices about what to invest in. Heavy industry. Shipping. Steelmaking. Electronics. Transport infrastructure. The country focused on becoming a manufacturing powerhouse and an economic competitor. By the early 1960s, Japan was growing at remarkable rates — sometimes called the 'Japanese economic miracle'. GDP was doubling every several years. New factories opened. New universities trained engineers. New roads, ports, and rail lines were built. Tokyo's population was exploding as people moved from rural areas for industrial jobs. The Shinkansen project began in this context. Japanese National Railways had been studying high-speed rail since the 1930s. (There had been a pre-war plan for an even longer high-speed line connecting Japan with its colonies in Korea and Manchuria, called the 'Bullet Train Plan' — dangan ressha — but this was abandoned with the wartime collapse.) After the war, the project was revived as a peaceful engineering ambition. The key decision was made in the early 1960s. Japan would build a dedicated high-speed rail line between Tokyo and Osaka, the country's two largest cities. The line would run on its own separate tracks (not the existing Tokyo-Osaka Tōkaidō Main Line, which used narrower 'Cape gauge' track). It would be standard gauge (1,435 mm), the same as most international rail. The trains would be custom-designed for speed. Construction was timed to be ready before the 1964 Tokyo Olympics — the first Olympic Games ever held in Asia, scheduled for October 1964. The Olympics gave Japan a deadline and a global stage. The Shinkansen would open just before the Games, and the world would see what Japan had become. Why might a country make such a massive investment so soon after wartime devastation?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. National pride. After the humiliation of defeat and occupation, Japan wanted something to be proud of, something that showed the world that Japan was a leader in something positive. The Shinkansen was that something. National recovery. Building infrastructure was part of how Japan rebuilt, providing jobs, training engineers, and creating productive capacity for the future. Economic logic. The Tōkaidō corridor (Tokyo-Yokohama-Nagoya-Kyoto-Osaka) is one of the most densely populated regions in the world, with over 50 million people. Connecting it with fast trains made enormous economic sense. The Olympic deadline. Tokyo had been awarded the Olympics in 1959, scheduled for 1964. This gave Japan a hard target date and global visibility. Showing off for the Olympics is a recurring pattern in international politics — many countries time major projects to coincide with hosting global events. Long-term thinking. Japanese industrial policy was famous for taking the long view. The Shinkansen would benefit Japan for decades. Japanese planners were willing to make large investments now for benefits that would arrive over many years. Students should see that big infrastructure projects often combine economic logic, national pride, and political timing. The Shinkansen was not built just because it was useful (though it was); it was also built because Japan wanted to demonstrate its recovery to the world. Both motivations were real. Both contributed to the project's success.

2
The Shinkansen opened on 1 October 1964, with a ceremony at Tokyo Station presided over by the Japanese prime minister and broadcast across the country. The first train — designated Hikari ('Light') 1 — departed at 6:00 AM and reached Osaka at 10:00 AM, completing a journey that had previously taken six and a half hours in just four. The fastest trains achieved the run in three hours, ten minutes. The trains themselves were a marvel of design. The 0 Series Shinkansen had a distinctive shape: a long aerodynamic nose, a smooth white body with a blue stripe, sliding doors, and large picture windows. Inside, the seats were comfortable, the cars were clean and air-conditioned, and the ride was famously smooth. Passengers reported that the experience felt like flying — but on the ground, with views of the countryside speeding past. The top speed of 210 km/h was extraordinary for the time. Fast trains in Britain, France, Germany, and the United States ran at perhaps 130-160 km/h on their best lines. The Shinkansen was significantly faster than anything else in regular service anywhere in the world. More impressive than the speed was the consistency. The Shinkansen ran to the second. Trains departed and arrived on time, every time, with average delays measured in seconds across the entire system. (Even today, average annual delay on the Shinkansen is under one minute per train. When delays do occur, the railway company traditionally hands out 'delay certificates' to passengers, which they can use to explain to employers why they were late to work.) The safety record was even more remarkable. No passenger has ever been killed in a Shinkansen collision or derailment in over 60 years of operation. There have been incidents — a derailment in the 2004 Niigata earthquake, where the train remained upright thanks to careful design; a partial fire incident in 2015 — but no passenger fatalities from train accidents. This safety record is unmatched by any other rail system in the world. How was such consistency achieved? Several factors. Dedicated tracks. The Shinkansen runs on its own tracks, separate from regular rail. There are no level crossings. There is no shared space with other trains. This eliminates a major source of accidents and delays. Custom-designed trains. The trains and tracks were designed together, as a single integrated system. This is different from many older rail systems, which used trains designed for different speeds running on tracks built for slower speeds. Computerised signalling. The Shinkansen had sophisticated automatic train control from the start — systems that detect potential problems and slow or stop trains automatically. Frequent inspection. The tracks, trains, and signals are inspected continuously, with maintenance crews working through every night. Earthquake protection. Japan is on the Pacific Ring of Fire and has frequent earthquakes. The Shinkansen has automatic earthquake detection systems that stop trains within seconds of an earthquake being detected, reducing derailment risks. Cultural factors. Japanese rail culture emphasises punctuality, professionalism, and continuous improvement. Drivers, conductors, station staff, and maintenance workers all take pride in keeping the system running perfectly. The Shinkansen was an immediate success. Ridership grew rapidly. By the late 1960s, the line was carrying many more passengers than originally projected. New cars were added. The fleet expanded. Japan announced plans to extend the system — to Hiroshima and Hakata in the south, to Sendai and beyond in the north. The Tōkaidō line itself was joined by the Sanyō line (1972, extending to Hakata), the Tōhoku line (1982, going north), the Joetsu line (1982, to Niigata), and others. By 2024, the network was over 3,000 km long. What made the Shinkansen so successful from day one?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several factors together. Engineering quality. The Shinkansen was designed with extraordinary care. Engineers studied previous high-speed rail attempts (in the United States, France, and elsewhere), learned from their problems, and built a system that addressed each issue. The result was a system that worked from day one. Integrated thinking. The trains, tracks, signals, stations, and maintenance procedures were all designed together. This is different from many infrastructure projects, where pieces are designed by separate teams and then integrated later (often badly). The Shinkansen was a complete system from the start. Public investment. Japanese National Railways was a government-owned company. The Shinkansen was financed by the Japanese government with significant World Bank loans. There was no need to make short-term profits; the project could be planned for long-term success. Cultural commitment. Japan's commitment to making the Shinkansen work was not just engineering — it was a national project. Drivers, station staff, maintenance workers, and managers all understood that the Shinkansen represented Japan to the world. They took pride in keeping it running perfectly. Continuous improvement. The Japanese approach to manufacturing — sometimes called 'kaizen' or 'continuous improvement' — was applied to the Shinkansen. Each generation of trains was an improvement on the last. Each generation of operating procedures learned from the previous. The system has been continuously refined for 60 years. Students should see that 'success' in big infrastructure projects depends on many factors. Engineering quality matters. Money matters. Political stability matters. Cultural commitment matters. The Shinkansen had all of these. Many other countries have tried to build high-speed rail and faced more difficulty. The Shinkansen succeeded because so many things lined up.

3
The Shinkansen changed the world. Before 1964, fast rail had been pursued in many countries — Britain, France, Germany, the United States, Italy — but no one had built dedicated high-speed track with custom-designed trains running at consistently high speeds across long distances. The Shinkansen invented the format. Within a few years of the Shinkansen's success, other countries began planning similar systems. France was the first to follow Japan's lead. The TGV (Train à Grande Vitesse, French for 'high-speed train') project began in the late 1960s and the first line, between Paris and Lyon, opened on 27 September 1981. The TGV used different technology in some respects (it ran on standard gauge tracks shared in some places with regular trains, and had different signalling systems) but the core concept — dedicated high-speed lines and custom-designed fast trains — came from the Shinkansen. The TGV was a great success and inspired other European countries. Germany followed in 1991 with the Inter-City Express (ICE). Spain followed in 1992 with the Alta Velocidad Española (AVE). Italy developed its Treno Alta Velocità (TAV) and ETR Frecciarossa systems. Belgium, the Netherlands, and Britain (with the Channel Tunnel and HS1) developed connections to the European network. South Korea opened the KTX (Korea Train Express) in 2004, using French TGV technology with Korean modifications. Taiwan opened its high-speed rail (Taiwan High Speed Rail or THSR) in 2007, using Japanese Shinkansen technology — the most direct international export of the Shinkansen system. China has been the largest follower. China began building high-speed rail in the early 2000s, learning from Japanese, French, and German technologies and developing its own. The China Railway High-speed (CRH) network grew rapidly: 1,000 km in 2008, 10,000 km in 2013, over 40,000 km by 2024. China now has more high-speed rail track than the rest of the world combined. The Beijing-Shanghai line, opened in 2011, is the busiest high-speed line in the world. Many other countries have built or are building high-speed systems: Russia (Sapsan, 2009), Turkey (YHT, 2009), Saudi Arabia (Haramain High Speed Railway, 2018), Morocco (Al-Boraq, 2018), Indonesia (Jakarta-Bandung, 2023). The United States has long planned a high-speed system in California (still under construction), and Florida has the privately operated Brightline. All of these systems descend in some way from the Shinkansen. Some use Japanese technology directly (Taiwan, Indonesia for Jakarta-Bandung). Others use French TGV technology (South Korea, Morocco). Others use German ICE technology. Many use a mix. China developed its own technology by combining and improving on Japanese, French, and German systems. The global high-speed rail network is now extensive. From Lisbon to Beijing, you can travel mostly by high-speed rail (with a few gaps in Central Asia). From Tokyo to Hakata or Sapporo, you can cross Japan in hours. From Shanghai to Beijing, a 1,300 km journey, takes 4.5 hours by Chinese CRH. From Madrid to Barcelona, 600 km, takes 2.5 hours by Spanish AVE. The Shinkansen is the source. Japan invented the format and the world copied it. Why might one country's invention spread so widely?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. The format works. High-speed rail genuinely solves a transport problem better than alternatives in many cases. For distances of 200-1,000 km between major cities, high-speed rail is faster than driving and competitive with flying (when you account for time spent at airports). Once Japan demonstrated that the format works, other countries had a model to follow. The technology can be exported. Japanese, French, German, and Chinese companies all sell high-speed rail technology to other countries. There is a global market in high-speed rail engineering and equipment. Once the technology was developed, it could be commercialised. National pride. Many countries want their own high-speed rail because it is a symbol of modernity and national capability. The Shinkansen demonstrated that having a high-speed system is what advanced countries do. Once one country has it, others want it for the prestige as well as the transport benefits. Environmental benefits. As awareness of climate change has grown, high-speed rail has gained attention as a relatively low-emission alternative to air travel. A train trip emits much less CO2 per passenger than an equivalent flight. This adds another reason for countries to build high-speed rail. Demonstration effect. Big infrastructure projects often spread by example. Once one country has done something, others see that it is possible and want to do it themselves. The Shinkansen showed that high-speed rail was possible. Every other system since has built on that foundation. Students should see that 'innovation' is rarely just about being first. Other countries had been working on fast rail before Japan. But Japan made it work in a way that others could see, study, and follow. Being the first to make something work matters more than being the first to think of it. The Shinkansen made the format real. The world has been copying it ever since.

4
After 60 years, the Shinkansen continues to evolve. Each generation of trains has been faster, more efficient, and more comfortable than the last. The original 0 Series ran at 210 km/h. The 100 Series (1985) added two-storey cars for more capacity. The 300 Series (1992) reached 270 km/h with new aluminium body designs. The 500 Series (1997) was famous for its sleek design and reached 300 km/h. The 700 Series (1999) had the long 'duck-bill' nose for better tunnel performance. The N700 Series (2007) pushed top speeds to 300 km/h with active tilting suspension that allowed faster cornering. The E5 Series, introduced in 2011 on the Tōhoku line going north, reaches 320 km/h on regular service — the fastest Shinkansen in standard operation. The N700S (S for 'supreme'), introduced in 2020, is the latest generation, with improved efficiency, better earthquake protection, and modern interior designs. Looking ahead, Japan is building the Chūō Shinkansen — a maglev (magnetic levitation) line between Tokyo, Nagoya, and eventually Osaka. The maglev train levitates above the track using powerful magnets, eliminating wheel-rail friction and allowing much higher speeds. Test runs have exceeded 600 km/h. The Tokyo-Nagoya section was originally scheduled to open in 2027 but has been delayed; current estimates suggest the late 2020s or early 2030s. The full Tokyo-Osaka maglev line is planned for 2037 or later. When complete, it will cut Tokyo-Osaka travel time from 2 hours 30 minutes (current Shinkansen) to about 1 hour. The Shinkansen also faces challenges. Japan's population is shrinking — it peaked at 128 million in 2010 and is now declining. Some Shinkansen lines may have less demand in the coming decades. Construction costs for new lines are very high. The maglev project, in particular, has been enormously expensive and has caused environmental controversy (the line tunnels through important watersheds in Shizuoka Prefecture, raising concerns about water supply). But the basic Shinkansen system remains extraordinary. After 60 years of operation, it still runs to extraordinary punctuality. It still has zero passenger fatalities from collisions or derailments. It still carries about 1 million passengers a day. It still inspires high-speed rail systems worldwide. It is one of the most successful long-running infrastructure projects in human history. What makes a piece of infrastructure last 60 years and still be cutting-edge?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several factors. Continuous investment. Japan has continually invested in maintaining and upgrading the Shinkansen. Tracks have been replaced. Trains have been replaced. Signals have been modernised. The system is not the same Shinkansen of 1964 — it is constantly being renewed. Continuous improvement. Each generation of Shinkansen trains has been an improvement on the last. The Japanese practice of kaizen (continuous improvement) means that every aspect of the system is regularly examined and refined. Cultural continuity. The Japanese rail culture that made the Shinkansen work in 1964 — punctuality, professionalism, pride in the system — has continued for 60 years. Drivers, conductors, station staff, and maintenance crews continue to take the same care that the original generation did. Public commitment. The Shinkansen is not just a private business; it is a national institution. The Japanese public expects it to work, supports it politically and financially, and treats it as part of national identity. This kind of long-term public commitment is hard to maintain in many countries. Adaptation to change. The Shinkansen has adapted to many changes — new technology, new materials, new safety standards, new environmental concerns, the shift from public ownership to privatised JR companies in the 1980s. Each adaptation has preserved the core mission while updating the means. Students should see that 'lasting infrastructure' is not just about building well once. It is about building well, then maintaining well, then improving continuously, for many decades. Few countries have managed this with major infrastructure projects. Japan has, with the Shinkansen, for 60 years and counting. End the discovery here. The Shinkansen is a beautiful example of what one country can achieve when engineering ambition, public investment, cultural commitment, and long-term thinking all line up. It is also a model for what other countries can do — and what some have already begun to do — with their own infrastructure projects. The bullet train is more than a train. It is a demonstration of what is possible. Sixty years after it began, it still demonstrates.

What this object teaches

The Shinkansen — meaning 'new trunk line' in Japanese, commonly called the bullet train in English — was the world's first dedicated high-speed rail system. The first line, the Tōkaidō Shinkansen between Tokyo and Osaka, opened on 1 October 1964, just nine days before the Tokyo Olympic Games. Original speeds of 210 km/h were extraordinary for the time. The system represented Japan's post-war recovery: just 19 years after wartime devastation, Japan was building the world's most advanced rail system. The Olympic Games gave the Shinkansen a global stage, and the world watched as Japan demonstrated its engineering ambition. The Shinkansen worked beautifully from day one. It ran to extraordinary punctuality — average delays measured in seconds, not minutes. It was extraordinarily safe — no passenger has ever been killed in a Shinkansen collision or derailment in over 60 years of operation. Several factors contributed to this success: dedicated tracks (separate from regular rail, with no level crossings); custom-designed integrated trains and infrastructure; sophisticated computerised signalling; continuous maintenance; automatic earthquake detection systems; and a Japanese rail culture that emphasised punctuality, professionalism, and continuous improvement. The Shinkansen network expanded over the decades. The Tōkaidō line was joined by the Sanyō (1972, to Hakata), Tōhoku (1982, going north), Jōetsu (1982, to Niigata), and many others. By 2024, the Japanese network was over 3,000 km long, carrying about 1 million passengers daily. Trains now reach 320 km/h on regular service; experimental maglev trains have exceeded 600 km/h. The Shinkansen changed the world. France's TGV opened in 1981, Germany's ICE in 1991, Spain's AVE in 1992, South Korea's KTX in 2004, Taiwan's THSR in 2007 (using Japanese technology directly). China began building high-speed rail in the early 2000s and now has the world's largest network — over 40,000 km of track, more than the rest of the world combined. All of these systems descend in some way from the Shinkansen. Japan invented the format and the world copied it. The Shinkansen continues to evolve. Each generation of trains has been an improvement: 100 Series, 300 Series, 500 Series, 700 Series, N700, E5, N700S. Japan is building the Chūō Shinkansen — a maglev line between Tokyo, Nagoya, and eventually Osaka — that will run at over 500 km/h. The Shinkansen is one of the most successful long-running infrastructure projects in human history. After 60 years, it still runs to extraordinary punctuality, still has zero passenger fatalities from accidents, still carries millions, and still inspires the world.

DateEventWhat changed
1945Japan's wartime devastationJapan ends the war in ruins; Tokyo firebombed, Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombed; economy collapsed
1959Tokyo awarded the 1964 Olympic GamesJapan now has a global deadline for demonstrating its post-war recovery
1 October 1964Tōkaidō Shinkansen opens between Tokyo and OsakaWorld's first dedicated high-speed rail system enters service, just nine days before the Olympics
1972-1982Shinkansen network expandsSanyō (1972), Tōhoku (1982), Jōetsu (1982) lines added; the network grows beyond a single line
1981France's TGV opens between Paris and LyonFirst non-Japanese high-speed rail system; the Shinkansen format goes global
1991-2007European and Asian high-speed rail expandsGermany's ICE (1991), Spain's AVE (1992), South Korea's KTX (2004), Taiwan's THSR (2007, using Japanese technology directly) all enter service
2008 onwardsChina builds the world's largest high-speed rail networkChinese high-speed rail expands from 1,000 km in 2008 to over 40,000 km by 2024
2011 onwardsE5 Series Shinkansen reaches 320 km/h on regular serviceModern Shinkansen speeds match the latest competitor systems
TodayShinkansen running for over 60 years; maglev under constructionTens of billions of passenger journeys completed; zero passenger fatalities from collisions; the model for global high-speed rail
Key words
Shinkansen (新幹線)
Japanese for 'new trunk line', the name of Japan's high-speed rail system, which opened with the Tōkaidō line on 1 October 1964. Commonly called 'bullet train' in English because of the shape and speed of the original 0 Series trains. Today the Japanese Shinkansen network is over 3,000 km long with multiple lines, carrying about 1 million passengers daily.
Example: The original Tōkaidō Shinkansen ran from Tokyo to Osaka in 4 hours, cut from 6.5 hours by previous trains. Today's Shinkansen completes the journey in 2 hours 30 minutes. The maglev line under construction will eventually reduce it to about 1 hour.
1964 Tokyo Olympics
The 18th Summer Olympic Games, held in Tokyo from 10 to 24 October 1964 — the first Olympic Games ever held in Asia. The Games represented Japan's return to the international community after wartime defeat and were a major showcase of Japan's post-war recovery. The Shinkansen opened on 1 October 1964, nine days before the Games, as part of the same demonstration of Japanese engineering and ambition.
Example: Japan invested enormously in infrastructure for the 1964 Olympics: the Shinkansen, the Metropolitan Expressway in Tokyo, the new Haneda Airport monorail, the rebuilt Tokyo skyline. The Olympics were a global success and confirmed Japan's recovery. Tokyo hosted the Olympics again in 2020 (delayed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic), but the 1964 Games remain especially memorable for marking the beginning of modern Japan's international profile.
Japanese economic miracle
The period of extraordinary economic growth in Japan from the early 1950s to the early 1970s, when Japanese GDP grew at an average of about 10% per year for two decades. This growth transformed Japan from a war-devastated country into one of the world's largest economies. Made possible by a combination of factors including American Cold War economic policies favouring Japan, the boom from Korean War procurement, heavy public investment in infrastructure and education, and Japanese cultural emphasis on quality manufacturing.
Example: Between 1950 and 1973, Japanese real GDP grew by a factor of about 7 — an unprecedented rate of growth for any major economy over such a sustained period. By the early 1970s, Japan was the world's third-largest economy (behind the United States and the Soviet Union) and a major exporter of cars, electronics, and steel. The Shinkansen was one of the most visible symbols of this growth.
Maglev (magnetic levitation)
A transport technology in which a vehicle is suspended above a track by powerful magnetic fields, with no physical contact between the vehicle and the track. Eliminates wheel-rail friction, allowing much higher speeds than conventional rail. Japan has been developing maglev technology for several decades. The Chūō Shinkansen, currently under construction, will be a maglev line between Tokyo, Nagoya, and eventually Osaka, running at speeds over 500 km/h.
Example: Test runs on the Yamanashi Maglev Test Line have reached 603 km/h (374 mph) — the current world speed record for any rail vehicle. The Chūō Shinkansen, when complete, will reduce Tokyo-Osaka travel time from 2.5 hours (current Shinkansen) to about 1 hour. The line has been controversial because of concerns about its enormous cost and environmental impact, particularly on water supplies in Shizuoka Prefecture.
TGV (Train à Grande Vitesse)
France's high-speed rail system, the first non-Japanese high-speed rail. The first line, between Paris and Lyon, opened on 27 September 1981. Inspired by the success of the Shinkansen but uses different technical solutions in several respects. Reaches speeds of 320 km/h on regular service; the test record is 574 km/h. The TGV technology has been exported to many other countries (South Korea's KTX, Spain's AVE in part, Morocco's Al-Boraq, several others).
Example: The Paris-Lyon TGV cut the journey time between France's two largest cities from 4 hours by ordinary train to about 2 hours by TGV. Within a few years, the line was carrying many more passengers than originally projected. The TGV network has expanded across France and into neighbouring countries (Belgium, the Netherlands, Britain via the Channel Tunnel, Spain, Italy, Germany).
China Railway High-speed (CRH)
China's high-speed rail network, which began construction in the early 2000s and is now the world's largest high-speed rail network with over 40,000 km of track. Initially built using a combination of imported Japanese, French, and German technologies, with extensive Chinese modifications and additions. Now considered to be advancing on the original technologies. The Beijing-Shanghai high-speed line, opened in 2011, is the world's busiest high-speed line.
Example: China's high-speed rail expanded from 1,000 km in 2008 to over 40,000 km by 2024 — more than the rest of the world's high-speed networks combined. The CRH carries over 3 billion passengers per year. Major lines connect Beijing-Shanghai (1,318 km in 4.5 hours), Beijing-Guangzhou (2,298 km in 8 hours), and many others. The system has transformed travel within China, with high-speed rail now competing successfully with domestic flights.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of post-war Japan: wartime devastation (1945); American occupation (1945-1952); Korean War economic boost (1950-1953); independence and rapid growth (1950s); Tokyo awarded 1964 Olympics (1959); Shinkansen opens (1964); Japan becomes world's third-largest economy (1968); continued growth and global influence. The Shinkansen is one piece of a much larger story of national recovery.
  • Geography: On a world map, mark the major high-speed rail networks: Japan's Shinkansen (3,000+ km); China's CRH (40,000+ km); the European network (France, Germany, Spain, Italy, and others); South Korea's KTX; Taiwan's THSR; smaller networks elsewhere. Discuss how each country's geography (population density, distances between cities, terrain) affects whether high-speed rail makes sense.
  • Science: Discuss the engineering of high-speed rail. Aerodynamic shapes (the long pointed nose). Electric power systems (overhead lines at 25,000+ volts AC). Pneumatic suspension. Regenerative braking. Computer-controlled signalling. Earthquake detection systems. Strong answers will see how high-speed rail combines many engineering disciplines into a single integrated system.
  • Citizenship: Hold a class discussion: 'What makes big infrastructure projects succeed?' Compare the Shinkansen with other major projects: the Channel Tunnel, the Three Gorges Dam, the International Space Station, the London Olympics 2012, current high-speed rail projects in California and elsewhere. Strong answers will see that successful infrastructure requires engineering quality, political stability, public support, sustained funding, and long-term thinking.
  • Languages: The Japanese word 'Shinkansen' (新幹線) means 'new trunk line' (shin = new, kan = trunk/main, sen = line). The English nickname 'bullet train' was coined by Western journalists for the original 0 Series trains because of their shape and speed. Other languages have similar borrowings: French 'TGV' (Train à Grande Vitesse), German 'ICE' (Inter-City Express), Spanish 'AVE' (Alta Velocidad Española). Discuss how the same technology gets different names in different cultures.
  • Art: Look at images of Shinkansen trains across generations: the original 0 Series (1964) with its rounded nose; the 100 Series (1985) with its sharper angles; the 500 Series (1997) with its sleek streamlining; the 700 Series (1999) with its 'duck-bill' nose; the E5 Series (2011) with its long pointed front. Discuss how the design has evolved and what each generation says about Japanese aesthetic preferences. Industrial design is a real art form.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Japan has always been an advanced industrial country.

Right

In 1945, Japan was a devastated and poor country, with much of its industry destroyed and many of its people lacking food. The transformation into an advanced industrial nation took place over the following two decades, in what is sometimes called the 'Japanese economic miracle'. The Shinkansen (1964) was an important early demonstration of how far the recovery had come.

Why

Modern Japan can seem to have always been industrial; the dramatic post-war recovery is sometimes forgotten.

Wrong

The Shinkansen was just a faster train.

Right

The Shinkansen was the world's first dedicated high-speed rail system, with its own separate tracks, custom-designed trains, and integrated signal systems. Earlier 'fast trains' had run on shared tracks at lower speeds. The Shinkansen was a complete new system, not just a faster version of an old one. The combination of dedicated tracks, custom trains, sophisticated signalling, and continuous improvement was the genuine innovation.

Why

The technical achievement is sometimes underestimated.

Wrong

Other countries had high-speed rail at the same time as Japan.

Right

Japan was first by a significant margin. The Shinkansen opened in 1964. France's TGV did not open until 1981 — 17 years later. Germany's ICE in 1991 was 27 years later. Most countries followed Japan rather than developing in parallel. Japan invented the format; the world copied it.

Why

People sometimes assume technical innovations happen in many countries simultaneously, but the Shinkansen's lead was real and substantial.

Wrong

The Shinkansen has had problems with safety.

Right

The Shinkansen has had no passenger fatalities from collisions or derailments in over 60 years of operation, carrying tens of billions of passenger journeys. Some incidents have occurred (a derailment during the 2004 Niigata earthquake, where the train remained upright thanks to careful design; a partial fire in 2015), but no passenger deaths from train accidents. This safety record is unmatched by any other rail system in the world.

Why

People sometimes assume that any complex technology must have major accidents; the Shinkansen's record genuinely is extraordinary.

Teaching this with care

Treat the Shinkansen as the major engineering achievement it is, while keeping the post-war context honest. The lesson should bring out the engineering achievement and the national recovery story without becoming triumphalist about Japan or simplistic about its history. Use precise language. The Shinkansen opened on 1 October 1964. It was the world's first dedicated high-speed rail system. It has had no passenger fatalities from collisions or derailments in 60+ years of operation. These are facts. Be honest about Japan's wartime past. The lesson briefly mentions Japanese wartime devastation in 1945. This is necessary context for the post-war recovery story. The lesson does not go into detail about the war's causes or about Japanese wartime conduct (which would be a separate, important lesson). It mentions the firebombing of Tokyo, the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the surrender. It does not minimise these events or position them as unfair to Japan; they are presented as the context for what came next. Be careful with the recovery narrative. Japan's economic miracle is a real and remarkable story, but it should not be told as 'Japan deserved to recover and the world helped'. The recovery had specific causes — American Cold War policy decisions, the Korean War boom, Japanese government policy, Japanese cultural factors. Each of these is debatable and not simply heroic. The lesson tries to be honest about the multiple factors. Be respectful of other countries' high-speed rail systems. The lesson notes that France, Germany, Spain, South Korea, Taiwan, China, and others have all built high-speed rail systems. None of these is presented as inferior to the Shinkansen. They are all real achievements in their own right. The Shinkansen was first, but France, Germany, China, and others have all made important contributions. The TGV's record-breaking speeds, China's network size, and other achievements deserve recognition. Be careful with the China material. China's CRH network is now larger than all other high-speed networks combined. The lesson should acknowledge this honestly without becoming political. China developed its high-speed rail by combining and improving Japanese, French, and German technologies; this is a real engineering achievement and not just imitation. Be aware of environmental dimensions. High-speed rail is generally considered environmentally favourable compared to flying, but new lines have environmental impacts (land use, tunnel construction, water supply). The Japanese maglev line has been controversial for environmental reasons. The lesson mentions this without lecturing. Be respectful of disability. Modern Shinkansen and other high-speed trains have generally good accessibility, but rail travel can be difficult for some passengers (those with mobility challenges, those with sensory sensitivities, those with anxiety). Modern Shinkansen design includes accessible features but the lesson does not need to dwell on this. Be aware that students may have personal connections to Japan (heritage, family, travel) and to high-speed rail (commuting, tourism). The lesson should be welcoming of these connections without privileging them. Avoid making the lesson into Japan-tourism promotion. The Shinkansen is a real engineering and political story, not just a tourist attraction. It was built for Japanese commuters and passengers, not primarily for tourists. The lesson should treat it as the working transport system it is. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The Shinkansen is running right now. Trains are arriving exactly on time at platforms across Japan. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Shinkansen.

  1. When did the Shinkansen open, and why was the timing significant?

    The Shinkansen opened on 1 October 1964, just nine days before the start of the Tokyo Olympic Games — the first Olympic Games ever held in Asia. The timing was deliberate. Japan wanted to demonstrate its post-war recovery to the world during the Olympics, and the Shinkansen was a major symbol of that recovery. Just 19 years after wartime devastation, Japan was opening the world's most advanced rail system.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the 1964 date and the Olympic Games connection. Strong answers will note the post-war recovery context.
  2. What made the Shinkansen different from earlier 'fast trains' in other countries?

    The Shinkansen was the world's first dedicated high-speed rail system. It had its own separate tracks (not shared with regular trains), custom-designed trains built for high speed, sophisticated computerised signalling, and integrated planning of trains, tracks, stations, and operations. Earlier 'fast trains' had run on tracks designed for slower trains. The Shinkansen was a complete new system, not just a faster version of an old one.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the dedicated tracks, custom trains, and integrated system design. Any of these is enough for partial credit.
  3. What is the Shinkansen's safety record, and why is it remarkable?

    The Shinkansen has had no passenger fatalities from collisions or derailments in over 60 years of operation, carrying tens of billions of passenger journeys. This safety record is unmatched by any other rail system in the world. It was achieved through dedicated tracks (no level crossings), custom-designed trains, sophisticated signalling, continuous maintenance, automatic earthquake detection, and a Japanese rail culture of professionalism and continuous improvement.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the zero-fatality record and notes that this is exceptional. Bonus credit for naming specific factors that contributed to the safety.
  4. Name three other countries that have built high-speed rail systems inspired by the Shinkansen.

    Many possible answers. France (TGV, opened 1981, the first non-Japanese high-speed rail). Germany (ICE, opened 1991). Spain (AVE, opened 1992). South Korea (KTX, opened 2004, using French technology). Taiwan (THSR, opened 2007, using Japanese technology directly). China (CRH, beginning in early 2000s, now the world's largest network with over 40,000 km of track). Italy (TAV/Frecciarossa). Russia (Sapsan, 2009). Saudi Arabia (Haramain, 2018). Morocco (Al-Boraq, 2018).
    Marking note: Award full marks for any three specific countries with at least one date or detail.
  5. What is the Chūō Shinkansen, and how will it differ from the current Shinkansen?

    The Chūō Shinkansen is a new line currently under construction in Japan. It will use maglev (magnetic levitation) technology — the train will be suspended above the track by powerful magnetic fields, eliminating wheel-rail friction. Test runs have exceeded 600 km/h, much faster than the current Shinkansen's 320 km/h. When complete, the Chūō Shinkansen will reduce Tokyo-Osaka travel time from 2.5 hours (current Shinkansen) to about 1 hour.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both maglev technology and the faster speeds it allows.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Shinkansen was built just 19 years after Japan's devastating defeat in the Second World War. What does this tell us about national recovery from disaster?

    Several thoughts worth discussing. National recovery from disaster is possible but it requires specific conditions: stable government, public investment, peaceful conditions, international support (sometimes), strong domestic industry and education, and time. Japan's recovery was extraordinarily fast by historical standards, but it was helped by specific factors: American Cold War policy that favoured Japan economically; the Korean War boom; Japanese government investment in infrastructure and education; Japanese cultural emphasis on quality manufacturing. Other countries that have recovered from disaster (Germany after WWII, South Korea after the Korean War, post-war Italy, etc.) have followed similar patterns. Strong answers will see that national recovery is rarely automatic. It requires policy choices and sustained effort over decades. The Shinkansen is a symbol of a wider pattern: Japan rebuilt by investing in infrastructure, education, and industry. The result was the world's third-largest economy by the early 1970s. The lesson for other countries recovering from disaster is that recovery is possible but not easy.
  2. The Shinkansen has inspired high-speed rail systems all over the world. Why might one country's invention spread so widely, when many other inventions stay local?

    Several factors. The Shinkansen format works — it solves a real transport problem better than alternatives in many cases (200-1,000 km journeys between major cities). Once Japan demonstrated that the format works, other countries had a model to follow. The technology can be exported — Japanese, French, German, and Chinese companies sell high-speed rail technology to other countries. National pride matters — many countries want their own high-speed rail as a symbol of modernity. Environmental benefits are increasingly important — high-speed rail emits less CO2 than flying. The demonstration effect is real — once one country has done something, others see it is possible. Strong answers will see that 'innovation' is rarely just about being first. Other countries had been working on fast rail before Japan. But Japan made it work in a way that others could see, study, and follow. Being the first to make something work well matters more than being the first to think of it. The Shinkansen made high-speed rail real. The world has been copying it ever since.
  3. The Shinkansen has been running for over 60 years and is still cutting-edge. What makes a piece of infrastructure last that long without becoming obsolete?

    Several factors. Continuous investment — Japan has continually maintained and upgraded the Shinkansen. Tracks have been replaced. Trains have been replaced. Signals have been modernised. The system is not the same as 1964; it has been continuously renewed. Continuous improvement (kaizen) — each generation of trains and procedures has been better than the last. Cultural continuity — Japanese rail culture (punctuality, professionalism, pride) has lasted 60 years. Public commitment — the Shinkansen is a national institution, not just a private business. It has steady political and financial support. Adaptation — the system has adapted to many changes (technology, ownership, environmental concerns). Strong answers will see that 'lasting infrastructure' is not about building well once. It is about building well, then maintaining well, then improving continuously, for many decades. Few countries have managed this. Japan has, with the Shinkansen, for 60 years and counting. The deeper lesson is that infrastructure quality depends on long-term commitment, not just initial design quality. A well-built system poorly maintained will fail. A reasonably built system continuously improved will get better and better. The Shinkansen is in the second category.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Show the photograph of the Shinkansen. Ask: 'When did the world's first high-speed rail system open?' Take guesses. Then say: 'The Japanese Shinkansen opened on 1 October 1964 — sixty years ago. Just 19 years after Japan was devastated by war. We are going to find out how Japan rebuilt that fast and why this train changed the world.'
  2. POST-WAR JAPAN (10 min)
    Briefly walk through Japan's situation in 1945 — devastation, occupation, recovery. American Cold War policies that favoured Japan economically. Korean War boom. Japanese economic miracle through the 1950s-60s. By 1964, Japan was hosting the Olympics and opening the world's first high-speed rail. Pause and ask: 'Why might a country make such a massive investment so soon after wartime devastation?'
  3. HOW THE SHINKANSEN WORKS (10 min)
    Walk through what made the Shinkansen successful. Dedicated tracks (separate from regular rail). Custom trains. Computerised signalling. Continuous maintenance. Earthquake detection. Japanese rail culture of punctuality and continuous improvement. Result: zero passenger fatalities in 60+ years, average delays measured in seconds. Discuss: what made the Shinkansen so successful from day one?
  4. THE WORLD COPIES (10 min)
    Walk through global spread. France's TGV (1981). Germany's ICE (1991). Spain's AVE (1992). South Korea's KTX (2004). Taiwan's THSR (2007, using Japanese technology). China's massive CRH (over 40,000 km by 2024). Discuss: why might one country's invention spread so widely?
  5. CLOSING (10 min)
    Note the future. Maglev Chūō Shinkansen under construction, with speeds over 500 km/h. End by saying: 'Sixty years ago Japan opened the world's first high-speed rail. The country was just 19 years out of devastating war. The Shinkansen still runs today, still on time to the second, still with no passenger fatalities, still inspiring high-speed rail systems all over the world. It is one of the great pieces of post-war engineering. The story of one country's recovery and ambition, told in trains.'
Classroom materials
Map the Network
Instructions: On a map of Japan drawn on the board (or a printed map), students mark the major Shinkansen lines: Tōkaidō (Tokyo-Osaka), Sanyō (Osaka-Hakata), Tōhoku (Tokyo north to Aomori), Hokkaidō (continuing to Hakodate and Sapporo), Kyūshū (Hakata to Kagoshima), Jōetsu (Tokyo to Niigata), and others. Discuss: how does the network connect Japan? Why do some regions have Shinkansen and others not?
Example: In Mr Tanaka's class, students saw that the Shinkansen network mainly serves Japan's most densely populated corridor along the Pacific coast. The teacher said: 'You have just shown why high-speed rail makes economic sense for Japan. Most of Japan's population lives in a narrow corridor along the Pacific coast — Tokyo, Yokohama, Nagoya, Kyoto, Osaka. Connecting this corridor with fast trains serves over 50 million people. The same logic applies to other high-speed networks: Beijing-Shanghai in China, Paris-Lyon-Marseille in France, Madrid-Barcelona in Spain. Geography matters for high-speed rail.'
Why Some Countries, Not Others
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'Why do some countries have extensive high-speed rail and others don't?' Compare countries with extensive high-speed rail (Japan, France, Germany, Spain, China, South Korea) with countries that have less (United States, Australia, Canada, most of Africa). Discuss factors: geography, population density, wealth, government priorities, transport culture. Each group presents their analysis.
Example: In Mrs Williams's class, groups identified factors including: distance between cities (high-speed rail works for 200-1,000 km journeys); population density (denser populations make high-speed rail more economically viable); car culture (countries with strong car cultures have less demand for trains); government investment (high-speed rail requires huge upfront public investment); existing rail infrastructure (countries with strong existing rail are more likely to invest in high-speed). The teacher said: 'You have just identified most of the factors that experts also identify. There is no single reason why some countries have high-speed rail and others do not. It is a combination of geography, economics, politics, and culture. The United States, for example, has many of the same factors as Japan (wealthy, technologically advanced, large population) but very different transport culture (strong car and air travel) — so high-speed rail has been slow to develop there.'
Big Infrastructure Projects
Instructions: In small groups, students research one major infrastructure project from the past 100 years: the Shinkansen, the Channel Tunnel, the Three Gorges Dam, the International Space Station, the Panama Canal expansion, the London Underground, the New York Subway, the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge, or another of their choice. Each group presents what made the project succeed (or fail). Compare across groups. Discuss: what makes infrastructure work?
Example: In Mrs Lange's class, groups researched the Shinkansen, the Channel Tunnel, the Three Gorges Dam, and the International Space Station. The teacher said: 'You have just shown that big infrastructure projects share certain features when they succeed: clear engineering goals, sustained political and financial support, integrated planning, cultural commitment to excellence, and continuous adaptation. They also share certain features when they fail: cost overruns, political conflict, weak engineering, poor maintenance. The Shinkansen is one of the great success stories. There are also great failures. Both teach us something.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the cycle rickshaw for another transport object with deep cultural roots (already delivered).
  • Try a lesson on the Wuppertal Schwebebahn for another piece of remarkable rail engineering (already delivered).
  • Try a lesson on the Cambodian bamboo train for a contrasting story of post-disaster transport in a poorer country (already delivered).
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on Japan's post-war recovery, including economic policy, industrial development, and the broader Japanese economic miracle.
  • Connect this lesson to engineering class with a longer study of high-speed rail technology, including aerodynamics, electric motors, signal systems, and earthquake protection.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of what makes big infrastructure projects succeed. Comparisons with the Channel Tunnel, the International Space Station, the New York Subway, and modern projects can be illuminating.
Key takeaways
  • The Shinkansen — Japanese for 'new trunk line', commonly called the bullet train in English — was the world's first dedicated high-speed rail system. The first line, the Tōkaidō Shinkansen between Tokyo and Osaka, opened on 1 October 1964, just nine days before the Tokyo Olympic Games.
  • The Shinkansen was a deliberate symbol of Japan's post-war recovery. Just 19 years after wartime devastation, Japan was opening the world's most advanced rail system. The Olympics gave Japan a global stage, and the Shinkansen demonstrated what Japan had become.
  • The Shinkansen has had no passenger fatalities from collisions or derailments in over 60 years of operation, carrying tens of billions of passenger journeys. This safety record is unmatched by any other rail system in the world. It runs to extraordinary punctuality, with average delays measured in seconds.
  • The Shinkansen network has expanded over the decades. The Tōkaidō line was joined by the Sanyō, Tōhoku, Jōetsu, Hokkaidō, Kyūshū, and other lines. The Japanese network is now over 3,000 km long, with daily ridership of about 1 million passengers.
  • The Shinkansen inspired high-speed rail systems worldwide. France's TGV (1981), Germany's ICE (1991), Spain's AVE (1992), South Korea's KTX (2004), Taiwan's THSR (2007, using Japanese technology), and China's massive CRH network (over 40,000 km by 2024) all descend in some way from the Shinkansen.
  • The Shinkansen continues to evolve. Each generation of trains has been an improvement on the last. The Chūō Shinkansen, currently under construction, will use maglev (magnetic levitation) technology to run at over 500 km/h, eventually reducing Tokyo-Osaka travel time to about one hour. The Shinkansen is one of the most successful long-running infrastructure projects in human history.
Sources
  • The Shinkansen: A Half Century of Japan's High-Speed Trains — Christopher P. Hood (2014) [academic]
  • The Japanese Economic Miracle — Various academic sources cited in Brookings Institution and others (2020) [academic]
  • JR Central — Tōkaidō Shinkansen 60th Anniversary — Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) (2024) [institution]
  • Tokyo 1964: The Olympics That Symbolised Japan's Comeback — BBC News (2014) [news]
  • Shinkansen — Wikipedia (citing multiple peer-reviewed sources) (2024) [academic]